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Timetable App Developer Gets Nastygram From Transit Sydney

mikesd81 writes "ZDNet Australia writes that NSW state corporation RailCorp has threatened a Sydney software developer with legal action if he fails to withdraw a train timetable application that is currently the second-most-popular application in its category in Apple's App Store. Alvin Singh created Transit Sydney after he began teaching himself how to program in Cocoa Mobile. Within days of its Feb 18 release, Singh received a cease and desist notice from Rail Corporation NSW, the government body that administers Sydney's CityRail network. The email states: 'I advise that copyright in all CityRail timetables is owned by RailCorp. ... Any use of these timetables in a manner which breaches copyright by a third party can only occur through the grant of a suitable licence by RailCorp.'" "As a government body, RailCorp information is protected by Crown copyright, a contentious provision in copyright law that has recently been used to block attempts to access information on the location of Victoria's bushfires and even seemingly innocuous information as the locations of public toilets. 'RailCorp's primary concern here is that our customers receive accurate, up-to-date timetable information,' RailCorp spokesperson Paul Rea explained. 'This includes details of service interruptions, special event services, track work and other changes. ... At this stage, it is not possible for RailCorp to grant third-party developers access to our internal passenger information systems. As such, any third-party CityRail timetable application would contain inaccuracies and have the potential to mislead our customers.'"

55 of 378 comments (clear)

  1. No Case Under US Law by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I don't know anything about Australian copyright law, but under US law you cannot copyright a fact. A train timetable would certainly qualify. This might be one area where we get things right.

    1. Re:No Case Under US Law by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      Advertised train times a fact? In what country is that? Usually, these are pure fiction.

    2. Re:No Case Under US Law by castorvx · · Score: 4, Funny

      Because the train operators have been using that damn application!

    3. Re:No Case Under US Law by LuNa7ic · · Score: 5, Informative

      As far as I'm aware, Japanese trains have to be within ~2 minutes of the schedule or the passengers get a partial refund.

      --
      *runs*
    4. Re:No Case Under US Law by Cimexus · · Score: 5, Informative

      Unfortunately the relevant part of Australian intellectual property law is a bit of a relic from the 'olden days' and actually doesn't bother to distinguish between a creative work, and merely publishing a fact. So things like telephone directory data and train timetables CAN in fact be considered copyrighted here.

      Yes it's utterly ridiculous. The Australian Law Reform Commission is looking at this as a matter of priority in its review of Australian IP law, and it's likely to get changed within the next 5-10 years. But for now, that's the state of affairs.

      Disclaimer: IAAL.

    5. Re:No Case Under US Law by supernova_hq · · Score: 4, Funny

      Disclaimer: IAAL.

      Holy crap, and actual lawyer on slashdot!!!

    6. Re:No Case Under US Law by Aranykai · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Correct. They even give you a receipt to turn into your employer or school explaining that they are responsible for your tardiness.

      I seem to recall reading the average delay last year was only 26 seconds.

      --
      If sharing a song makes you a pirate, what do I have to share to be a ninja?
    7. Re:No Case Under US Law by Cimexus · · Score: 5, Informative

      Well I'm qualified as one ... but I don't currently practice law. I'm a university lecturer ... specifically, Information Technology Law and IP Law. So saying 'IAAL' is slightly naughty of me since I'm not actually representing clients et al. at this point, I just have the necessary qualifications.

    8. Re:No Case Under US Law by Namarrgon · · Score: 5, Funny

      Pointing out fine legal distinctions - holy crap, he really is a lawyer on slashdot!!!

      --
      Why would anyone engrave "Elbereth"?
    9. Re:No Case Under US Law by ArwynH · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Never heard of anyone getting a refund.

      They do give out the receipts though, which legally protect you from being tardy. Quite useful because when it rains, the train are guaranteed to be at least 5min late, sometimes up to 30min.

      Other common reasons for trains being late are overcrowding and suicide.

    10. Re:No Case Under US Law by complete+loony · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Which is also holding back DIY PVR adoption since there is no legal source of TV show timetables.

      --
      09F91102 no, 455FE104 nope, F190A1E8 uh-uh, 7A5F8A09 that's not it, C87294CE no. Ah! 452F6E403CDF10714E41DFAA257D313F.
    11. Re:No Case Under US Law by wvmarle · · Score: 4, Informative

      It also depends on how the information is retrieved.

