The original artwork for this comic is available for purchase.
Notes: White-out in panels 1, 2, and 3. Pasted-in correction in panel 1 which has yellowed a little compared to the underlying Bristol board.
The original artwork for this comic is available for purchase.
Notes: White-out in panels 1, 2, and 3. Pasted-in correction in panel 1 which has yellowed a little compared to the underlying Bristol board.
Ok now he’s got me wondering if someone could honestly own the copyright for fire
One would probably have to patent all the different ways of making it. It would be a long and tedious process to figure out all the possible ways that man can create fire. I so want the job of figuring that out. *goes outside and shoots a water gun filled with glycerine at a pile of potassium permaganate*
Forget figuring it out, I just want to *do* it.
Of course, more or less any way would have prior art. If you did invent an actual new way, it could be patented. That water-balloon thing might be patent-worthy, for example.
No. (And I suspect the correct word is ‘patent’.) You could probably patent and new and unique way of -making- fire however. 🙂
Dragons would be the obvious ones to patent fire.
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