Not the first time he's done that.Certainly Vader cracking a Dad joke was not the highlight of my experience. It would have been better if they had left him out.
Not the first time he's done that.Certainly Vader cracking a Dad joke was not the highlight of my experience. It would have been better if they had left him out.
True... but it's important to keep one's terms consistent. What exactly do you mean by "survive"... actual survival of physical life, or mere continuation of the current status quo conditions? And what scale of "society" are you talking about here? The planet Earth? The human species? The entire United Federation of Planets? Once again: nothing in DSC season 1 suggested that the Klingons posed an existential threat to the physical survival of any of these.A society that does not survive gets no second chance to learn from it failures. It's done and gone, finito.
Indeed. Concerning habeas corpus, for instance, the way many high-level US officials in the Bush/Cheney administration were ready and willing to toss aside not just that but many other cherished Constitutional guarantees in the face of a frankly trivial threat was deeply disturbing.I submit to you that if the situation were dire enough, it's unknown exactly what our people in government might do...
This reflects a misunderstanding that has already been debunked. To wit, you're talking about the wrong area of IP law. Patents (which actually last for 20 years) only apply to functional inventions. Unless the Trek producers devised a working starship, that's not what we're talking about here. What's relevant is copyright (which applies to stories, characters, and other narrative elements), and especially trademark (which applies to non-functional visual designs). Copyright protection in the U.S lasts for 95 years, and trademark protection lasts indefinitely.It all comes back to money. CBS wants to licence new things and make money. All props, uniforms, ships, etc., can only be protected by filing a patent on them. Those only last for 17 years. They ordered the redesign by 25% so things could be patented and they could make more money.
All legal issues aside, this is a subjective conclusion, and one I can understand and (to an extent) agree with. I look at it like this: the Trek universe has gone through quite a few retrocausal timeline alterations over the years. What Paramount and CBS call the "Prime" timeline is the most recent incarnation of that timeline, the one that existed at the point Romulus was destroyed in 2387. This is not the same thing as the original Trek timeline we actually saw throughout TOS.To me, Discovery is in a similar, but noticeably different timeline. They have in spirit gone back to the prime timeline, but not in fact. That was a marketing gimmick to distance Discovery from the films. It has worked and Discovery has its audience and there is no longer a need to pretend Discovery and TOS happen in the same exact timeline. Similar, yes, but not the same.
Let me give an example to be clearer: Rogue One (2016) was a direct prequel to SW: A New Hope (1977), made 39 years after the latter, but has sets, props, costumes, models etc. that are exactly the same as the film it is a prequel of. Why? Because the producers specifically made R1 as a prequel, so it needed to exactly match what we saw in ANH in every way. It was completely believable that this movie made with the production values of 2016 was able to recreate the same look and feel of a movie made in 1977.
Now contrast that with DSC. It's clear that the show, while visually stunning and using the newest production values available, does not even remotely try to look and feel like the 50+ year old show it's supposedly trying to be a prequel of. And it's not like they couldn't have tried, since R1 pulled it off just fine. It's almost as if it wasn't originally meant to be a prequel to TOS, and that someone just made that decision later in the process after production was already commencing (No, I'm not implying that that's what actually happened. I'm just saying that's what it felt like to me.)
So when I said "a show produced in 2018 with 2018 production values that claims to be a prequel to a show produced in the '60's with '60's production values is rather silly," I meant that there was literally no effort to use those 2018 production values to recreate the look and feel of TOS, and instead made a show that looks and feels more like it takes place either post-TUC or even post-TNG (again, my opinion). As I stated before, I like DSC on its own merits, I think it looks great, and I hope that it continues and gets better. But to me, there's nothing about it that remotely makes me feel like it takes place ten years before TOS, which is what the show is advertised as being. And really, I don't need it to look like TOS. I just need to treat it like the reboot that it actually is.
Indeed, indeed. But, to be fair, that ship sailed with TMP and TNG as GR adjusted what he wanted Star Trek and future humanity to look like.All legal issues aside, this is a subjective conclusion, and one I can understand and (to an extent) agree with. I look at it like this: the Trek universe has gone through quite a few retrocausal timeline alterations over the years. What Paramount and CBS call the "Prime" timeline is the most recent incarnation of that timeline, the one that existed at the point Romulus was destroyed in 2387. This is not the same thing as the original Trek timeline we actually saw throughout TOS.
True... but it's important to keep one's terms consistent. What exactly do you mean by "survive"... actual survival of physical life, or mere continuation of the current status quo conditions? And what scale of "society" are you talking about here? The planet Earth? The human species? The entire United Federation of Planets? Once again: nothing in DSC season 1 suggested that the Klingons posed an existential threat to the physical survival of any of these.