      For example, some 15 years ago in The Netherlands a company wanted to release a phone book to compete with the monopoly fixed line provider's phone book. This to sell advertisements and so of course. Now to get the telephone numbers, they took the phone book to China, and hired a bunch of Chinese for cheap to manually copy the numbers from paper into a computer, and then printed it. The monopolist of course didn't believe that, and a law suit followed.

      The point was: reading and typing the numbers is legal, as the information could not be copyrighted. However directly copying the phone book (e.g. by using a photocopier) would be illegal.

      This of course is not Australian law, but I just want to point out that even though the information (telephone numbers, sports results, TV schedules, transport time tables) may not be copyrighted, a certain representation of it may suddenly be copyrighted.

      The train company may argue that it is illegal to draw the information from their web site (e.g. screen scraping), even though it is not legal for someone to walk down to the station, look at the published tables, type the information into their PDA, and publish is.

      As another poster in this thread points out there is also an issue with TV listings: these are normally drawn directly from a TV channel's Internet site, and that may cause copyright problems. However if someone would gather the information from public sources (printed listings, the newspaper, whatever) then it may be a different matter.

      Of course I think it is silly to have these tables copyrighted, and even silly from the train company to prevent this information to be known by as many people as possible (the more people know about when a train runs, the more are likely to actually take it), without knowing the details of how this information is retrieved and how the Australian copyright laws deal with this kind of information we can not say whether they are legally right or not. And whether they are morally right or not, that is a totally different discussion.

    12. Re:No Case Under US Law by patch0 · · Score: 3, Funny

      That is obviously a complete lie, you can't have been in the UK if you experienced trains being on time.... Didn't the German accents give away your real location? :)

    13. Re:No Case Under US Law by Man+Eating+Duck · · Score: 3, Funny

      He used et al - he must be a lawyer :P

      ...or an academic. Actually, he's both :)

      --
      Are you a grammar Nazi? I'm trying to improve my English; please correct my errors! :)
    14. Re:No Case Under US Law by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

      Oh yes, murder is very a popular social movement in Japan, at about 1.1 per 100,000 per year (the U.S. is around 9 per 100K; UK have 1 per 100K.)

      Not likely, so we need to ask you some questions: is this your fantasy? Do you think about murdering people by pushing them in front of trains? When you were a child, was your relationship with your father difficult? How do you feel about your mother?

    15. Re:No Case Under US Law by teh+kurisu · · Score: 4, Interesting

      It's not the most ridiculous thing in the world. Facts could be seen to be more deserving of copyright protection because, unlike creative works, they have to be collected and, depending on the context, kept up-to-date. This takes time and money. I'd be pretty pissed off if I collected large amounts of information, putting substantial resources into making sure it was accurate and up-to-date, with the intention of recovering that investment through advertising (for example) only to have someone reproduce it sans-advertising for free.

      Obviously there has to be a distinction between the fact and the collected data, and it probably shouldn't apply to data that already exists, but a knee-jerk reaction against copyright might not be helpful.

    16. Re:No Case Under US Law by Martin+Blank · · Score: 3, Informative

      The US murder rate is about 5.9 per 100,000. It hasn't been at 9 per 100,000 in a number of years. The UK's is about 1.4 per 100,000. Japan's is about 0.5 per 100,000.

      --
      You can never go home again... but I guess you can shop there.
    17. Re:No Case Under US Law by digitig · · Score: 4, Informative

      I've recently finished a major contract in Zurich, and spent absolutely ages waiting for delayed trains in and around the city. Long enough to work out that the seconds hand on Zurich station clocks click on one second in slightly less than a second, completing a revolution in 59 seconds and then waiting for an extra second at the top. You can imagine how long I spent waiting around to get that bored.

      --
      Quidnam Latine loqui modo coepi?
    18. Re:No Case Under US Law by leomekenkamp · · Score: 3, Informative

      Actually, our Dutch train system is the second most densely used in the world; Japan is first on that list.

      --
      Wenn ist das Nunstueck git und Slotermeyer? Ja! Beiherhund das Oder die Flipperwaldt gersput.
    19. Re:No Case Under US Law by TeXMaster · · Score: 4, Funny

      Being late does not make you a retard.

