Open Source Law 287
Russ Nelson writes "The U.S. Supreme Court just announced its refusal to review the 5th
Circuit's en banc decision that there can be no copyright of
privately authored laws offered to U.S. governmental bodies for adoption. The
model law itself may be copyrighted, but once it's adopted, the law
must be open source. The entire case is laid out on Peter Veeck's
page." Slashdot touched on this before, but never really covered this dispute in depth. Here's a nice legal summary of the case.
Here's an interesting quote (Score:5, Insightful)
Fascinating, isn't it?
Re:Here's an interesting quote (Score:2)
http://regionalweb.texoma.net/cr/VEEKbrief.html (Score:2)
Taken from Ohio's Amicus briefs (I hope I have that right).
Re:Here's an interesting quote (Score:5, Interesting)
"The Primary Purpose of Copyright Law is not to Provide a Benefit to Authors, But to Provide the Public With Access to Authors' Works."
Fascinating, isn't it?
More than fascinating... anyone who follows yro.slashdot or any copywright laws could pull some very helpful court decisions from this one statement alone. Heck, it sort of infers that P2P is legal, especially with copywrighted works. Obviously, that wouldn't stand up in another case, but it's very interesting nevertheless.
Re:Here's an interesting quote (Score:3, Interesting)
anyone who follows yro.slashdot or any copywright laws could pull some very helpful court decisions from this one statement alone. Heck, it sort of [implies] that P2P is legal, especially with copywrighted works.
I didn't see this quote in the decision or the analysis, but if I'm to assume it's there then I also would assume that the argument runs in the vein of decidi
Re:Here's an interesting quote (Score:2)
Speakers imply, listeners infer. -- Dct. Robert Goran, Major Crime Squad
Re:Here's an interesting quote (Score:2)
I don't see where you got this from. Basically a company creates a work, gets it published into law that you and I has to follow, and then says, you must pay us to be able to know what the law is so you can follow it. If you want to create a law, and have any ability to enforce it, I would hope that people can be allowed to see what the law sa
Re:Here's an interesting quote (Score:4, Insightful)
No, it doesn't. Copyright provides public access to authors' works precisely by protecting it, much in the same way that patents are supposed to protect inventions (despite the patent system being hopelessly broken and ransacked by large corporate interests).
It permits authors to publish stuff - i.e., make it public - without fear of being ripped off.
Re:Here's an interesting quote (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Here's an interesting quote (Score:2)
what would that mean exactly? that every time someone made a public address that cited the law, that they would have to pay royalties to the writer?
Lawyers would have to pay royalties to practice certain kinds of law?
I could just imagine "we dont defend against this firm, because they paid 300 thousand to actually be told what the law is, we cannot therefor know that law since we did not pay the legal royalties on it."
That leaves m
Re:Here's an interesting quote (Score:2)
You mean just like how you have to pay royalties for all the copyrighted works you cite in a paper?
Re:Here's an interesting quote (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm surprised that copyrighted laws are news to so many people. I've been frustrated for years that while you can look up almost all of our local munciple code on line, the building code sections are not published, because they incorporate by reference material copyrighted by the standards organizations. Check your own local code websites and I bet you'll find the same thing.
This odd situation isn't new; this has been standard practice for years. But nobody really noticed until we came to expect instant internet access to government information, since all local governments have copies of the copyrighted building codes available for inspection in the office.
There are some interesting implications of this ruling for software; for example, if a government agency requires software to interoperate with a proprietary standard (e.g., Word document format)....
True Open Law (Score:5, Insightful)
When dealing with such a complex subject as building codes, having the county/city buy a few copies for the courthouse/city hall and a few more for each library, and 'incorporating by reference' made some kind of sense. But now we have the technology to communicate law for virtually zero transaction cost, so I propose this simple idea for governments to consider enacting if they want to open up the whole business of law to make it accessible to the citizenry:
Making the law open to the people electronically will be far cheaper and effective than doing it by just printing fat books that sit in law libraries.Re:True Open Law (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Re:True Open Law (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Here's an interesting quote (Score:3, Informative)
Well, it basically means that you can't go around making copies of the law itself. If you need a copy, you will have to order it from someone who is authorised to make copies, and you will presumably have to pay for it.
