For Axanar, this IS a major achievement!!!They're just patches, not a major achievement.
For Axanar, this IS a major achievement!!!They're just patches, not a major achievement.
With Professor Plum in the Conservatory.Re your offer in the analysis:
Grace Lee Whitney's salary was paid in Spockified Canadian fivers
That William Shatner created while having beer
With David Gerrold, who immortalized the tribble species
That fringed Garth of Izar's cloak
Which signified he is master of the universe
Whom Gods Destroy on Axanar
At 10 PM
With Twinkies
It is ironic then that in his other non-adult jobs he seems only capable of dicking around instead of doing actual research instead of cocking up the facts. I guess we might say he's a missionary for doggy-style intellectualism.
With Professor Plum in the Conservatory.
PM Me your address and pie preference and I will send you one.![]()
DON’T ASK DON’T TELL Despite his official ‘no refund’ policy, Axanar producer Alec Peters offers money back to complaining donors so long as they never talk about Axanar again. Meanwhile, donors’ perks finally start shipping, and Peters props up his favored blog by continuing his attack on AxaMonitor.
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DON’T ASK DON’T TELL Despite his official ‘no refund’ policy, Axanar producer Alec Peters offers money back to complaining donors so long as they never talk about Axanar again. Meanwhile, donors’ perks finally start shipping, and Peters props up his favored blog by continuing his attack on AxaMonitor.
Maybe she's building up to it. On behalf of Alec Peters her blog references a singer most famous for a song entitled "You're So Vain"I really wonder why Diana 1.0 hasn't bailed yet.........
http://www.axanarproductions.com/to-carly-simon-and-heinz-ketchup/
Anyone have any experience with Californian consumer law? In the UK there would be absolutely no justification for any such agreement.DON’T ASK DON’T TELL Despite his official ‘no refund’ policy, Axanar producer Alec Peters offers money back to complaining donors so long as they never talk about Axanar again. Meanwhile, donors’ perks finally start shipping, and Peters props up his favored blog by continuing his attack on AxaMonitor.
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Why, thank you.Virtual would be enough for my diet at the moment
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Yeah. I wonder how this can be justified. I see it as intimidation but I'm no lawyer.Anyone have any experience with Californian consumer law? In the UK there would be absolutely no justification for any such agreement.
All NDAs should define what permissible uses, or copying, the receiving party can make with the confidential information. ...
Conversely, the NDA should expressly permit certain types of disclosures— such as to the receiving party's attorneys and accountants (with appropriate safeguards).
DON’T ASK DON’T TELL Despite his official ‘no refund’ policy, Axanar producer Alec Peters offers money back to complaining donors so long as they never talk about Axanar again. Meanwhile, donors’ perks finally start shipping, and Peters props up his favored blog by continuing his attack on AxaMonitor.
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Well, you can't be sure that the owner is not going to go back to something old. Current series, case in point. They will doubtless forward reference canon they established. I doubt they would want to reference a fan production, but if fan productions are successful filling in the story, it might pose a problem for the owners both legally and wrt/ the fans. Would the studio have to pay licensing fees to the fan production for their 'original' work? That's just an example.
My point was not "certainly they should get credit", but that their compensation is money/points, and perhaps credit. Not sublicenses. One could argue that they "should" have a sublicense to resell the IP, but that's not what their contract says or what the law requires.
Ok. So, then why does the actor get to decide whether or not the character--that as you admit--others contributed to the success--gets to appear in a fan film? Especially, when that actor is being paid to be in it?
How would you feel if I came into your house--uninvited--and took something I thought you didn't care about. Maybe you were going to play with that old xbox. Maybe you were going to sell it. But, I thought, you didn't really care about it anymore. Would that be ok to you?
I'm the same. I absolutely love this.You know, sometimes you just have to bow to the absurd.
Positively roaring with laughter at the simultaneous audacity and idiocy of this latest plot twist over here.![]()
Them getting paid for it does make the issue less clear, at least a bit more like taking from the owner. But I don't see using the character in a low-budget nonprofit work as a rival good when the corporation and the others who contributed to the character seem to not want to and not be intending to use it again (but still can).
A person's game system obviously is a rival good and assuming they don't want it anymore and thus taking it and using and enjoying it as I would seems pretty different from using a concept or character to no profit let alone as much as the corporation would (and still can). Intellectual property is similar to physical property and should get protection but they are different and IP shouldn't necessarily be treated exactly the same way.
I wouldn't like someone trespassing, let alone also taking a game system, but if I had invited you over and while there you secretly took a photo of a game system, enlarged the photo and pretended to yourself that the system was yours (either that you had the system the photo was of or the photo literally was the system) I wouldn't mind.
I'm not taking about employment law. I'm talking about consumer law. I think the issue I have is that Peters is claiming that he is not in breach of Kickstarter's terms. Having read read them I disagree with that. English consumer law has certain protections in that regard that Are a more straight forward remedy than a standard contractual dispute. I was just wondering with the Californian position was.FYI California law (so far as I can see) mainly talks about nondisclosures in the context of employment. However, generic NDAs aren't going to work. See: http://www.yourlegalcorner.com/articles.asp?id=106&cat=emp
Quoting from that site:
The 'agreement' (ha; it's not an agreement. It's intended to be a contract of adhesion, e. g. a non-negotiated document where one side dictates terms and the other side is forced to agree or walk) is overly broad and doesn't permit the signer to talk about Axanar at all, forever. $15 donors would be giving away the store, and selling themselves out for cheap.
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