      Being late once only makes you a tard, you need to be late at least two times to be a REtard.

      --
      "I'm never quite so stupid as when I'm being smart" (Linus van Pelt)
    20. Re:No Case Under US Law by drsmithy · · Score: 4, Informative

      As far as I'm aware, Japanese trains have to be within ~2 minutes of the schedule or the passengers get a partial refund.

      Sadly, the same is not true in Sydney, where a few years back Railcorp defined "on time" to be anything up to five minutes after the scheduled arrival/departure time.

      Naturally, this dramatically improved their "on time" performance statistics, which they then used to justify a fare increase.

      With that said, from a technical perspective, their poor performance is apparently due to incompetence, not malice (at least according to my wife, who used to work for an engineering firm with a lot of Railcorp projects).

    21. Re:No Case Under US Law by mattwarden · · Score: 3, Funny

      > Other common reasons for trains being late are overcrowding and suicide.

      Incorrect correlation direction.

    22. Re:No Case Under US Law by trmj · · Score: 3, Interesting

      That's better than in Boston. An MBTA bus is not late until two hours past its scheduled arrival time. I found this out a couple years back. In January. I'm sure you can imagine my displeasure.

      --
      Work sucked, until it became unemployment, when it became slightly more tolerable. -Tet
    23. Re:No Case Under US Law by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

      Did you ever consider that Japan's is so low because so many of the uncounted murders are from people pushing people onto train tracks, making it look like a suicide?

    24. Re:No Case Under US Law by z80kid · · Score: 4, Funny
      Depends on where.

      The rain delay for trains in Spain occur mainly on the plains.

    25. Re:No Case Under US Law by mdmkolbe · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The purpose of copyright is to encourage the creation of information/data. Simply collecting existing information doesn't fall under the traditional purposes of copyright even if that collecting is otherwise valuable to society.

    26. Re:No Case Under US Law by Ungrounded+Lightning · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The US murder rate is about 5.9 per 100,000. It hasn't been at 9 per 100,000 in a number of years. The UK's is about 1.4 per 100,000.

      The US counts a murder when there's a body and foul play is suspected. The UK counts a murder when there's a conviction.

      Japan's is about 0.5 per 100,000.

      When a father of five kills his kids, wife, and himself, Japan counts seven suicides, the US counts six murders and a suicide. (Try comparing the sum of the murder and suicide rates in both countries to see whether it's mathematically possible that the US has a lower rate if they were counted the same.)

      The murder victimization rate of US citizens of UK descent is lower than that of UK citizens. Ditto for US citizens of African descent vs. Africans, US citizens of Japanese descent vs. Japanese citizens, and for several other regions of origin. (Allowing immigration of people from more violent cultures and letting them keep their cultures until they voluntarily adopt another has the downside of raising the average level of violence - though fortunately {for others} the violence occurs mainly among the groups in question rather than across group boundaries.)

      When comparing death rates from murder and drawing conclusions about culture, don't forget to include deaths from war and genocide (including euphemisms like "sectarian violence" and "ethnic cleansing").

      --
      Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
    27. Re:No Case Under US Law by toriver · · Score: 3, Funny

      Was I talking about rain?

      El Whoosho.

  2. That's not good by Rosco+P.+Coltrane · · Score: 3, Insightful

    block [...] seemingly innocuous information as the locations of public toilets.

    something you definitely need when you have transit problems.

    --
    "A door is what a dog is perpetually on the wrong side of" - Ogden Nash
  3. tip of the iceberg by speedtux · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Governments all over the world are asserting copyrights on information created with public funding, or even public domain information.

    Particularly annoying is when museums and similar institutions assert copyright over images of works that should have fallen into the public domain by now, in direct contradiction of their mission of disseminating those works to the public.

    Potentially, governments can also use copyright claims in order to restrict distribution of information that the government finds politically undesirable: statistics, investigative reporting, etc.

    Generally, everything a government creates with tax payer money should be public domain.

    1. Re:tip of the iceberg by Logic+Worshiper · · Score: 3, Informative

      Generally, everything a government creates with tax payer money should be public domain.

      I couldn't agree more, and if it's software, it should be open source.

