Do i need to ask permission to use demovisuals in non commercial event?
category: general [glöplog]
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as such, i'm glad doom stopped making demos ages ago, as this reduces the chance of me, purely by accident, actually showing them to people. we wouldn't want that to happen, now wouldn't we!
Yes, "showing a demo to someone" is exactly the same as using some of the visuals at a live DJ event. I'm glad you understand that there is no difference at all.
you are all free to use any material released by Indianas Condomos.
if you care, add cc license (or even just a few words on the .txt) to your demo.
rezip old prods if you must or simply put a mention on your website.
if one is comercially using a product he is obliged (in most countries atleast) to do a mininum search on its author to try and obtain right to use (or find a statement allowing free use)
undefined/unspecified/unknown licensing may or may not == public domain.
if you want to be safe with what ppl are legally allowed to do with your work then clearly mention it along with the release.
if you havent bothered then dont complain about unwritten rules, there is no legal system for this issue on most countries.
on the other hand, plenty of people are waging this "war" between the right to free culture and the right to free capitalism control (including patents and general intellectual property).
and this is a totally fucked up issue to debate under, so please educate yourself on the matter before spitting your comment to the table.
bottomline, if you care about what others do with the stuff you carelessly placed online, then get educated, goggling for lessig is a nice place to start.
im personally pro cc by-nc-sa to all my work
even though the license still has a few loopholes, but its better than void.
forcing people to assign cc licenses to all work uploaded was another of scene.org ongoing projects that didnt go anywhere due to lack of personal time. if anyone cares enough to bother saving the scene, you should mail the staff and get working.
2 cents
rezip old prods if you must or simply put a mention on your website.
if one is comercially using a product he is obliged (in most countries atleast) to do a mininum search on its author to try and obtain right to use (or find a statement allowing free use)
undefined/unspecified/unknown licensing may or may not == public domain.
if you want to be safe with what ppl are legally allowed to do with your work then clearly mention it along with the release.
if you havent bothered then dont complain about unwritten rules, there is no legal system for this issue on most countries.
on the other hand, plenty of people are waging this "war" between the right to free culture and the right to free capitalism control (including patents and general intellectual property).
and this is a totally fucked up issue to debate under, so please educate yourself on the matter before spitting your comment to the table.
bottomline, if you care about what others do with the stuff you carelessly placed online, then get educated, goggling for lessig is a nice place to start.
im personally pro cc by-nc-sa to all my work
even though the license still has a few loopholes, but its better than void.
forcing people to assign cc licenses to all work uploaded was another of scene.org ongoing projects that didnt go anywhere due to lack of personal time. if anyone cares enough to bother saving the scene, you should mail the staff and get working.
2 cents
Part of what makes demos special, at least for me, is the connection between the music and the visuals. Take one of them away, and you're left with something that was not the original authors intent. Apart from that, Smash has leading.
ps: You American-oriented the-whole-world-is-America thinking non-intercontinental being you! Public domain does not exist anywhere but in the States!
Nowadays, in most parts of the world a work is copyrighted unless you explicitly put it in the public domain (and yes, decipher, PD does exist everywhere where copyright exist. The whole point of copyright is to eventually land in the public domain; of course, Disney and the record industry think differently)
So, if a work has no license, you are not allowed to use it in any way. (Unless you can prove that everyone involved - and I mean everyone - is dead for at least 75 years)
So, if a work has no license, you are not allowed to use it in any way. (Unless you can prove that everyone involved - and I mean everyone - is dead for at least 75 years)
Oh, IANAL
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bottomline, if you care about what others do with the stuff you carelessly placed online, then get educated, goggling for lessig is a nice place to start.
im personally pro cc by-nc-sa to all my work
PS: So I can take your stuff, put some hardcore racist nazi propaganda under it and distrubute it under cc by-nc-sa as well.
Oh - and because of the license I'll put *YOUR* name under it :-)
Good choice..
torus: If you do that, you are more likely to commit a hate crime ("Volksverhetzung").
if you really thought to recieve a "clear" aswer, you asked at the wrong place :)
The old rule is : As long you dont make benefits with it ... :)
The old rule is : As long you dont make benefits with it ... :)
(committing a..)
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undefined/unspecified/unknown licensing may or may not == public domain.