Traditionally, this has been the case for large codes such as building codes or electrical codes. These are law, and you can go down to your local branch of government (city hall, legislature, etc) and read the copy they have there, but you can't photocopy the
Re:Here's an interesting quote (Score:3, Interesting)
What I am saying is that this is the way these laws have been developed; the existing trade-off allowed goverments to adopt as law very high quality building codes, electrical codes, etc., at almost no cost.
If this had not been the case, then goverments would have had to spend a lot of money to commission specialists to write these codes for them. I am not
Re:Here's another interesting quote (Score:4, Insightful)
- James Madison (Fourth President of the United States)
while making sure laws remain open is a good and necessary thing to maintain a transparent state with de jure authority, it only goes so far. if the laws are open but the interests, motivations and business dealings of lawmakers remain opaque then the openess is not complete.
mit (yep, the massachussets institute of technology) has been running a site for a while now dedicated to allowing citizens to monitor and research their legislators (and executives). the mission statement says it all:
To empower citizens by providing a single, comprehensive, easy-to-use repository of information on individuals, organizations, and corporations related to the government of the United States of America.
To allow citizens to submit intelligence about government-related issues, while maintaining their anonymity. To allow members of the government a chance to participate in the process.
the full site is at: http://opengov.media.mit.edu/ [mit.edu]
it's a good read.
Re:Here's an interesting quote (Score:2, Insightful)
Surely it has a right to some recompense (even if only a reimbursement of reasonable costs) for its input?
I would propose that the body that first enacts the standards into law should ensure that the producer of the standards is not out of pocket.
Of course, if SBBI has just produced a derivative work of existing (public domain) building regs, then screw 'em, and may they rot in hell for making me defend their position in any
Re:Here's an interesting quote (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Here's an interesting quote (Score:3, Interesting)
Well, aside from getting illegal kickbacks from the industries who benefit from the laws like any other public servant, I don't see where you'd say they have a "right" (read: entitlement) to some benefits of the law. Why would they, isn't good faith participation in the public sector reward enough? If they're so concerned about their standards being used without compensation, then they can sue to keep
Re:Here's an interesting quote (Score:3, Interesting)
I think that SBCCI, and the other building-code organizations, thought they had the ultimate legal monopoly. By convincing municipalities to enact building codes that amount to "see SBCCI's code," they'd retain the copyright and soak every Joe Handyman that wanted to repair a li
In other news. (Score:3, Insightful)
Link renders bad on Mozilla? (Score:2, Offtopic)
http://www.gtwassociates.com/answers/veeck.htm [gtwassociates.com]
Re:Link renders bad on Mozilla? (Score:2)
Re:Link renders bad on Mozilla? (Score:2)
lame text fixed here (Score:3, Informative)
In the Supreme Court of the United States
Southern Building Code Congress International, Inc, Petitioner
v.
Peter Veeck, D/B/A Regional Web
No. 02-355
Update June 3065, 2003
Summary
On June 27 the Supreme Supreme Court decided not to hear an appeal of the Fifth Circuit court June 7, 2002 decision in Veeck vs. SBCCI No. 99-40632 that when a copyrighted standard or code is referenced into law (particularly if it thereby becomes "the law
My email to them: (Score:2, Interesting)
I am writing to inform you the web page listed in the subject line is completely illegible unless using Internet Explorer, as the text of the page is confined to a narrow column only a few words wide, with wide blank spaces on either side. A quick look at the source for the page reveals that the text has on both sides columns where the width is set to 720 pixels. As a programmer and web developer, I understand the difficulty in developing web pages for more than one browser, but your home p
Was this a joke? (Score:2)
then they tried to copyright laws??? Give me a break.
Re:Was this a joke? (Score:5, Insightful)
A private organization creates some specifications for building. They hold the copyright on this, as they are the creators.
The organization offers the codes to municipal governments for adoption into law.
The private organization wants to keep the copyright over the material itself. They don't want to lose control of these specifications; if that happened then another individual or private organization could freely use the specifications in their own work (such as in building handbook).
The court decided that since the private organization in question had offered the specifications to governments for use, they didn't retain ownership over what was adopted into law.
Now I think the courts made a wise decision. But, you know, it's not a cut-and-dried issue; you can make arguments for both sides. The plaintiffs in this aren't trying to copyright laws--their copyright existed BEFORE the laws were enacted. The question is whether their copyright survives the process of being adopted by governmental entities, and I know this is heresy on slashdot, but not every legal case is a matter of common sense--these are complicated issues.
