top | item 9295432 (no title) passepartout | 11 years ago Your licence should be more precise because you cannot put a CC licence on the legal texts, just on your ReadMe file. discuss order hn newest jordigh|11 years ago How does French law work? Do the texts of laws have droit d'auteur? seszett|11 years ago As far as I understand from http://rip.journal-officiel.gouv.fr/index.php/pages/LO the laws themselves don't really have an author, but you are required to mention the source of the texts you reuse. passepartout|11 years ago They are considered "public information", so no droit d'auteur. All government data considered as public information were published starting 2011 with an open data licence, the Etalab licence similar to the UK one.
jordigh|11 years ago How does French law work? Do the texts of laws have droit d'auteur? seszett|11 years ago As far as I understand from http://rip.journal-officiel.gouv.fr/index.php/pages/LO the laws themselves don't really have an author, but you are required to mention the source of the texts you reuse. passepartout|11 years ago They are considered "public information", so no droit d'auteur. All government data considered as public information were published starting 2011 with an open data licence, the Etalab licence similar to the UK one.
seszett|11 years ago As far as I understand from http://rip.journal-officiel.gouv.fr/index.php/pages/LO the laws themselves don't really have an author, but you are required to mention the source of the texts you reuse.
passepartout|11 years ago They are considered "public information", so no droit d'auteur. All government data considered as public information were published starting 2011 with an open data licence, the Etalab licence similar to the UK one.
jordigh|11 years ago
seszett|11 years ago
passepartout|11 years ago