Thanks for your feedback!! On 2022-07-26 14:48, Steve Litt wrote: > On Tue, 2022-07-26 at 07:06 -0700, techlists@phpcoderusa.com wrote: >> >> What is a registered copyright.  He has a copyright statement on the >> site. > > > I'm not a lawyer, just a guy with about 9 registered copyrights and > hundreds of web > pages, so what I give you is just opinion. A little web research will > give you your > own opinion. > > A copyright statement is not registration. > > To register his copyright, he would have had to one way or another put > the entirety > of his website on an optical drive or a thumb drive, fill out a > registration form, > pay about $63.00, and send it to the Library of Congress. > He did not do so. > One of the benefits of registering your copyright, if I remember > correctly, is that > when some fool copies your stuff you can get an immediate monetary > judgement from > them. > > Don't get me wrong: The fact that your friend wrote this stuff means > he's the > copyright owner. It's legally his. Without your friend's express > written permission, > the copycat has no legal standing to copy your friend's work. It's > just that without > a registration, you have to spend a lot of money in court. > > What were the damages to your friend for the copy? I don't mean the > damages for the > loss of his website, I mean the damages for the copying alone. How > could such > damages be proven? Has the copier used your friend's work to make a > lot of money? Interestingly the other person has done nothing with the website. > If > not, and if it isn't registered, I'd advise your friend to screen > scrape every page > of the copy so your friend himself can rebuild his site. Perhaps the > copier really > did your friend a service by copying. I wonder about the duplicate content issue. > > One other thing: There's a reason Troubleshooters.Com isn't a Drupal > site or a > Wordpress site or a Rails site or a Zope site. The minute a database > becomes > involved, both deployment and backup become much, much more difficult. How do you create content and how do you maintain it ie, modify your content? I think every website I've created has been data driven even my first from 2000. I use WordPress exclusively now. Much easy than the alternative. A long while ago I wrote a script to backup to Amazon S3. I added it to a Cron and it does a backup everyday and saves these backups for 6 months. It is a two step process 1) tar and compress all the web content to include WordPress, and 2) tar and compress the data dump. Creates 2 files and it is hands free. I recently pulled down a backup and setup a server to test it and it worked. These S3 backups have saved my bacon a few times. On a site I maintained a fellow consultant did something that deleted the entire website. So I downloaded the S3 backups did a reinstall and we were back on line. I backup 3 or 4 websites daily and keep their backups for 6 months and it only cost me about $1.05 a month. If I clean it up a bit it will go below a dollar a month. > It would also > be incredibly difficult to put a database based site on an optical disk > or thumb > drive to send to the Library of Congress. With Troubleshooters.Com, I > could just > rsync my local copy to a thumb drive or optical disc and bang, I'm > done. > > SteveT --------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.phxlinux.org To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change your mail settings: https://lists.phxlinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss