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    翠星石 (suiseiseki@freesoftwareextremist.com)'s status on Thursday, 13-Mar-2025 11:58:24 JST翠星石翠星石
    in reply to
    • SuperDicq
    • waifu
    @waifu @SuperDicq I doubt you live in Argentina, considering that you don't even know that it's part of the Berne Convention (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Berne_Convention?useskin=monobook), meaning any creative work published in Argentina is proprietary; https://www.gnu.org/licenses/license-list.html#NoLicense

    Just dumping a license file into the root of a git repo doesn't license anything - there also needs to be a copyright statement explicitly licensing x files or y project under z license, with the copyright holder(s) listed and the copyright year(s) listed - otherwise the project has no license and is proprietary.
    In conversationabout 2 months ago from freesoftwareextremist.compermalink

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      Berne Convention
      The Berne Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic Works, usually known as the Berne Convention, was an international assembly held in 1886 in the Swiss city of Bern by ten European countries with the goal to agree on a set of legal principles for the protection of original work. They drafted and adopted a multi-party contract containing agreements for a uniform, crossing border system that became known under the same name. Its rules have been updated many times since then. The treaty provides authors, musicians, poets, painters, and other creators with the means to control how their works are used, by whom, and on what terms. In some jurisdictions these type of rights are being referred to as copyright. The United States became a party in 1989. As of November 2022, the Berne Convention has been ratified by 181 states out of 195 countries in the world, most of which are also parties to the Paris Act of 1971.The Berne Convention introduced the concept that protection exists the moment a work is "fixed", that is, written or recorded on some physical medium, its author is automatically entitled to all copyrights...
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      Various Licenses and Comments about Them - GNU Project - Free Software Foundation
      from mailto:webmasters@gnu.org
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