On Wed, 30 Mar 2016, Mouse wrote:
As I understand the term, the rights owner has to be
nonexistent or to
have proved unidentifiable or uncontactable (re which see below). The
case where the owner clearly exists but demonstrably does not care
about the software is, to my mind, a grey area.
Disunirregardless of whether it SHOULD be that way, most property changes
ownership, rather than be "un-owned" when the original owner is gone.
If the "legal owner" explicitly declares that they don't care, then it can
become public domain.
But, the legaal owner not responding to inquiries, not still having the
same address as 30 years ago, and not even necessarily showing up on a
simple Google search, does NOT take ownership away from them. When I
moved my office six blocks down the same street, one outfit declared my
company to be out of business, and that therefore my work was up for
grabs!
Copyright law
does NOT [...].
There is no single "copyright law". . . .
That said, what you say is true in almost all jursidictions today.
yes, I was speaking generaally, not the specifics, which do vary a lot.
Q: To what
extent are they making a "good faith" effort to contact
the "prior" (actually current) owners of the intellectual property
rights?
Yes. That.
To my mind, this is the most critical missing piece of information.
Since their definition does not mention it, I would be inclined to
assume they haven't bothered; if so, I consider their abandonware
definition to be sophistry, rigged in an attempt to make what they
happen to feel like doing sound a bit less unjustified.
MANY copyright holders really don't care, and would sign off certain
rights. When Sellam contacted George Morrow's widow about rights to the
little red book "Quotations From Chairman Morrow", she gladly signed them
over.
If a copyright owner doesn't respond to a demand to relinquish the rights,
that does NOT constitute release, although many wouldn't bother to object.
Of course, what relation any of this bears to what
_should_ be is a
question for philosophy and much disagreement and has - or at least
should have! - little-to-nothing with how people handle any software.
A significant shortening of the term of copyright for items with short
life, such as computer software would make sense. However, the laws don't
seem to be heading in that direction. "Don't mess with the mouse."