Post
by barr7430 » Mon Nov 18, 2013 1:15 pm
I think good old fashioned common sense should be the benchmark. I would be quite happy for someone to quote me or my work as long as they were not making any money out of it as the sole purpose. I cannot however speak for other authors or originators of material. The has been a degree of 'preciousness' here related to that which was not predictable. You may think that any publicity was good publicity, alas you would be wrong in that assumption. I am unsure why some people become so touchy about quoting from their work:
Copyright.. yup get that but if you are not lifting an entire work and are not making money out of it, then overprotective seems to be the watchword.
Otherwise, some authors, who of course make their money out of selling their books don't seem to be able to deal with people questioning their conclusions. The Bible is supposedly the word of God yet people question its truths, so where does that leave a book on how many men stood in lines, how far apart were the lines, what colour were their pants and did the have lace on their underwear or not. Bearing in mind none of the authors are 300 years old I would reckon a few questions were legit. I mean, what happened at the NoTW? Did anybody do it or not. That happened in the last 10 years and nobody can agree.
Keep me right boys and out of the claims courts.. apply common sense.
"If you think you can, or if you think you can't, you are probably right"
Henry Ford