Author: Pallav Nawani
Date: 21:25:54 02/15/05
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On February 15, 2005 at 21:49:45, Lance Perkins wrote: >Consider this scenario: > >You saw someone else's code, then you went out and wrote your own code, which >ended up to be like the other code. > >Even in this scenario, you could be violating the copyright of the other code. > >The only way around this is with the 'clean room' approach. If you want to make >a similar or compatible code, you should have not seen the other person's code. >Instead, somebody else would see it, describe to you what it does, then you go >and write the code. This is no different from the first case you have mentioned. Important are ideas, not code. Code is just an implementation. Whether you get the idea directly from looking the code, or whether you get it indirectly how does it matter? Unless, of course you _copy the implementation_. If you look at somebody's implementation and then go and write your own, assuming that it is not word by word copying and just changing the variable names, it is not a clone. At least not by my definition.
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