  4. they're not the only ones who lay the hate on by SuperBanana · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Years ago, the MBTA had a download that could be installed on older iPods and would give you bus and commuter rail schedules.

    Then, a Palm app was "sponsored" by some Palm user group, and the iPod download mysteriously disappeared from their website.

    Now, the MBTA is +$6BN in debt and can't afford to do anything like this- or implement the real-time tracking system all the busses are equipped with. It gets worse- Charliecards can't have money or passes loaded on them via the web, nor can you check their balance via the web. The commuter rail system was supposed to switch over a while ago. Student passes? Not able to load them onto Charliecards. They're such fucking morons that when they came up with bike cages that were "secured via charliecard", they neglected to mention that you can't have an existing charliecard granted cage access- not only that, but the bike charliecard can't have anything loaded on it!

  5. Idling corporations and working people by what+about · · Score: 4, Interesting

    This seems one of the cases when an Idling corporation wans to get money out of work done by someone else.
    The corporation did not have a product that people wanted, a person makes such product and now the corp wants the idea and the money I presume.

    I have a feeling that laws should contain a part where the "intent" of the law is stated. In the Copyright law the intent is to give a limited monopoly on the "product" to allow people to produce new books that otherwise would not be viable.
    A train timetable is no such thing, yes it is printed, but it is a byproduct of the service, not a product in itself !

    IANAL The point is: If laws had a part where it was written what was the general aim of the law than maybe it would be simpler to decide on borderline cases.

  6. Re:Facts can't be copyrighted. by vandy1 · · Score: 5, Informative

    You may wish to compare copyright schemes - In particular, the EU & AU recognise the so-called "sweat of the brow" right extant in databases, which a timetable would qualify under. Times of football matches also seem to qualify.

    The controlling law in Australia is Desktop Marketing Systems Pty Ltd [âoeDtMSâ] v Telstra Corporation Limited [2002] FCAFC 112. At paras 253 & 254:

    253 It was not their alphabetical arrangement or their designation as headings that attracted copyright protection to the compilation of headings constituting the Headings Books. Rather, it was the labour of building up the collection (of headings). Desktop appropriated the benefit of all or most of that labour.

    254 Accordingly, by parity of reasoning with my reasons for concluding above that Desktop reproduced a substantial part of the White Pages Directories and a substantial part of the Yellow Pages Directories, it also reproduced a substantial part of the Headings Books, and so infringed Telstra's copyright in those Books.

    So, under Australian law, you can copyright a compilation of facts.

    Cheers,

    Michael

  7. Re:Database rights by Xoc-S · · Score: 5, Interesting

    So create an app so that it collects real-time data gathering information via GPS, Wi-Fi hub, and cell tower triangulation and uploading it to a central server (similar to Google Latitude). You could even use the accelerometer in the iPhone to detect when trains started moving, since I'm sure that it would be a different profile than walking. After a month or so, you'd have a real database of when the trains run rather than what appears on the schedule, which is more valuable information anyway. They couldn't touch that info, since they don't own it. If I lived Down Under, I'd write it just to tell them where they can stuff their copyright.

  8. Re:Database rights by raju1kabir · · Score: 4, Insightful

    That, sir, is a very clever idea. If I lived down under, I'd help you write it.

    Then again, I've already lived there in the past, and you couldn't force me at gunpoint to make that mistake again.

    --
    "Patriotism is your conviction that this country is superior to all other countries because you were born in it." -- GBS
  9. Posting Yesterday's Train Schedule by ItsyBitsySpider · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Couldn't the developer create an application of what yesterday's, or the previous week's, train schedule was? Then, the application would be reporting past events, much like any news agency is allowed to do.

  10. No. by JoeBuck · · Score: 4, Funny

    This has been another edition of simple answers to simple questions.