Re:Was this a joke? (Score:4, Insightful)
The question is whether their copyright survives the process of being adopted by governmental entities
Sort of, but not exactly. The court agrees that their copyright survives the process of being adopted by government entities. However, it also becomes an uncopyrightable fact, in its entirety and without modification.
It's kind of an anomoly of copyright law. If two people independently come up with the exact same poem (for instance), they both have independent copyrights on the exact same text. This ruling creates something similar. As law, it is public domain, but as model codes, the copyright stands.
Re:Was this a joke? (Score:2)
You (the defendant): I demand to know the charges against me and what law I've violated!
Prosecutor: Sorry; the law is copyrighted, and we don't have signed permission from the copyright owner to give you a copy of that information.
Re:Was this a joke? (Score:2)
Imagine having to pay to obtain access to something you must comply with.
Only standards bodies are allowed to pull nonsense like that.
Now if we can only get some municipality to legislate compliance...
Summary? (Score:2)
Here is a summary... (Score:2, Insightful)
The standards setting organization is in the business of creating "model" codes. This is common. A better known example would be the Model Penal Code which is a set of proposed criminal laws created by the American Law Institute... in this case, the group was creating model codes for buildings (plumbing, electric, etc.) to be enacted by cities.
So, you have an organization that creates this work with the in
Re:Summary? (Score:3, Informative)
SBCCI threatened to sue him for publishing the codes. Peter Veeck sued first for a declaratory judgment in a Texas federal court. He probably did this to eliminate the risk that they would drag him to federal court in Alabama (their location).
Enact Linux (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Enact Linux (Score:5, Insightful)
Slashbots are always quick to condemm copyright law and seldom realize that it is because of copyright law that things like Linux and BSD are able to be what they are.
Re:Enact Linux (Score:2)
Re:Enact Linux (Score:2)
You fail to realize that without copyright law, individuals and organizations wouldn't be able to restrict distribution, either, therefore abolishing the very problems that RMS created the GPL to address.
I've always thought of the GPL as "Copyleft". If "Copyright" sits at one extreme, "Copyleft" sits on the other essentially using Copyright law against itself. Public domain (the complete non-existance of "expressive monopolies") sits comfortably in the center.
Read Stallman's works: it's very clear that
Re:Enact Linux (Score:2)
Getting rid of copyright is only one part of what RMS wants. He always wants to make it illegal to distribute a binary without source code. If copyright law (and thus the GPL) was to be declared invalid today, there would be nothing stopping anyone from distributing Linux binaries and refusing to distri
Re:Enact Linux (Score:2)
Re:Enact Linux (Score:2)
www.fsf.org (Score:2)
Re:Enact Linux (Score:2)
Re:Enact Linux (Score:5, Insightful)
If there were no copyright law, any source code would leak out. Evil Corporation Inc. incorporates "our" free code into their process? No problem; sooner or later there would be employees that are either disgruntled or sympathetic to The Cause; their code would leak out and become public knowledge. Since there is no copyright law, there is no culpability for any free software hacker who uses this code, regardless of whether or not the employee violated an NDA or broke any laws while leaking the code.
The GPL plays a role in free software, but only because of the way our present copright law is written. Remove copyright and you remove the necessity for the GPL. Remember that in the "good ol' days" that RMS talks about at MIT, there effectively was no copyright; customers could get whatever source code they wanted, and would contribute any improvements back to the manufacturer and the user community. It was only because some manufacturer (of a printer?) refused to divulge the source that RMS got launched on Gnu.
Note: nowhere in this article is there any claim or statement about whether or not Gnu and/or RMS are good or evil; just some inferences and history.
Re:Enact Linux (Score:2)
Really? So what prevents company X from taking Open Source code and inserting into product Y without giving credit or releasing the modifications?
No copyright would basically turn the software world into a BSD style license.
How many more times must we hear this stupid meme? (Score:2)
This statement is highly misleading. It's like saying if it weren't for tyrants we wouldn't have revolutions. Well, f'ing duh! If we didn't have tyrants revolutions wouldn't be necessary!
Copyright law is used by the GPL to protect itself from... drumroll please... copyright law. The parent poster fails to understand this recursive natur
Re:How many more times must we hear this stupid me (Score:2)
You see then you would have no GPL. Without a GPL company X would take source code and then insert it into product Y without giving credit, paying money, or re-releasing the source code. Which would violate the GPL and turn all open source products into, effectively, BSD licenses.
