As opposed to your actively abusive language which makes no real substantive claims or cites anything in particular. I at least try to articulate my thoughts and feelings in a way I can support with fact and logical argument. Well, congratulations, I was going to simply to dignify your previous statements with a real response, but since you seem so eager...Well that certainly beats your usual passive-aggressive verbal
diarrhoea.
If by that you mean you gave an unsupported opinion, they yes.Oh I think it's quite clear what I meant.
This is the equivalent of when Princess Leia called Han Solo a "scruffy looking nerf herder" and Han replied "Who's scruffy looking?". But I suppose what you said technically wasn't snide, because you weren't being implicit or using subtlety.Nothing snide about it.
I used Latin terms because those are the names of the respective terms. I didn't invent the terminology. Clearly, you're implying that I'm engaging in trolling. The interesting thing is that your comment far better meets the definition of trolling:The ability to Google latin phrases doesn't intimidate the billygoats crossing the bridge.
My post was in response to a troll, and while expressing my feelings regarding the post I was responding, was not intended purely to illicit a response, nor did I feel anything I said was inaccurate in any way. Note that, at no time, did you every directly contradict any of my comments, or dispute the facts as I see them. I think that says it all.1) make a deliberately offensive or provocative online post with the aim of upsetting someone or eliciting an angry response from them.
There's an expectation of access because the existence of guidelines implies access. (If anything, I think was less cause to believe in an expectation of access before the Guidelines.) I'd actually have more respect for CBS if they simply said "no fan films". At least that would be clear and consistent.To my reading, it starts at a level of passion to express towards a property and morphs, quite readily, in to expectation of access.
The Guidelines are an attempt on the part of CBS to have their cake and eat it, to foster the kind of fan film community they've always wanted without extending any legal protections or guarantees to that same community so they can continue to exercise control over it, even when they conform to the Guidelines. They keep people in a legal limbo for the sole purpose of exercising that power. The fans don't have to make films, of course, and that's the option I'd actually suggest, but that doesn't mean I find the situation that CBS has created any less distasteful. Fish or cut bait, CBS.