One of the biggest pitfalls of going post-VOY is the producers (and likely the modern showrunners) would still want the show to be edgy, grimdark, show flawed characters, etc. This would feel even more out of place post-VOY, because it would be either implying that everything we saw before was a lie, or the Federation went to shit (basically, the same thing that people are complaining about with Disney Star Wars crapping all over the "happy ending" of the original trilogy.
I dunno, seems to me that the Trek
novels set in the 24th century era over the past 15 years or so have done a perfectly nice job following up on those shows and finding sources of drama without going all "edgy and grimdark." As I've thought on more than one occasion over the years, the people producing the canon Trek material could do a lot worse than to take some creative cues from the people producing the licensed Trek fiction.
Of course, they wouldn't actually have done that... which would've led to a whole
other problem, namely that any show set post-VOY would almost certainly have invalidated a great deal of what's been established in the "litverse." And doing
that would've upset a whole distinct (smaller but very dedicated) cohort of fans... just as Disney's sequels pissed off fans of the Star Wars EU.
The judge indicated they own the rights period. No speculation on other people having rights.
From the judge's order.
"CBS owns the copyrights in the Star Trek Television Series, while Paramount owns the copyrights in the Star Trek Motion Pictures. Plaintiffs also jointly own United States copyrights in numerous other Star Trek works including novels in which Garth of Izar and Star Trek starships appear (collectively with Star Trek Television Series and Star Trek Motion Pictures, “Star Trek Copyrighted Works”)."
Hmm, that's interesting. The court said that Paramount
owns the copyrights to the Star Trek films, not merely that it holds the film rights to Star Trek? (Those are two different statements. Michael Uslan holds the film rights to Batman, for instance, but that doesn't mean he owns Batman in any meaningful sense.) That seems potentially at odds with the legal statements of ownership actually promulgated by CBS (as I mentioned upthread), and also (particularly it comes to the novels) at odds with everything I've heard about licensors having to deal only with CBS, not Paramount.
I think it's probably safer to stick to the "sole ownership" understanding of the underlying IP, just as CBS has consistently represented it for years, and assume that Paramount was involved in the Axanar lawsuit primarily because Peters was seeking to make
a film (hence also interfering with Paramount's rights), and that the judge who authored the decision slightly mis-stated things.
I don't think "a burden to write for" is nearly as much a factor these days as the desire to engage new fans without the baggage of all that crapola. And- it's FAR more perception than reality.
I agree with that last sentence. I've never understood this notion in some quarters that "new fans" of any given property are somehow turned off by a deep continuity. Speaking as a fan (of many things) myself, I've always
loved the opportunity to dig into the backstory of a fictional world that goes beyond any particular story. It's an enticement, not a deterrent!