This ^ (what SeerSGB said)
Here's the deal.
Profit has nothing to do with the tort. IP infringement is proven either way. But the making of serious coin means (1) CBS/Paramount got wind of it. Trust me, they neither know nor care about Joe from Peoria and his $500 Trek fan film shot with his cellphone camera. But $1 M with a semi-pro look and feel, and SAG-AFTRA members reprising their roles? Oh yeah, there's very little that can be argued as being transformative there. And that rightfully hit their radar.
and (2) there's a pocket there. I saw elsewhere (might have been on the Axanar site itself but I have read so much stuff on this lately, I can't recall, sorry) someone asking why not go against a smaller production?
Because - surprise! - taking down this production will have far more of an impact, plus suing for $150k/violation doesn't mean diddly for Joe from Peoria's $500 fan film. Joe is fine - the courts aren't going to hand over the deed for his house to CBS/Paramount. Even if they did, that would only cover 1 - 2 violations. But with close to $1.5 M in assets (fan $$ raised plus AP's own personal assets), 10 violations can be paid for.
Not that CBS/Paramount needs the cabbage. They don't. But it makes little sense to steamroll Joe in Peoria. Better to go after AP and get something for your troubles.
PS The blonde in those pictures? She's Doe defendant #1.
Here's the deal.
Profit has nothing to do with the tort. IP infringement is proven either way. But the making of serious coin means (1) CBS/Paramount got wind of it. Trust me, they neither know nor care about Joe from Peoria and his $500 Trek fan film shot with his cellphone camera. But $1 M with a semi-pro look and feel, and SAG-AFTRA members reprising their roles? Oh yeah, there's very little that can be argued as being transformative there. And that rightfully hit their radar.
and (2) there's a pocket there. I saw elsewhere (might have been on the Axanar site itself but I have read so much stuff on this lately, I can't recall, sorry) someone asking why not go against a smaller production?
Because - surprise! - taking down this production will have far more of an impact, plus suing for $150k/violation doesn't mean diddly for Joe from Peoria's $500 fan film. Joe is fine - the courts aren't going to hand over the deed for his house to CBS/Paramount. Even if they did, that would only cover 1 - 2 violations. But with close to $1.5 M in assets (fan $$ raised plus AP's own personal assets), 10 violations can be paid for.
Not that CBS/Paramount needs the cabbage. They don't. But it makes little sense to steamroll Joe in Peoria. Better to go after AP and get something for your troubles.
PS The blonde in those pictures? She's Doe defendant #1.