Talk:Herring-Bone (card game)

Latest comment: 15 years ago by Thirteen squared

The work reproduced here is out of copyright (1914) and part of project Gutenberg. Therefore it is NO copyright violation to reproduce parts here. http://www.gutenberg.org/wiki/Gutenberg:Copyright_FAQ Source: http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/21642

 C.10. What books are in the public domain?

Any book published anywhere before 1923 is in the public domain in the U.S. This is the rule we use most.

U.S. Government publications are in the public domain. This is the rule under which we have published, for example, presidential inauguration speeches.

Books can be released into the public domain by the owners of their copyrights.

Some books published without a copyright notice in the U.S. prior to March 1st, 1989 are in the public domain.

Some books published before 1964, and whose copyright was not renewed, are in the public domain.

If you want to rely on anything except the 1923 rule, things can get complicated, and the rules do change with time. Please refer to our Public Domain and Copyright How-To for more detailed information.

You still need to establish notability, by citing multiple reliable sources, otherwise, this page is a candidate for deletion. --132 04:43, 9 March 2009 (UTC)Reply

The article was extended from the List of solitaire card games "Braid", but introduced under its original English name The Herring-Bone. Braid redirects to here. The original article was mostly deleted by User:thirteen squared for mentioned reasons, so I will cease to extend it and leave this task to others. I planned to link graphics for how to set up the game from the original, out of copyright book here, but this seems to disturb some folks. Whatever. May the article be useful anyway.