Yep. I sure don't get it.
Just like BSD, except... (Score:2)
Re:Enact Linux (Score:2)
Not true... according to the material at this site, the Solicitor General is limiting the effect to organizations. So for any code for which an individual (a 'natural person') owns the copyright, that copyright can't be removed by incorporation into a law.
You see, the USC specifically prohibits the kind of action you're talking about, which is why I'm a little confused about the Solicitor's reasoning . He seems to be spli
BAD IDEA (Score:2)
If you did that, SCO could make OpenLinux as closed as OpenServer. We couldn't do a damn thing about it.
What would the founding fathers think? (Score:4, Informative)
Monopoly of idea as a "Natural" right (Score:2)
Maybe Hamilton, maybe Madison; but Jefferson was not party to the constitutional convention.
And considering that (as you correctly quote) he was of the "information wants to free" crowd, it makes it even less likely that he wrote the copyright and patent clause, although what you quote [uchicago.edu] was written 26 years after the US constitution and may reflect a change of heart.
Quoting more from the same do
Mod Parent Down: Stock Troll (Score:2)
The parent post is a stock troll, originally appearing on Kuro5hin, and gets slipped in here from time to time. It is a willful misrepresentation of Jefferson's views.
Schwab
Re:What would the founding fathers think? (Score:2)
The phrase "writers would not write," can just as easily mean "some writers would not write," as well as "no writers would write." The OP perhaps should have been a little more specific, but his statement wasn't incorrect.
Public Domain vs OpenSource (Score:5, Insightful)
Open Source laws are better. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Public Domain vs OpenSource (Score:2)
Good lord (Score:2)
That site is ugly. Is it just mozilla, or does eveyone have the problem of all the text being in a 20 character column?
Anyway, doesn't that seem like common sense? How could a law not be public? If a law was copyrighted, does that mean I couldn't reproduce it for the purposes of telling people the laws? What if I gave a (paid) class on laws to be careful of (obscure laws, maybe)?
A breath of fresh air as someone shows our legal system hasn't gone completely insane...
Re:Good lord (Score:2)
Re:Good lord (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
Open sourcing isn't the issue (Score:4, Funny)
This is Socialism at its worst (Score:5, Funny)
Without private ownership of our laws, what incentive will there be for corporations to write innovative new laws? Now that there is no way for businesses to make money writing laws, our nation's lawmaking process is going to wither up and die.
"Open source" (Score:5, Informative)
The law is public domain. Use the correct term, desire for buzzword compliance notwithstanding.
Re:"Open source" (Score:4, Insightful)
But it's so much more fun to use inaccurate words! Lets start with the GNU/Congress jokes now. They really aren't funny, but people will still say them.
Re:"Open source" (Score:2)
Better let's start the flame BSDL laws vs GPL laws. Oh, and how would LGPL make laws more reusable?
"open source" laws (Score:4, Insightful)
A much better term would be that these laws enter the public domain.
Re:"open source" laws (Score:2)
Laws aren't like open source computer code that can be tinkered with by anybody with the proper knowhow.
Sure they are! "Anybody with the proper knowhow" is an activist judiciary. Read just about anything about the Supreme Court and you'll soon realize that they get to tinker a WHOLE lot.
Anybody can tinker, but try getting 'em ADOPTED (Score:2)
But they CAN be! ANYBODY can tinker with them. Use the courts for a debugger. Petition an administrative body. Submit samples to a legislator (with or without wining-and-dining him). Write an initiative.
Laws are altered by a constitutionally defined procedure by the various branches of our government.
Precicely.
Anybody can WRITE them. Getting them ADOPTED is a whole 'nother story.
Easier to read mirror: (Score:4, Informative)
GOOD!!! (Score:5, Interesting)
Ignorance would have to be an acceptable defence.
It would allow lawyers to rambus the legal system.
Seinfeld described lawyers as those annoying people that actually read the back of the box for the odd rules in the game. Imagine if they could now cut out parts of the rules and hide them.
Re:GOOD!!! (Score:2)
Imagine if they could now cut out parts of the rules and hide them.
They don't have to hide them. They're effectively hidden already- there are so many laws, and they're so complex, written in such a confusing manner, etc- that the average citizen has no chance in HELL of even possibly knowing a fraction of a percent of them, much less understanding them.
Like the "open source" software arena, we need simplification and consolidation VERY, VERY badly.
