Template:Derived information: Difference between revisions

From The Jolly Contrarian
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Created page with "{{confiprov|Derived information}}, the fecund fruits of the {{confiprov|receiver}}’s own creative juice and analytical energy, is in no sense proprietary to the {{confiprov|...")
 
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
{{confiprov|Derived information}}, the fecund fruits of the {{confiprov|receiver}}’s own creative juice and analytical energy, is in no sense proprietary to the {{confiprov|disclosing party}}, and may indeed be as commercially sensitive to the {{confiprov|receiving party}} as the material the disclosing party gave, and on which it was based, it in the first place. Think Paul’s middle eight about having a shave and catching the bus in ''A Day in the Life''. We are in danger of getting into the [[jurisprudence|jurisprudential]] wisdom of treating intellectual endeavour as if it were tangible property - but let’s not go there just not<ref>Those who can’t resist the siren call, start with Larwence Lessig’s fabulous Code 2.0.</ref>
{{confiprov|Derived information}}, the fecund fruits of the {{confiprov|receiver}}’s own creative juice and analytical energy, is in no sense proprietary to the {{confiprov|disclosing party}}, and may indeed be as commercially sensitive to the {{confiprov|receiving party}} as the material the disclosing party gave, and on which it was based, it in the first place. Think Paul’s middle eight about having a shave and catching the bus in ''A Day in the Life''. We are in danger of getting into the [[jurisprudence|jurisprudential]] wisdom of treating intellectual endeavour as if it were tangible property - but let’s not go there just not<ref>Those who can’t resist the siren call, start with [[Lawrence Lessig]]’s fabulous {{br|Code: Version 2.0}}.</ref>

Revision as of 09:25, 13 May 2019

Derived information, the fecund fruits of the receiver’s own creative juice and analytical energy, is in no sense proprietary to the disclosing party, and may indeed be as commercially sensitive to the receiving party as the material the disclosing party gave, and on which it was based, it in the first place. Think Paul’s middle eight about having a shave and catching the bus in A Day in the Life. We are in danger of getting into the jurisprudential wisdom of treating intellectual endeavour as if it were tangible property - but let’s not go there just not[1]

  1. Those who can’t resist the siren call, start with Lawrence Lessig’s fabulous Code: Version 2.0.