Comment by tpush
5 years ago
> If you are blocking people from reading books in the public domain […]
‘Public domain’ doesn’t exist in Germany.
5 years ago
> If you are blocking people from reading books in the public domain […]
‘Public domain’ doesn’t exist in Germany.
For the purposes of the discussion here, "Gemeinfreiheit" is basically the same thing.
An important caveat is that in Germany (and Austria, I think?) you can't legally dedicate a work to the public domain, but you can surrender most of your legal rights to a work. This is why international public domain dedications often include a fallback public license.
70 years after the last authors death it becomes public domain.
You cannot give up all rights voluntarily.
see https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=29025058