A.Daviel INTERNET-DRAFT Vancouver Webpages November 1996 (Expires June 1997) Copy Control for Web Documents Status of this Memo This document is an Internet-Draft. Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF), its areas, and its working groups. Note that other groups may also distribute working documents as Internet-Drafts. Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any time. It is inappropriate to use Internet- Drafts as reference material or to cite them other than as ``work in progress.'' To learn the current status of any Internet-Draft, please check the ``1id-abstracts.txt'' listing contained in the Internet- Drafts Shadow Directories on ftp.is.co.za (Africa), nic.nordu.net (Europe), munnari.oz.au (Pacific Rim), ds.internic.net (US East Coast), or ftp.isi.edu (US West Coast). Abstract This memo describes a simple syntax for describing the copyright status of a World-Wide-Web document in a machine-readable way. When implemented in a Web browser it provides an unambiguous notification when permission must be sought to print or copy material obtained from the network. 1. Introduction Documents on the World-Wide-Web may have varied copyright status. While a human-readable copyright notice is usually included in copyrighted documents, this is usually transparent to automated retrieval agents. This memo describes a simple syntax for defining the copyright status of a document using an HTTP header or HTML META tag. Agents implementing this protocol may refuse to print or save a tagged document, or may display an informational message. 2.1 Protocol A protocol version is defined. This memo defines version 1.0. Three copyright-significant actions are defined: print, save and quote. "Print" refers to making a hard copy of a document, or saving a printer-ready version. "Save" refers to saving a source version of a document to non-volatile media. "Quote" refers to including a portion of a document in a new document. Three numeric levels are defined: 0 - disallowed, 1 - conditionally allowed, 2 - unconditionally allowed. Internet-Draft Copy Control for Web Documents The copy-control directive consists of a list of actions and levels, together with a URL. The URL points to a document describing the copyright status in detail. Action names may be abbreviated to one character. The directive may be given as an HTTP header or as an HTML META tag. The following are valid directives: Copy-Control: version 1.0 print 2 save 2 quote 2 Copy-Control: v 1.0 p 0 s 0 q 1 URL http://some.org/copy.html Copy-Control: v 1.0 p 1 s 1 q 2 u http://some.org/copy.html 2.2 Implementation In a user agent such as a Web browser, the copy-control actions would correspond to the browser actions of printing, saving to file, and transferring to clipboard. If the level defined for the requested action is zero, the browser should refuse to perform the action. If the level is one, the browser should generate a warning message. If the level is two, no message is generated. Where a message is generated, it should contain a hyperlink to the URL given in the directive, if any. Typical messages might be: "This document is copyright. You are not allowed to print it. See http://some.org/nocopy.html for details." "This document is copyright. You are allowed to save it subject to certain restrictions. See http://some.org/copy.html for details." "This document is copyright. You are allowed to quote portions of it subject to certain restrictions. See http://some.org/copy.html for details." The URL would normally also be included in a readable copyright notice. 3. Security Considerations Implementation of this protocol will not prevent document copying by persons using a non-compliant agent, and is not a substitute for encryption or secure transport. 4. Author's Address A.Daviel Vancouver Webpages Box 357 185-9040 Blundell Rd Richmond BC V6Y 1K3 Tel. (604)-377-4796 Fax. (604)-270-8285 mailto:andrew@vancouver-webpages.com