Railroad Says Train Schedule iPhone App Violates Copyright
from the crown-copyright-strikes-again dept
Ridiculous copyright policies strike again. Phill writes in to let us know that officials from Rail Corporation NSW, a government-run organization that manages the trainlines in Sydney, Australia, are threatening an independent developer who created a super popular train schedule app for the iPhone. The group is claiming that the train schedule is copyrighted information, under Crown copyright, which (for no good reason at all) allows the government to claim copyright on things. This same issue recently came up when Crown copyright was used (abused, actually) to stop Google from providing relevant info on the deadly brushfires in Australia.This case may be even more ridiculous. The guy created a useful app that many people want. Rather than recognizing the demand for such an app, the railroad is threatening him. Their reasoning? The app might not be accurate. Well, if that was a problem, then people would stop using it. Plus, there are easy solutions: give him access to the real-time data and/or create your own damn iPhone app.
Filed Under: australia, copyright, crown copyright, train schedule
Companies: rail corporation nsw
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typical
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Toilet flushes, no problem found, moving on to train schedules...
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Re: BooGotShoot's comment
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Not Australia's fault NSW is a bunch of rednick idiots.
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Australia is funny!
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Re: Australia is funny!
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Ludicrous
This case may be EVEN MORE ridiculous than that.
Think about it for a minute.
If the app infringes copyright, then obviously it's because of an infringing copy. That would mean that the app runs off a copy of the official train schedules. If the app "might not be accurate" in this case, it can only be because the official train schedules "might not be accurate". And then the app is not to blame for the inaccuracy.
On the flip side, if the app is to blame for the inaccuracy, it can only be because the developer compiled his own train schedule based on observations of the trains or by some similar method. In which case he independently created the schedule the app runs off, instead of copying the official one. In which case, no copyright infringement.
Therefore, to claim both copyright violation and "the app might be inaccurate" as reasons to attack it is to ask to have your cake and eat it too.
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