Terms and Conditions and copyright
Hi,
I recently started contributing to the Habbox Wiki in the hope this would be beneficial to people. In doing so I stumbled upon the Terms and Conditions (which are practically the same for the Habbox forum). The first line raised my eyebrows.
The first line reads:
Quote:
We can (WITHOUT ANY PRIOR NOTICE) edit, close/lock, move, duplicate or publish any of your posted content because as soon as it is posted, you are the author of the content, but it becomes property of HabboxWiki.
The logic in this line is lost on me. It seems to suggest that because Habbox owns something it can do whatever it wants with it. That makes no sense to me. Just because you own a car doesn't mean you can drive it. You need a licence, drive on the road, etc. Just because you own a book doesn't mean you may republish the book. There are rules. Similar to Wikipedia text I think text is copyrighted automatically under the Berne Convention.
So in my opinion the first line in the Terms and Conditions has no meaning whatsoever and can just as well be left out.
If the intend is to make people abandon their copyright (leave out the "because ..." part), I think this can not be done this way. As far as I know abandoning one's copyright can only be done by a very explicit statement by the copyright holder.
Terms and Conditions and copyright
It’s not really down to what anyone means or individual interpretation though - it specifically and explicitly says that Habbox has the right to edit, modify, duplicate, lock, delete content after someone publishes it to our site(s), because at the point of publication that content belongs to HabboxWiki - with the exception of images which normal copyright rules apply.
The reason we have that term (as both Tom and I have explained) is so people can’t demand we remove OR keep content at their discretion, and we can edit as appropriate and use it elsewhere as we please.
I’m not sure why you’re confused at it’s meaning and saying it’s our interpretation as it is very clear exactly what this term is for. We won’t be removing or editing it.