Gee, I'm usually the lawyer. I stand corrected on this point.
-----Original Message----- From: Scott Bradner [SMTP:sob@HARVARD.EDU] Sent: Wednesday, May 31, 2000 10:56 AM To: ITU-SG16@MAILBAG.INTEL.COM Subject: Re: H.323 Annex O
Chip Sharp further made it clear in his email the problems of using the
IETF
drafts if the authors cannot participate in the ITU meetings no matter whether there is IPR or not.
lets be careful here -
current Copyright law says there is always Copyright IPR in any document even if the document has no copyright statement on it.
the IETF requires that authors of IETF documents give the IETF (actually ISOC for legal reasons) the right to publish the douments, allow others to publish the documents as-is, and, in most cases, the right to make derivative works within the IETF standards process - the author retains all other rights
the IETF can not grant the right for any other organization to make derivative rigts because we do not get that right from the authors
but the authors can give their own OK if they want
that said, I do not think its a real good idea to have two organizations working off the same base documents to come up with different results - it just confuses the community - so I would rather that one organization take the token to lead but that people from both organizations work together if possible
Scott
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Tom-PT Taylor