▲ | edgineer 12 hours ago | |
I'm interested in hearing more about the evolution of copyright law wrt computer media in Spain. I see an article from 2001 describing how compiled software was not copyrightable in Spain at that time. [0] From [1] I see that individual file sharing, except for software, is allowed there. Having seen how Sweden changed their copyright law in response to the Pirate Bay website [2], I wish everyone knew that it wasn't always this way, and that states maintain their own rules. The idea that "no one shall copy any corporation's media, ever" is a recent propaganda success. [0] https://www.mondaq.com/copyright/14472/technology-protection... [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Legal_aspects_of_file_sharing | ||
▲ | AshamedCaptain 9 hours ago | parent [-] | |
> I see an article from 2001 describing how compiled software was not copyrightable in Spain at that time Compiled software is not copyrightable in any country that I know of. Compilation is not an original creative process. The original software is copyrightable, and compiling it creates a (protected) derived work of it. > I see that individual file sharing, except for software, is allowed there. The Pirate Bay is censored in Spain as much as it is on France. |