It's been a long time since I've watched the original BSG. But I seem to remember that the (everyday) uniforms looked somewhat more interesting than fatigues, and could be turned into dress uniforms by adding capes.
That's the part that seems fuzzy, though. If the name of the character was "John Smith", I would imagine that, copyright or not, you could use it in another work.
So, how is it delineated? Where is the line that makes naming a character "Luke Skywalker" a copyright violation, but not "John Smith"?
Trademark is different than copyright and doesn't have to be defended. @Maurice explains it better than I can but there is always an option for the holder to bring suit and the judges will look kindly if there is an increase in copyright material in to your own work. Hard to argue Easter egg when it is more prominent or part of the story: https://www.copyright.gov/fair-use/more-info.htmlI've also been thinking about this.Easters eggs seems to get a pass, but if you very gradually increased the prominence of an easter egg, at what point would the hammer come down? Let's say you had a seven year run series and at the beginning of season one you started with brief glimpses of an R2-D2 droid mainly as easter eggs. And your plan is to gradually increase R2-D2's prominence until by the end of season 7 it was a main character.
I guess I'm wondering how trademark violations would work in cases of very gradual infringement through acclimatization. At what point would a company sue? Also at what point would a judge determine that they hadn't been enforcing their trademark and so you were free to use it?
Here’s an example: in The Man In The High Castle, the main protagonist is named John Smith. You are free to have your own character be named John Smith, as long as that character has no attributes of the John Smith from TMITHC. Because at that point it’s not about the name, it’s about the character. You could have a character named James T. Kirk as long as he has nothing whatsoever to do with the JTK from Star Trek. Luke Skywalker is a different story. That is a fake name copywrited by Lucasfilm.
Yes, I'm aware of all that, but it's no more precise. How does one define "the attributes of the character"? How does one delineate between "fake name" and "actual name"?
It all feels more like a gut-feeling than a rigorous principle.
I don’t know the intricacies of exactly how far you can go without crossing the line, but I would assume that if your John Smith character happens to be an American Nazi Obergruppenfuhrer from an alternate universe, I would think that Amazon would probably send you a cease and desist letter at the minimum.
So, make him an "American Stasi american Obergruppenführer" - both components of which were very real, but the combination of which never existed IRL (and moreover, the DDR Stasi was decidedely antifascistic by its own declaration, but still evocative enough to recall the association with 'nazi Obergruppenführer' - what would happen ?)
You think that would hold up in court?
Honestly, I have no idea. Which 'court' would that be, exactly ?
The DDR exists no more (as do most of its brethren communist states) , and it's not as if any US or other western court would hold any ubiquitous naming copyrights on such matters - though perhaps a federal German court would (can't look into such matters)..
in that case one still could have pre-emptively sued pre-emptively Amazon for their appropriation of the "nazi" epitaph, which was never really theirs, to begin with. Of course they would still have a case for the remaining commonalities with "their" John Smith.
But the term “Nazi” isn’t copywrited, so one couldn’t sue someone if they used that term.
Technically, no. However, I still think Amazon would need to present very precise evidence to prove some ripoff was a copy of theirs, given that they themselves shamelessly appropriated a cultural stereotype (which was not their own) to create their own character.
If I recall correctly, Prelude to Axanar was a prelude to a law suit.
^ OK, so please give me the exact definition of what would be part of " the character of John Smith", and what isn't . More explicitly, what attributes make him unique and 'copyrighted' and hence cannot be copied without modification without having Amazon having a valid cause for prosecution, and which attributes could be copied without Amazon making a case ?
If you cannot provide that in any less than very exact terms, why would I take any of the above seriously ?
Because it is up to the court. The court basically gets to determine what the similarities are, including the character in question, the story being told, and the setting. The closer it gets to being like Amazon's show (in this instance) the more likely that it will be found in violation.^ OK, so please give me the exact definition of what would be part of " the character of John Smith", and what isn't . More explicitly, what attributes make him unique and 'copyrighted' and hence cannot be copied without modification make Amazon have a valid cause for prosecution, and which attributes could be copied without Amazon making a case ?
If you cannot provide that in any less than very exact terms, why would I take any of the above seriously ?
Whether you take me seriously or not is irrelevant to me. I'm just giving you the facts
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