From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 Date: Mon, 4 Sep 1995 11:14:22 -0400 From: presotto@plan9.att.com presotto@plan9.att.com Subject: Why? Topicbox-Message-UUID: 1f8aa3aa-eac8-11e9-9e20-41e7f4b1d025 Message-ID: <19950904151422.FFaYidRhedughy4FpY0ClKb7YUKNsrfUIvwjBpM_Ad4@z> >How strictly is "organisation" defined? If a group of friends form an >informal Plan 9 Hackers' Club, can they legally install Plan 9 on their >machines from the same CD provided that they don't make any commercial use >of it? Is it one of those gray areas, like copying 10-year-old Commodore >games or taping TV programs? Given that lawyers wrote the license, I'ld bet my salary that its any entity that can be sued. This is, after all, a legal document. I assume that at the very least the organization has to have some sort of legal standing, i.e., that it has officers filed somewhere that are legally and financially liable. If you want, you can always send us a letter as the organization (letterhead and the whole deal) and we'll forward it to the lawyers. Remember though: some gray areas are best left that way.