According to the Public Domain list: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2026_in_public_domain James Blish's Star Trek novelisations enter Public Domain in 2026, but do they if Star Trek is still copyrighted?
It could be a case, where the author didn't renew the copyright depending when it was published.Perhaps it means that anything unique to the novelizations is public domain, though I doubt it.
U.S. law gives published works from 1964–1977 a copyright term of 95 years from the year of publication. This assumes the copyrights were filed correctly in those pre-registration days. You can see the 1967 copyright in the first volume (link).According to the Public Domain list: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2026_in_public_domain James Blish's Star Trek novelisations enter Public Domain in 2026, but do they if Star Trek is still copyrighted?
Some of the younger crowd here will live to see the 1966 episodes become public domain thirty-six years from now, but I don't believe I will.Star Trek is not going into public domain in our lifetimes.
Spoken like someone who doesn't actually make a living as a writer/creator of intellectual property. You think authors have it too easy in this marketplace? Give it a try. Show us how easy it is before you denigrate the one thing that makes our careers even remotely feasible.copyright terms have been extended to a point where they allow authors to "rest on their laurels,' and retire on the continued royalties from a work they'd published decades ago, without ever actually creating anything new
Nice job moving those goalposts.And the "resting on laurels" part is quite a bit more true of corporations (which frequently had no hand in actually creating a given piece of IP, having bought it outright, for quite possibly far less than it was actually worth) than of individuals.
I'll be in my mid-seventies by then. And I'll probably still be posting here, bitching about how insane it is that Amazomni Corp or whoever owns Trek at that point is trying to argue that you can't publish a story about other Vulcans yet because the idea of Vulcans other than Spock wasn't introduced until season two, so it's still under copyright. I'm sure they'll go full Doyle Estate, arguing every comma and capital letter remotely related to Star Trek is intrinsic and invented by the most recent episode or movie they put out.Some of the younger crowd here will live to see the 1966 episodes become public domain thirty-six years from now, but I don't believe I will.
The Doyle estate did sue the company that produced the Enola Holmes movie, but I don't remember them ever going after novel writers. There are so many Sherlock Holmes novels, with more being released every month, that it would be impossible to keep track of them all.I'll be in my mid-seventies by then. And I'll probably still be posting here, bitching about how insane it is that Amazomni Corp or whoever owns Trek at that point is trying to argue that you can't publish a story about other Vulcans yet because the idea of Vulcans other than Spock wasn't introduced until season two, so it's still under copyright. I'm sure they'll go full Doyle Estate, arguing every comma and capital letter remotely related to Star Trek is intrinsic and invented by the most recent episode or movie they put out.
At this point, the Doyle estate can do nothing; the Canon is all public domain at this point. Which has resulted in an absolute crapton of Sherlock Holmes slop to which Sturgeon's Law absolutely applies for sale on Amazon.The Doyle estate did sue the company that produced the Enola Holmes movie, but I don't remember them ever going after novel writers. There are so many Sherlock Holmes novels, with more being released every month, that it would be impossible to keep track of them all.
The thing that makes me think they won't go "full Doyle" is that there will have been nearly forty years of exploitation of public domain elements of characters still largely under copyright and the experience of that to draw upon. People are already discussing what's going to happen when Superman begins to hit the public domain eight years from now and if other publishers, like Marvel, will introduce their own Superman based on the public domain stories. Will DC retcon a Golden Age Captain America into their history two years after that? Hell, by the time we're approaching 2060, will planets like Krypton and Oa and Thanagar have been incorporated into the Star Trek universe because they've entered the public domain? I'd be interested to see what @Christopher might do with the public domain elements of Krypton in a Star Trek novel a decade from now. Point is, the copyright landscape and the customs around the public domain will be very different forty years from now.I'll be in my mid-seventies by then. And I'll probably still be posting here, bitching about how insane it is that Amazomni Corp or whoever owns Trek at that point is trying to argue that you can't publish a story about other Vulcans yet because the idea of Vulcans other than Spock wasn't introduced until season two, so it's still under copyright. I'm sure they'll go full Doyle Estate, arguing every comma and capital letter remotely related to Star Trek is intrinsic and invented by the most recent episode or movie they put out.
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