|  | Posted by J. Clarke on 12/05/06 17:30 
On Tue, 05 Dec 2006 16:53:22 +0000, jeremy wrote:
 > "Bill" <trash@christian-horizons.org> wrote in message
 > news:vIednbdySa1gPOjYnZ2dnUVZ_sadnZ2d@golden.net...
 >
 >>
 >> The most ridiculous idea to come out of the digital age is that copyright
 >> is "absolute".  It is not, never has been, and never was intended to be.
 >
 > That argument may express your sentiments, but it is legally unsound.
 >
 > Let me get this straight:
 >
 > You want to be allowed to lift someone else's images off of web sites and
 > re-post them on other sites of your choice?  Perhaps you want to alter them
 > or try to improve them first?  Ever hear of a "Derivative Copy?"  The
 > copyright law addresses that.
 >
 > Who has conferred upon you the right to take someone else's intellectual
 > property and to recycle it as you see fit, without the creator's knowledge
 > or permission?  Where in the copyright law does it say that the right to
 > reproduce the work of another is not absolute?
 
 Two questions, what constitutes "fair use" and at what point does the
 ubiquity of violation of a law render any attempt to enforce it "selective
 enforcement"?
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