This might take a little while, depending on how big your space is. Make sure all checkboxes are selected so that labels, attachments, and restrictions are all preserved. Specify your new space as the destination. If you have no pages at the root, you can skip this step. This is to ensure the connection between pages in links and macros are preserved when copying. In your source space, go to Space Tools > Reorder pages, and temporarily move any pages that exist at the root of the space to be a child of the homepage. To copy a space using copy page hierarchy:Ĭreate a new space and set any permissions, look and feel, and other customizations. The following instructions are for Confluence Server or Data Center, but you can follow a similar process in Cloud. This can be useful if you need to copy the contents of an entire space. The ability to copy a page and all its child pages was introduced in Confluence 6.0. Solution 2 - Use the copy page hierarchy feature Available for CLOUD SERVER DATA CENTER CNN Sans ™ & © 2016 Cable News Network.Note that the Atlassian Labs Copy Space for Confluence app is not compatible with Confluence Server and Data Center 7.0 or later. Market holidays and trading hours provided by Copp Clark Limited. All content of the Dow Jones branded indices Copyright S&P Dow Jones Indices LLC and/or its affiliates. Standard & Poor’s and S&P are registered trademarks of Standard & Poor’s Financial Services LLC and Dow Jones is a registered trademark of Dow Jones Trademark Holdings LLC. Dow Jones: The Dow Jones branded indices are proprietary to and are calculated, distributed and marketed by DJI Opco, a subsidiary of S&P Dow Jones Indices LLC and have been licensed for use to S&P Opco, LLC and CNN. Chicago Mercantile: Certain market data is the property of Chicago Mercantile Exchange Inc. US market indices are shown in real time, except for the S&P 500 which is refreshed every two minutes. Your CNN account Log in to your CNN account “The writers of ‘Thinking Out Loud’ did not copy ‘Let’s Get It On,’” the expert, Lawrence Ferrara, said on the stand.įerrara said the chord progression was in “common use” before “Let’s Get It On,” and the harmonic rhythm is “unremarkable.” The melodies in question are “dramatically different” and only have “fragmentary similarities,” he said.įerrara is expected to continue his testimony Tuesday. She said it was “not possible” that she could have infringed on another song, either intentionally or not.Īlso on Monday, a music expert for the defense testified he’s seen “no musicological evidence” that Ed Sheeran and his co-writer copied “Let’s Get It On” when writing “Thinking Out Loud.” “I was just playing some simple chords that I knew how to play,” Wadge said on the stand, adding that she’s used similar chords in other songs. Wadge never formally learned how to play guitar and since her skill level is “pretty basic,” she has to rely on the building blocks, she said. Sheeran previously testified that Wadge came up with the basic chord progression in the opening part of the song. The song, “Better Than Me,” was released by Pete Wiley before Wadge and Sheeran wrote “Thinking Out Loud” in 2014. Later in the day Monday, Amy Wadge, who co-wrote “Thinking Out Loud” with Sheeran, testified that she used “exactly the same chord progression” in a previous song. On Thursday, Sheeran played the opening line of “Thinking Out Loud” in an attempt to rebut Stewart’s testimony. To demonstrate this, he played the chords from “Thinking Out Loud” while singing multiple different songs from other artists, including “Tupelo Honey” and “Crazy Love.” He testified that he did not copy those songs when he wrote “Thinking Out Loud.” Sheeran said that the chords in “Thinking Out Loud” are a “common progression,” and that similar chords are used in several songs. Stewart had claimed during the trial last week that the chords Sheeran played in the first 24 seconds of his song were “virtually identical” to “Let’s Get It On.” Sheeran claimed Stewart altered elements from “Thinking Out Loud” in his analysis in order to prove his point. He also disputed the testimony of Alexander Stewart, the plaintiffs’ expert witness. Sheeran said he found the allegations in the case “really insulting.” At one point, the musician said, “I’m not gonna swear.” Musician Ed Sheeran appeared visibly frustrated on the stand Monday as he continued his testimony in the second week of his copyright infringement case about whether his smash single “Thinking Out Loud” copied the classic Marvin Gaye song “Let’s Get It On.”
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