Hogwash
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2009-10-19
, 14:48
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Posts: 369 |
Thanked: 191 times |
Joined on Sep 2009
@ Virginia
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#131
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2009-10-19
, 14:51
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Posts: 861 |
Thanked: 734 times |
Joined on Jan 2008
@ Nomadic
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#132
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This may be looking too far ahead, but I am wondering if it would be worth it to partner with one of the older companies that make Bible software for other platforms. For instance, Laridian currently partners with BEIKS to offer their content to the BlackBerry platform. They also announced today that they are partnering with Bits of God Software to make their library available on the Palm Pre.
If a Qt-based Bible reader would have access to a library the size of what Laridian or Olive Tree have to offer, it would be really good. I am not sure how open source you could still keep it though if this path was chosen.
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2009-10-19
, 14:55
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Posts: 111 |
Thanked: 80 times |
Joined on Oct 2009
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#133
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2009-10-19
, 15:16
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Posts: 320 |
Thanked: 108 times |
Joined on Oct 2009
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#134
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2009-10-19
, 15:20
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Posts: 1,559 |
Thanked: 1,786 times |
Joined on Oct 2009
@ Boston
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#135
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2009-10-19
, 16:57
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Posts: 861 |
Thanked: 734 times |
Joined on Jan 2008
@ Nomadic
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#136
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What I've done so far to get more translations into SWORD is to buy a hardcopy of the translation, then use a script to scrape BibleGateway.com and convert it into the OSIS format (one of the formats that SWORD uses). I'd rather not post the script, since it could be used to violate copyright, but thought I would mention the idea.
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2009-10-19
, 18:20
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Posts: 111 |
Thanked: 80 times |
Joined on Oct 2009
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#137
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While what you have coded (in terms of the scraping script) might be legal in your region, in many places its not - even if yu own the physical copy of the item.
...
Its better, on this wise, that a person gets a notice about possible copyright issues, when using Sword or any other repositories for their Bible use.
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2009-10-19
, 19:21
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Posts: 861 |
Thanked: 734 times |
Joined on Jan 2008
@ Nomadic
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#138
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It's possible that it's not technically legal - I guess in my mind, it fulfills the intent of copyright law in my region. I'm paying for the use of one copy of the translation (since I don't use the bible.)
My understanding is that the publicly available SWORD repositories only contain public domain works, so no copyright notice is necessary. Is this incorrect?
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2009-10-19
, 19:35
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Posts: 2,173 |
Thanked: 2,678 times |
Joined on Oct 2009
@ Cornwall, UK
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#139
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2009-10-19
, 19:48
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Posts: 861 |
Thanked: 734 times |
Joined on Jan 2008
@ Nomadic
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#140
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Yeah, you wouldn't want to be sued by God for breach of copyright.
Wouldn't the end-user be able to police what is/isn't legal to d/l in their own area? Like... if you want to read a Bible on an Open Source device, a certain ethical standard would be presumed.
Tags |
bible, maemo 5, rapier, reference browser, religious apps, scripture reader, sword |
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