  11. Public Servants Snouts in the Copyright Trough by CuteSteveJobs · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This is business as usual in Australia: The Federal Government uses the old archaic copyright practiced by *GREAT BRITAIN* (emphasis is theirs, not mine) where the government holds copyright on everything, and charge like a bull:

    * Australian Maps are copyrighted by the federal government's mapping agency AUSLIG.
    * Real Estate Data is copyrighted by e.g. Department of Natural Resources. They in turn make exclusive deals to data companies who sling wads of cash their way in exchange for special access. If you a citizen want access you're forced to go through these resellers. The famously greedy Macquarie Bank owns one of these.
    * Tide tables are copyright.
    * Even Aeronatical data is copyright. The US Department of Defense used to distribute a worldwide database of Aeronautical data, but they had to stop because "Air Services" (a branch of the Australian Government) hated the idea of the public getting for free what they were trying to sell. Instead of doing a worldwide edition without the Australian data, the US Department of Defense simply ended public access.
    * Anything and everything. From simple forms to photos taken by government (e.g. a nice photo of that billion dollar aircraft paid for by your taxes) are copyrighted by the government.
    * Even *THE WEATHER* is copyright. Print the weather in your local paper or stick it on the website, and you'll get an earful from the Weather Bureau who insists you "purchase a product license".

    In all cases the people who run these departments like to think of themselves a private businessmen, but they're not: their capital is provided by the taxpayer and they've got all the protection of being part of the government. They're a monopoly. They can charge what they want. Not like you can go to the government down the road instead. Pigs at the trough.

    This is different from the US where under the constitution the US Government does not copyright what it produces, reasoning your taxes paid to collect the data, so why should you be forced to pay again.

    In the Sydney case here is the worst part: Their railway system is known as being beyond terrible. Trains don't show up, break down, disappear, bypass stations, ticketing doesn't work, there's bugger all security. There's a real culture of sloth, laziness and corruption there. And here's a guy selling something to help commuters (and offered to give it to the railways department for free) and they threaten him instead.

  12. Re:Many stupid-sounding legal issues in Australia? by L4t3r4lu5 · · Score: 4, Funny

    [citation ne...

    --
    Finally had enough. Come see us over at https://soylentnews.org/
  13. Recheck that headline. by Arancaytar · · Score: 4, Informative

    The headline says he got a nastygram from "Transit Sydney".

    According to the summary that is, you know, right below it, "Transit Sydney" is the application, not the company. The company is "RailCorp".

    Getting a nastygram from an application you developed does occasionally occur (fuck those runtime exceptions), but not in the sense this article implies.

  14. Re:Heh. by batkiwi · · Score: 4, Insightful

    In australia it was:
    -proposed more than a year ago
    -went through trials
    -is having large amounts of public scrutiny
    -has not been passed as law yet

    and

    -will not pass due to public outcry and a shifting sentiment in the senate.

    Compare this to the US, where you'd only find out 18 months after it was implemented, and anyone asking about it would have been jailed.

  15. Re:Factual train times by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    How do you handle some jackass blocking the door, thereby preventing the train from leaving until security removes the blockage from the doorway?

    Crushing societal pressure to conform?

    It might not even be a person blocking the door, a sticker on the door sensors making optical sensors think there is a blockage, and/or a sticky rubber bumped on the mechanical sensors is enough to put a train 2 minutes behind schedule.

    Human intervention?

  16. Re:Many stupid-sounding legal issues in Australia? by Cimexus · · Score: 4, Interesting

    A lot of this is because we have a small population and a LARGE body of old law inherited from English common law. In America, a far greater proportion of what was originally common law has been codified into statutes.

    A smaller, less litigious population also means that fewer opportunities arise for courts to apply a modern eye to some of these laws. So I guess the 'refresh rate' of our laws is slower than in larger countries. The right case to challenge a stupid law needs to come before the courts before things will get changed, but that 'right case' might involve some pretty uncommon circumstances.

    Also many of these 'stupid-sounding legal issues' as they are reported on Slashdot are sensationalised, or the summary misses a crucial point (or half the story!). This applies to any legal stories on Slashdot, not just ones originating from .AU.

    Australian law by and large is well thought-out ... just sometimes a bit slow to get updated to deal with issues surrounding new technologies. Our IP law in particular is in need of an overhaul (although incidentally, it was made a lot worse by the US-Australia Free Trade Agreement signed a few years ago, which required us to adopt some DMCA-style provisions).

    The Australian governmental system has its strong points - it's a lot less susceptible to vote-buying and big business influence than the US system. Partly that's because we don't directly elect a head of state resident or even the Prime Minister (which understandably in most Americans' opinion is a bad thing). So we don't have the need to spend huge amounts of money promoting candidates (look at the money spent by Obama/McCain on their campaigns last year ... I'd be surprised if our major parties spent 1% of that when we have elections).

