On 8/20/2015 9:47 AM, Paul Koning wrote:
> On Aug 20, 2015, at 10:30 AM, Jay Jaeger <cube1 at charter.net> wrote:
>
>
>
> On 8/20/2015 3:32 AM, Randy Dawson wrote:
>> Who picked this up -
>>
>> I may have some cash for the buyer to mate it with my new ASR33, on
its
way via crate and freight.
>>
>> Anybody got debug and startup tips on the 33, it probably has been
siting
for a while.
>> (like who has the melted hammer
replacements and such, tape and paper
sources)
>>
>> I assume all the 8K, 4K BASICs are in public domain by now. The demo
for
the kids will be the 15 minutes of paper tape, followed by READY.
Randy
Bad assumption. Things that were actually registered even if there was
no notice, or published with a copyright notice would still be protected
under U.S. copyright.
Depending on when. If it was published without notice, the key question
is
whether publication occurred before Jan 1, 1978, or after. After,
notice does not matter; before, lack of notice means no copyright.
Even before, if it was registered, then it would be covered, even if
there was no notice.