These distinctions are critical. In one sense, for instance, ancient Roman society ceased to exist due to a self-inflicted wound, when it changed from a Republic to an Empire. In a different sense, Roman society not only survived but continued to expand.
But it didn't match ANH in every way. The one thing that jumps out at me (I haven't watched Rogue One for a while) is that we wouldn't have K-2SO and other imperial droids of the like if they were trying to match ANH.
"Newest production values" can mean creating cgi droids that don't really fit in with older films, no?
There's obviously nothing I can do to change your mind. But thank you for clarifying what you meant.
This reflects a misunderstanding that has already been debunked. To wit, you're talking about the wrong area of IP law. Patents (which actually last for 20 years) only apply to functional inventions. Unless the Trek producers devised a working starship, that's not what we're talking about here. What's relevant is copyright (which applies to stories, characters, and other narrative elements), and especially trademark (which applies to non-functional visual designs). Copyright protection in the U.S lasts for 95 years, and trademark protection lasts indefinitely.
The Coca-Cola bottle design, for instance, is still a protected trademark... and so is the original design of the starship Enterprise.
Moreover, there is not and never was any rule that you could refresh any form of IP protection by changing something "25%." Indeed, there's no clear definition of what a 25 percent change would even mean for most forms of IP.
All legal issues aside, this is a subjective conclusion, and one I can understand and (to an extent) agree with. I look at it like this: the Trek universe has gone through quite a few retrocausal timeline alterations over the years. What Paramount and CBS call the "Prime" timeline is the most recent incarnation of that timeline, the one that existed at the point Romulus was destroyed in 2387. This is not the same thing as the original Trek timeline we actually saw throughout TOS.
This has been my opinion since Eaves first mentioned the 25% difference.So back to my point - CBS wanted a 25% change to all the designs because that lets them submit new patents to protect the new designs so they can ask more for licencing.
Nope, it's everything, including TOS.What Paramount and CBS call the "Prime" timeline is the most recent incarnation of that timeline, the one that existed at the point Romulus was destroyed in 2387. This is not the same thing as the original Trek timeline we actually saw throughout TOS.
No. That's an inaccurate paraphrase that sets up a straw-man position. What I actually pointed out is that, while some posters were arguing that if the very survival of humanity (and/or the Federation) was threatened, that justifies violent actions that violate agreed-upon moral principles (i.e., winning "by any means necessary"), neither part of that claim actually applied in DSC. Survival was not actually threatened, and even when it has been (at other points in Trek history), other less extreme and more principled solutions have remained available.Interesting, your claim is that because the Klingons weren't bringing total annihilation of the intelligent members of the Federation and instead would, say make them slaves and slaughter vast numbers if any kind of resistance was offered (such as was done in Errand of Mercy except on a vaster sacle) then that'a a mere '"change in the status quo"' ... that justifies not doing something that made it clear to an alien race bent on conquest and subjugation the the cost was to high in the only language they are interested in listening to?
That second part is definitely not true, but this isn't the place to digress into the details. As for the first part, you're missing the point of my analogy. It was merely offered to illustrate the importance of clarifying one's terms. To the defenders of the Republic, the prospect of an Empire ruled by dictators posed a real, existential threat to the survival of Roman society. In a very real sense, that came to pass. Yet in a different sense (as you describe), Roman society continued. My point was to underscore the importance of cutting through hyperbole about things like "a last-ditch effort for survival" to focus on the actual stakes and risks involved in any given situation.For instance, your comparison to Rome turning from a Republic to an empire as a comparison, When the Roman Republic changed to an Empire very little changed for the vast majority of the population. ... there is little indication that Roman society changed much from Kingdom to Republic to Empire in terms of overall culture and treatment of the population.
And I think we see the fruits of such an attitude born out by Star Trek down the line.Moreover, whatever one thinks of the Klingon War, it's over now, as is whatever threat is posed. Yet, somehow, Section 31 continues to exist, and the people who thought the threat of genocide was a valid tactic still hold power. Institutions (and moral compromises) have inertia, and once such things have been condoned once, they tend to stick around, even under less extreme circumstances than those that initially "justified" them.
No. That's an inaccurate paraphrase that sets up a straw-man position. What I actually pointed out is that, while some posters were arguing that if the very survival of humanity (and/or the Federation) was threatened, that justifies violent actions that violate agreed-upon moral principles (i.e., winning "by any means necessary"), neither part of that claim actually applied in DSC. Survival was not actually threatened, and even when it has been (at other points in Trek history), other less extreme and more principled solutions have remained available.
