Rights to waveforms: in the typical case, that is nonsense. In a few exceptional cases, there may be *some* validity to an intellectual property claim over raw waveforms (e.g. a *collection* of waveforms may qualify for the purposes of EU database protection law), but even then it would typically be highly debatable. A really credible claim would probably have to rely on a patent, which is quite a high standard to meet (unlike copyright, for example). And patents run out after a term of 20 years in most jurisdictions as a matter of law. Ergo: they must have expired for whatever patents applied to synths from the 80s.hakey wrote:A good deal of which will be down to the waveforms, the rights for which will be owned and protected by someone - which rather puts the kibosh on a faithful emu. I guess the same will be true for the DW8000 and the Prophet VS.david.beholder wrote:one more for SQ80/ESQ1 - they are amazing and distinctive
Anyway, supersaw reservations aside, this JP8K oscillator should be more than enough to go on with for now.
PS: FWIW, IAAL.