The law isn't secret. It's just complicated. (Score:4, Insightful)
Fortunately, the average citizen has no chance in HELL of ever needing to know most of them. Quick! What's the statutory quorum for a meeting of your local water board? How many days before trial can you file a motion for summary judgment in your state? How many parts per million of formaldehyde can you have in crazy glue? Answer: who cares? If for some reason it matters to you, you can go and seek *that particular fact* out. Or hire a professional to find it out for you. But the average reader sitting in his chair reading Slashdot is not going to go to jail over his ignorance of these matters.
The laws that *matter* on a day to day basis are the ordinary criminal laws - and you already know those. Don't run anybody over. Don't shoplift. Don't steal money that somebody asked you to look after.
The law isn't secret. It's just complicated. It's complicated because the scope of human interactions is complicated. Some people buy houses from each other. Some people sail ships in waters that don't belong to any country. Some people steal things in complicated ways. Some people die and ask for unusual things to be done with their property afterwards.
The legislature's job is to make laws as clearly as possible to help keep all this running smoothly. The lobbyist's job is to suggest legislation, or keep an eye on others peoples' suggestions, in hopes that laws favorable to them will be created. (And legislators listen to them because it's hard to be an expert in both, say, environmental water quality regulation and securities oversight. Lobbyists have sway not merely because they have money, but because they have expertise which they can share with legislators. Wise legislators, of course, listen to both sides.) The judge's job is to interpret the legislature's laws, as well as the traditions passed down from earlier judges. The appellate judge's job is to create law in the cracks where the legislature hasn't, like putty joining everything together. The lawyer's job is to make sense of all this and act as an interface between the system and an individual person.
None of this is mysterious. And none of it is a conspiracy against you. Nobody likes having complicated laws. It's a pain in the ass for judges, and for lawyers, and for ordinary citizens. Want to know why so many corporations are based in Delaware? It's because they have really good corporate laws that are straightforward and easy to understand. Makes it a good place to set up shop.
ASA
Complexity of the law (Score:3, Interesting)
Trial procedures in my state, for instance, are governed by the state Rules of Civil Procedure with some local rules in effect county by county. They seem like water to a fish to me now -- I barely notice them. Bef
Sympathize but... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Sympathize but... (Score:2)
In the case stated, it seems obvious that the organisation itself promoted the adoption of the standard into law, and was then surprised and upset by the result (loss of copyright).
But what about the situation where someone else promotes the adoption of a standard as law?
How would the state compensate the authors of the standard?
In the UK, we have the BSI, which is responsible for the authoring of standards in all sorts of areas, and then we have laws (su
Re:Sympathize but... (Score:2)
I would think the correct procedure would be to negotiate: "we'd like to make your standard law, will you permit?" They might agree for a fee, if not, or if the fee's unreasonable, then the legal body can do their own. Probably it would be cheaper to
Government should bear the cost (Score:3, Insightful)
Yes, there is a cost in establishing certain standards. If you wish these standards to become law, you either must be willing to bear the cost or work with the government to
Re:Sympathize but... (Score:2)
I'm ambivalent about this decision - yes, laws are public domain, but to deprive organisations that exist for the public good of income is surely bad."
Please re-read what you wrote.
To allow LAWS to be kept private is tyrrany. How do you protest a law you feel is unjust if you can't re-publish it without the permission of the copyright holder?
And yes, this is possible in building codes... Wha
Misuse of "Open Source" (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Misuse of "Open Source" (Score:5, Funny)
For you MSCEs out there
Menu Bar -> Edit -> Search & Replace -> Search For: Open Source -> Replace With: in the public domain -> "It looks like your Searching and Replacing" -> Right clicn, Hide Asistant -> Start from Begining on Document -> Ok -> Ok -> Ok -> Ok -> Ok -> Ok -> Ok
Quick!!!! (Score:2)
Referenced article (Score:2, Insightful)
say is that
the referenced
article is one
nice column.
That's for
sure.
Re:Referenced article (Score:3, Funny)
fine
in
IE.
Still,
as
a
Mozilla
user,
I
was
disappoi
If a law was copyrighted... (Score:2, Insightful)
Hypocracy? (Score:2)
You can't copy right fact (Score:2, Informative)
Re:You can't copy right fact (Score:2)
* The US government makes a nice little living selling periodicals and Government documents (government document offices are neat little places). Shouldn't the US Geological Survey of Western States for Blue Topaz be available free? It was our tax money?