Moreover, whatever one thinks of the Klingon War, it's over now, as is whatever threat is posed. Yet, somehow, Section 31 continues to exist, and the people who thought the threat of genocide was a valid tactic still hold power. Institutions (and moral compromises) have inertia, and once such things have been condoned once, they tend to stick around, even under less extreme circumstances than those that initially "justified" them.
Moreover again, vilifying enemies as "only understanding violence" is an age-old form of propaganda, but it's virtually never true. One thing Star Trek has consistently been good at over the years is puncturing that sort of propaganda.
That second part is definitely not true, but this isn't the place to digress into the details. As for the first part, you're missing the point of my analogy. It was merely offered to illustrate the importance of clarifying one's terms. To the defenders of the Republic, the prospect of an Empire ruled by dictators posed a real, existential threat to the survival of Roman society. In a very real sense, that came to pass. Yet in a different sense (as you describe), Roman society continued. My point was to underscore the importance of cutting through hyperbole about things like "a last-ditch effort for survival" to focus on the actual stakes and risks involved in any given situation.
What is this "misunderstanding"? That seems extraordinarily specific. Is there some specific case or statute you could point me to?a little mis-understanding in our laws has created a gap so that fictional space ship designs remain unprotected
At no point have the owners of Star Trek ceased to use the original design of the Enterprise; merchandise featuring it continues to be commercially available on an ongoing basis. (Technically what we're talking about here is "trade dress," but that's been subsumed under the umbrella of trademark law in the U.S.) And trademarks don't have to be registered with the government (although registration does confer a few additional advantages); protection is automatic (just as with copyright) once you've put the IP in front of the public.As for the trademark claim you make, if you cease to use an item the trademark expires. By ceasing to use the TOS or TMP Enterprise design, any potential trademark will expire. And when I searched thorough the trademarks, I could find nothing on any of the vehicles used in Star Trek.
Here's where the flaw creeps in. CBS is still the only company that has the right to license any version of the Enterprise design for merchandising. Anyone who attempts to use it without a license will find himself the target of an infringement suit, and he'll lose. The notion that CBS can ask "more" for protected designs is mistaken; what it can ask depends entirely on whatever the market will bear, whereas for designs that were not protected, it couldn't ask anything, because those would be freely available to use.So back to my point - CBS wanted a 25% change to all the designs because that lets them submit new patents to protect the new designs so they can ask more for licencing.
Anyone else want the 25% thing to disappear forever? It keeps getting trotted out like some sort of iron clad standard, but, as noted above, has no legal standing.(Even then, though, the "25%" thing has no basis in law. The standard for infringement hinges on "likelihood of confusion," for which there are several criteria, only one of which is visual similarity, and even for that there's no quantitative threshold, nor could there plausibly be one.)
It's not their plan that succeeded... Burnham had to talk them down from that plan. Otherwise the Klingon homeworld would have been destroyed. That was a key element of the finale.Of course they are still in power, because they weren't proven wrong, their action of last resort appeared to have achieved the results required to end the war.
Debate continues to this day as to whether the original use of atomic weapons on Japan was justified. FWIW, I'm in the camp that thinks it wasn't. Beyond that, though, Patton wanted to use them in Korea. LeMay wanted to use them in the Cuban Missile Crisis. Various generals including Westmoreland (and presidential candidate Goldwater) wanted to use them in Vietnam. (And other less-famous examples abound.) Yet it's clear that none of those conflicts had stakes as high as World War II... and using nukes would only have raised the stakes. It's fortunate that the post-WWII taboo against using nukes prevailed (oh, look... a principle!), but there was never any guarantee that it wouldn't be violated.The people who condoned the dropping of nuclear bombs on Japan also remained in power, and according to history they kept dropping nukes on people who disagreed with American Hegemony every few years to remind folks of that. Oh wait. They didn't. Funny that.
CBS put out the 25%. That is how much they wanted it changed. It has no legal standing, but it is relevant because of who inserted it in the discussion.Anyone else want the 25% thing to disappear forever? It keeps getting trotted out like some sort of iron clad standard, but, as noted above, has no legal standing.
Hooray for confusion!![]()
CBS put out the 25%. That is how much they wanted it changed.
According to whom? When? This has never been made explicit, nor could it be, logically.Nope, [Prime is] everything, including TOS.
My IP professor in law school would disagree with you.And I seriously think you misunderstand trademarks.
CBS put out the 25%. That is how much they wanted it changed. It has no legal standing, but it is relevant because of who inserted it in the discussion.
Even if they did (or if someone at CBS said that to Eaves at some point), the notion is ridiculous. There's no agreed-upon metric for measuring the difference between one visual design and another. It's a completely subjective thing.Actually, no, they didn't.
John Eaves initially said they did, but then he back-walked it. There's no actual evidence that the "25%" was ever a legal thing.
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