  17. Re:Factual train times by AlecC · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I have used it for successfully to get out at the right stop when I cannot read the station names. You get out when the train is scheduled to arrive at your destination. My experience is that (a) the train is actually stopped within the scheduled minute, and (b) it is at the right destination. Very comforting when the script it complete gibberish to you.

    --
    Consciousness is an illusion caused by an excess of self consciousness.
  18. Re:Database rights by Animaether · · Score: 3, Informative

    more or less clever than detecting traffic speeds (and thus jams) by tracking cellphone signals from the stations - as is already used / in trials?

    Knowing that -a- train passed by point X at time Y is great... knowing -which- train that is, however, is a lot more important.

    In addition, that only gives you the realtime information... if I want to travel tomorrow, how's the situation -right now- going to help me? I'd still want to be able to look at the scheduled time table - no matter how far off that may be from tomorrow's actual situation - so I can at least plan ahead. I can then use the realtime information -tomorrow- to see if the train's actually going to be on time or whether I can stay a bit longer and say my goodbyes to my daughter 5, 10 minutes later.

  19. The NSW Premier has intervened by russsell · · Score: 4, Informative

    His Twitter page says "I've asked Minister Campbell to speak to RailCorp. They will meet with the app developers to negotiate how to use the info accurately"

  20. Re:Factual train times by Dr.+Hok · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Crushing societal pressure to conform?

    Which might as well be called common sense. Maybe the average Japanese doesn't want to be a jackass.

    IMHO that's a good thing.

    Another example: A friend who had spent some time in Japan told me that in large crowds Japanese tend to speak less loudly than usual. Over here, eveybody speaks more loudly, so eventually everybody needs to yell.

    --
    Say out loud: I'm an Aspie and I'm somewhat proud, I guess. Uh. Can I write an email in all caps instead? Hm...
  21. My experience by The+New+Andy · · Score: 4, Interesting
    I recently had a dialog with them about this stuff. Here is how it went: Me:

    I would like to put a program on my laptop that will hold the cityrail timetable information, so I can check when trains are coming without needing the internet. I understand that the timetables are protected by copyright law, and that without your written permission I can't do this. So, could you grant me permission to create and distribute copies of the timetable? I don't have any intentions to do this for commercial reasons, but I would want to distribute the work I've done under a licence that allows others to do so if they choose. Thanks for your time.

    Them:

    I refer to your email requesting to use the CityRail timetable. Copyright of all CityRail timetables is owned by RailCorp. Any use of these timetables in a manner which breaches such copyright by a third party can only occur through the grant of a suitable licence by RailCorp. RailCorp is not currently entering into licensing arrangements for its timetables for the purpose specified in your enquiry. I trust this information is of assistance. Yours sincerely

    Me:

    I was surprised to receive the answer I did about timetables. What exactly are you trying to achieve by preventing people from using your timetables? Is there any reason why you don't want to make it easier for people to know when trains are due? The information I would like is just the information already on your website, made available for free to anyone. I just want to put it in a more useful format. Thanks for your time.

    Them:

    I refer to your further email requesting permission to reproduce CityRail timetables. To address your question, CityRail is not preventing the public from accessing its timetables. The fact that timetables are readily available at stations, and published on the CityRail website, should more than answer your query. While I appreciate the motives behind your request, I can only reiterate our organisation's previous position, namely, that we are unable to accede to your request for reasons of copyright. I am sorry that I am unable to answer you in more favourable terms. Yours sincerely

    Me:

    Thanks for getting back to me, it is much appreciated. Sorry to keep bothering you, however you seem to have misinterpreted my previous message. My first message asked for permission to use the timetables. To this, you said no. My second message asked why you said no. To this, you restated your original response. So for my third message, I'm restating the question from before: Why can't/won't you allow timetable information to be copied and used? Thanks for your time.