* The sta
Re:You can't copy right fact (Score:4, Informative)
There you can search or browse through all editions of the Federal Register from 1994 to now. You can also:
Access to the information is free. If you want an official hardcopy version, you have to pay for it.
Re:You can't copy right fact (Score:3, Insightful)
Orbit nine heavenly bodies
And each
Reflects the morning light differently
Across its day side
There...I've just come up with some incredibly crappy free-verse poetry that also happens to be factual in nature. Furthermore, I claim copyright on the poetry. Does this mean I've also laid copyright to the fact? Bollocks! Of course not. As you pointed out, it's impossible to copyright fact.
The statement of fact, on the other hand, can be copyrighted. I can copyright the poem a
Section 105 of the 1976 Copyright acts covers this (Score:4, Informative)
United States Government Copyright protection under this title is not available for any work of the United States Government, but the United States Government is not precluded from receiving and holding copyrights transferred to it by assignment, bequest, or otherwise. If public interest groups draft model laws that they want enacted, they should be prepared to lose any copyright in those model laws if, in fact, they get adopted. What the hell would they want to keep the copyright for, anyway? Other than cock-strocking.
I suppose, however, that applies only to US government works and not US State Government works. Just another reason why we don't need states, and they sure as hell shouldn't have any rights. When has "state's rights" ever been used as an argument for anything worthy and moral?
Re:Section 105 of the 1976 Copyright acts covers t (Score:2)
That's kind of funny. I'm going to assume you haven't had a government class yet. Here's a rough list:
Copyright Please Read (Score:3, Insightful)
Now Copyright does Not mean that all stuff you have the right to charge money on. Once decared public domain all right to charge money for it are gone. As in this case they said that laws once passed were public domain. This mean If I think up a good law and someone wants to pass it for the first time at least they have to give me credit unless I tell them that they can take the credit.
Now if it might be required to buy me out or hire me or do something to get the law. What do you think some of the public servents get payed to do.
Basicly Copyright does go on. Now a goverment might try to place a law with a read fee but this is not good as if this is required the best you could get in court
judge: did you know about xyz law.
defendat: No I could not afford to pay the fee to find out about it.
judge: You are Free to go.
Now the reason why is simple you can not be charged for doing something wrong if they was not a fair chance to find out about it. And the judge could not tell you the law with out paying the fee if the judge to tell you the law there is a fair chance that you would just get of with a warning and get to know the law for free anyhow.
Now lets get to the tricky bit there is no reson why laws could not be a licence simlar to gpl not this would have to be stated when the law is passed. That another ruling body (goverments) who wanted to use the law would have to buy it. But every one else could read it for free and use it for free so no Judge problem.
Now there is no reason why the law could not be rewrite by working backward how the law effected people and writing a new law that did the same thing just a different way. Basicly copyright is extramelly weak. And normally from a developers point of view can not afford code around.
Re:Copyright Please Read (Score:2, Interesting)
What's the motivation? (Score:3, Insightful)
Is it an altruistic urge to ensure the safety of the general public?
I submit that, if such an urge were the chief reason for writing a model building code, groups like SBCCI wouldn't care if people copied the code. After all, if you keep people from easily getting the code -- which is supposed to keep people safe -- you're encouraging people to be less safe. No code, no idea if you're doing it right.
What other motivation could there be?
By trying to assert copyright on the enacted model laws, groups like SBCCI show that money is a major motivation. As long as the drafting group holds a legally-recognized copyright, they can soak the populace for any amount they wish. People need access to these codes, whether it's a contractor building a skyscraper or a homeowner building a deck. If the only source for the text of the code is the drafting group, it's a huge opportunity for profit.
If you agree with my opinion that money, not safety, seems to be the biggest motivation for the drafters of model codes, consider this: The codes are frequently updated. When the code is updated, those who needed it must have purchased it again. I think that perhaps this might have lead to code revisions that weren't strictly necessary for safety, but rather, revisions that ensured everyone would need to buy a new copy of the code.
Kind of like how a lot of software upgrades work. Remember the days when word processors changed file formats with every major revision?
I hope this court decision will ensure that building codes are about safety, and not profit. Those who draft the code need to be concerned about safety first and foremost, not about the money to be made in publication.
Re:I may be just dumb, but... (Score:2)
Re:I may be just dumb, but... (Score:2)