And to elaborate:
undefined/unspecified/unknown licensing == copyrighted.
At least in 99% of all places. Details. But I don't think you need to be worried about penalties if you're using demoscene material for non-profit purposes as there are hardly any damages or lost profits to sue over. If you respect the authors' wishes when they find out (somehow sceners always find out) there probably won't even be any hard feelings. But almost everywhere in the world, unless you explicitly give the rights away (and as long as your work isn't derivative, etc.) you own the rights to anything you create, and can dictate how it is used. The exception is "fair use", which means commentary, parody, review, and that sort of thing. AFAIK you even retain the rights to your own works if you release them anonymously.
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So I can take your stuff, put some hardcore racist nazi propaganda under it and distrubute it under cc by-nc-sa as well.
Oh - and because of the license I'll put *YOUR* name under it :-)
Good choice..
You can, but it would be in violation of the license:
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You may only use the credit required by this Section for the purpose of attribution in the manner set out above and, by exercising Your rights under this License, You may not implicitly or explicitly assert or imply any connection with, sponsorship or endorsement by the Original Author, Licensor and/or Attribution Parties, as appropriate, of You or Your use of the Work, without the separate, express prior written permission of the Original Author, Licensor and/or Attribution Parties.
What's more interesting is the question what's meant by "non commercial". Is it commercial if you show the work/play the music at your companies xmas party? What about using it to recruit new employees or using it as a case study for your design company? To each question, some will answer "that's commercial" while others will say "no"
gloom, yes, i'm agreed with you that music is an important part of the demo. because of that we will show two pc demosets (with sound!) before and after live dj acts, not during them. the target is to attract people and spread demoscene culture.
of course, every act is about selfpromotion, but we respect the demoauthors: we asked a permission and the demos will be shown uncut, with all intro and epilogue parts, so we promote not only ourselves acting live, we promote the demoscene too.
of course, every act is about selfpromotion, but we respect the demoauthors: we asked a permission and the demos will be shown uncut, with all intro and epilogue parts, so we promote not only ourselves acting live, we promote the demoscene too.
There's no way in hell a demoscener could win a legal process for your showing their material in any way, commercial or not.
The Bear is always a crowdpleaser! ;-)
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There's no way in hell a demoscener could win a legal process for your showing their material in any way, commercial or not.
Why not?
Just my $0.02: For all MindCandy DVDs (and the upcoming MC3 Blu-ray/DVD), we have **always** contacted at least one member of the demogroup (preferably all of them!) and not only asked for their permission, but asked for their commentary and also addresses where we could send free DVDs for their permission. In other words, it is the right thing to simply not be evil. We have been refused permission before, and have honored their request.
If the work doesn't have a specific license listed, ASK. Don't just assume.
If the work doesn't have a specific license listed, ASK. Don't just assume.
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Why not?
Kidding me?
demoparties are paid events. orgas show work from others during demoshows. meaning, they EARN MONEY from SOMEONE ELSE'S WORK!!
every demoparty should ask authors for permission!!!
my two EUROcents
every demoparty should ask authors for permission!!!
my two EUROcents
Yeah, let's all make a big deal out of this kid wanting to show some demos to his friends at a local party! That's the outreach spirit we need!
Dude, you don't get it. Nowadays you need this to make a demo:
Just show BITS prods.
("There's no way in hell a demoscener could win a legal process for your showing their material in any way, commercial or not.")
doom: The non-trolling answer that Stefan probably isn't thinking of is: "because any act of copyright infringement that's blatant enough to be worth going to court over, will be settled out-of-court by any defendant with half a brain". Same reason that the GPL was never tested in court until a year or two ago.
(Alternatively, if you count a favourable out-of-court settlement as "winning a legal process", then it's *probably* already happened - Tempest vs Timbaland, obviously)
doom: The non-trolling answer that Stefan probably isn't thinking of is: "because any act of copyright infringement that's blatant enough to be worth going to court over, will be settled out-of-court by any defendant with half a brain". Same reason that the GPL was never tested in court until a year or two ago.
(Alternatively, if you count a favourable out-of-court settlement as "winning a legal process", then it's *probably* already happened - Tempest vs Timbaland, obviously)
But does permission need to ask you to use non commercial events in demovisuals?