    Them:

    I refer to your further enquiry regarding the use of CityRail timetables on internet sites other than the www.cityrail.info and 131 500 infoline site. Please accept my apology on behalf of RailCorp if our previous responses have not dealt with this issue with sufficient clarity. Copyright of all CityRail timetables is owned by RailCorp. Any use of these timetables in a manner which breaches such copyright by a third party can only occur through the grant of a suitable licence by RailCorp. RailCorp is not currently entering into licensing arrangements for its timetables for the purpose specified in your enquiry. As explained in a previous response, this is because RailCorp wishes to ensure the information provided to customers is the most up-to-date and includes warning of trackwork. This is not currently possible even on our CityRail site until further internet and web management projects are completed. CityRail also runs several special timetables over Christmas/NYE, Easter etc. and for special events which, by our experience, are rarely updated in a timely fashion on unlicensed third party app

  22. Re:Factual train times by JoeMerchant · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I have used it for successfully to get out at the right stop when I cannot read the station names. You get out when the train is scheduled to arrive at your destination. My experience is that (a) the train is actually stopped within the scheduled minute, and (b) it is at the right destination. Very comforting when the script it complete gibberish to you.

    I tried this in the Swiss Alps once, thinking that "hey, it's Switzerland, these things should be on-time, right?" I forgot how close the Alps are to Italy. Luckily, the mountain trains don't run much faster than walking speed in that place - when the conductor discovered my error (about 5 minutes out of the station), he said "that's your train over there, want to change?" He went ahead of me to give me a hand jumping up, hopped off of one moving train sprinted about 20 yards and hopped onto another moving train. I wonder how often they do that?

  23. Re:Factual train times by larry+bagina · · Score: 5, Funny

    That's my experience, too. In American bukake, the guys are grunting, high fiving each other, and yelling comments like "take it bitch". In Japanese bukake, the men are very quiet and respectful. You can actually hear the woman crying in shame.

    --
    Do you even lift?

    These aren't the 'roids you're looking for.

  24. Legal copyright violation! by argent · · Score: 3, Funny

    Wait a second... "Any use of these timetables in a manner which breaches copyright by a third party can only occur through the grant of a suitable licence by RailCorp."

    What that's saying is that you're only violating their copyright if you get a license to do so.

    Whoever wrote that letter needs to re-take Remedial Passive Voice.

  25. Re:Factual train times by drsmithy · · Score: 5, Funny

    I wonder how often they do that?

    In the Italian part ? Probably all the time.

    In the German part ? Hell, no. There are rules ...

  26. actually, no by SuperBanana · · Score: 4, Interesting

    There was a case recently where a well-dressed guy with a laptop case passed out on the Red Line. The passengers hit the emergency button, the mid-train conductor came out, took one look at him, said "he's fine, just drunk."

    The train went another half a dozen stops, including past Mass General Hospital (literally. The stop is maybe 500 feet from the emergency room), and Park Street, where Boston EMS had been told to meet the train. The train didn't stop at Park- it went all the way to South Station, miles from any hospital.

    To put this in context- they had just announced they had put defibrilators in all of the commuter line trains after a guy died because (drumroll please) the conductors refused to stop the train to meet an ambulance crew- they went all the way from Wellesley to South Station, by which time the guy was a vegetable. They got their asses sued, and lost- there should have been manslaughter charges.

  27. Re:Sounds like the UK.. by je+ne+sais+quoi · · Score: 3, Informative

    Hah, well at least they have trains that can be late. In the U.S., congress has determined that they would rather subsidize highways and airplanes than trains. For example, our national rail system doesn't even have a dedicated track. It's forced to borrow lines from freight rail, so the Amtrak frequently gets delayed because it has to pull over to let a freight train pass. This was one of the reasons the Accela is such a disaster, the congress refused to give it it's own lines, so it had to satisfy the safety rules for a collision with a freight train. The end result was that the Acela is so heavy it shakes itself apart, that's when it can get up to top speed, which it usually can't because it runs on shitty freight lines designed for 30 mph or so.

    Of course, the amtrak is so limited in the number of places it goes that few americans have actually used it to go somewhere. The only time I ever used it on a regular basis was when I lived in California and would head down to San Francisco for the weekend -- the traffic was so bad and the parking in SF so horrendous that it was much easier to do that and take the BART or the MUNI everywhere.

    I live in Atlanta now and the main "train station" for this metropolis of 5.6 million people is about the size of just one of the minor stops for a city in europe, there's not even a comparison to one of the hub stations like grand central or union station. It still blows my mind whenever I see it.

    --
    Gentlemen! You can't fight in here, this is the war room!