Huh?I stand by my statement. The SENDER is irrelevant. Copyright stems from when the person WROTE the body of the message.
Eh? My mail system keeps a copy of every message I send. That's certainly going to be as good of evidence as anything else online. Further, if Mr. I publishes it with the proper attribution rather than just stealing the body text, it should be fairly clear that the content is my protected work.
The list of addresses might be a trade secret, but I can bet if Mr. I has them, than no attempt to treat such as secret has occurred.
If these are emails sent during the course of business, then the copyright to work product (those emails) likely lies with the business, thus you would need their permission to publish them.It's only the content of the email (subject line and body) that would be compiled in this library, not the email address or email address list. There would be an attribution to the original sender as well.
Others apparently are seeing lawsuits I am not seeing.It's only the content of the email (subject line and body) that would be compiled in this library, not the email address or email address list. There would be an attribution to the original sender as well.
It potentially can mitigate damages.Attribution doesn't fix infringement.
Hahaha. That is a bit of a puzzle, isn't it?What I am having trouble understanding is why the OP thinks anyone would be interested in this library of emails he's received.
The emails come from just signing up for newsletters, free downloads, etc. Then they send out daily or weekly emails. They would be emails coming to my inbox that I would then post for reference for others who are paying me a subscription.
Quincy is reading what has been posted and is not seeing what you are seeing. That is correct. But you are incorrect about my understanding of emails and what they can contain. Please reread my posts.Quincy seems to feel that email communication contains only trite blurbs similar to this forum. In fact, there is often substantial commercial activity passed in emails. I receive emails from companies that are far more than "Hi Ron ...yada yada yada." These are email publications that took a substantial amount of effort to produce and are directed only to me and other customers. The company rightfully so can get upset over their secondary dissemination, especially when it's to allow someone else to make a buck at the possibility of taking customers away from their services.
I would suggest that at the very least the OP consider scrubbing the e-mails of all names, trademarks, and any other identifying information and replace them with generic placeholders. If the idea is simply to create a database of what works and what doesn't, doing that should not undermine the objective of the database but would likely go a long way towards reducing friction and threats of legal action with the people/entities who created and sent the e-mails.The issue of privacy or defamation might be more likely legal avenues explored over shared content.
I am not sure eliminating identifiers is the smartest move. Passing off material as his own comes with its own set of problems.I would suggest that at the very least the OP consider scrubbing the e-mails of all names, trademarks, and any other identifying information and replace them with generic placeholders. If the idea is simply to create a database of what works and what doesn't, doing that should not undermine the objective of the database but would likely go a long way towards reducing friction and threats of legal action with the people/entities who created and sent the e-mails.
The emails come from just signing up for newsletters, free downloads, etc. Then they send out daily or weekly emails. They would be emails coming to my inbox that I would then post for reference for others who are paying me a subscription.