home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Newsgroups: rec.games.programmer
- Path: sparky!uunet!spool.mu.edu!yale.edu!jvnc.net!phage!boutell
- From: boutell@isis.cshl.org (Tom Boutell)
- Subject: Re: Copyrights of old games...
- Message-ID: <BzM3JM.JJu@phage.cshl.org>
- Sender: news@phage.cshl.org
- Organization: Cold Spring Harbor Labs
- References: <1992Dec20.213844.12147@news2.cis.umn.edu> <2108@acf5.NYU.EDU> <1992Dec21.030635.15139@news2.cis.umn.edu>
- Date: Mon, 21 Dec 1992 13:45:21 GMT
- Lines: 33
-
- In article <1992Dec21.030635.15139@news2.cis.umn.edu> toddl@county.lmt.mn.org (Todd Lehman) writes:
- >copyrights on things like the Mean Value Theorem. And you wouldn't want
- >Dr. Mandelbrot to own the copyright to the Mandelbrot set just because he
- >discovered it. So why should the "inventors" of Tetris be allowed to own
- >the copyright to Tetris? I don't see the reasoning there.
-
- A copyright on the Mean Value Theorem would set back all mathematical
- and scientific efforts. A copyright on Tetris merely prevents you from
- stealing the look of somebody's game. Unless you've got some terribly
- important practical use in mind that justifies theft of the concept.
- I sure can't think of one.
-
- The Mean Value Theorem is of general use; so is the Mandelbrot set (though
- if patents, not copyrights, were applied, this wouldn't be so horrendous,
- as this grants the originator a few years of compensation - ie, they
- get a chance to make some money off their discovery - before everybody
- can rip them off).
-
- Do you think people would invest the same amount of effort in "discovering"
- (since you prefer the word) new games and going to the trouble to flesh
- them out if they knew they'd just be ripped off?
-
- You put the finger on it when you said it's the sort of game where "it's
- obvious once you see it." So's incandescent light. I, for one, think
- Edison was entitled to a decent share of profit before everybody duplicated
- his "obvious" "discovery".
-
- -T
-
- --
- Tom Boutell, boutell@cshl.org
-
- Clausthaler is the best non - alcoholic beer in the known universe.
-