Hi all
Alessandro here can confirm that the italian law is so confusing that nobody can really tell if its structure is even remotely legal nor can anybody confirm if the stamp shall be applied where/how/anything... It's such a mess that probably only courts in years will be able to districate its meanings.
The Italian association SoftwareLibero.org sent an open letter to the SIAE asking to explain officially the contradicting law especially with the issues related to Free Software and Copylefted works. I think that only discussing with them (the SIAE) we can clear out what is the meaning of the law. Eventually, IMHO, we will need to organise some simbolic act to raise consciousness... maybe right after the elections?
Regards
Stefano Maffulli ********************************************* Milano Linux User Group Vice-president work: http://commongis.jrc.it/ leisure: http://www.milug.org *********************************************
-----Original Message----- From: discussion-admin@fsfeurope.org [mailto:discussion-admin@fsfeurope.org]On Behalf Of Jan-Oliver Wagner Sent: Friday, March 09, 2001 4:36 PM To: discussion@fsfeurope.org Subject: Re: forwarding of e-mails not illegal after all... (fwd)
On Fri, Mar 09, 2001 at 03:29:54PM +0100, Alessandro Rubini wrote:
It's not to put it on the market. It's to use for "revenue purposes". My own software tools I use to accomplish my work must be stamped even if I'm using them in my house.
so it goes much farther than just the market.
See the siae.html published by softwarelibero.org for more information (available in Italian and English (in slightly reduced form))
but how about the EU law? Can it break the Italian law regarding the payed approvals?
Jan
-- Jan-Oliver Wagner http://intevation.de/~jan/
Intevation GmbH http://intevation.de/ FreeGIS http://freegis.org/ _______________________________________________ Discussion mailing list Discussion@fsfeurope.org http://mailman.fsfeurope.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/discussion