> Are you really sure? I am not a lawyer, but if there are no restrictions > listed then it seems to me there are no restrictions. This might vary by country, but at least in my country (Netherlands) everything that is 1. made public 2. falls under the set of things that is subject to copyright law *is* copyrighted (or more precise: subject to copyright law). No (c) needed, AFAIK not even an option not to be subjec t to copyright law. (Declaring it 'free for all' does not remove the copyright; it just gives a license to everyone, which might be the same in practice but definitely not to a lawyer). And for those who think that Dutch law is irrelevant to for instance a USA resident: AFAIK by international treaty nearly all countries respect their individual copyright laws. So far the law theory. Whether this is enforceable in practice is something very different... -- Wouter van Ooijen -- ------------------------------------------- Van Ooijen Technische Informatica: www.voti.nl consultancy, development, PICmicro products docent Hogeschool van Utrecht: www.voti.nl/hvu -- http://www.piclist.com PIC/SX FAQ & list archive View/change your membership options at http://mailman.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/piclist