LikewiseIIRC, I found out about the last few cover art releases (not sure about actual book announcements) from StarTrek.com's social media.
How do you work out the percentage value of a spaceship???the Discoveryprise had to look 25% different to the TOS version for legal reasons
No lie, that is a pretty boss designI'm eagerly awaiting the next wave of Star Trek novels, which can only reference select episodes of Voyager and season two of TOS, and have covers featuring Best of Trek-style Enterprises
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Just imagine being one of the lawyers trying to figure that out. "I spent five years in law school just to spend my working days pouring over schematics of a fictional spaceship and determine if it's sufficiently different from the fifty year old design it originated from."No I mean, how do you work out 25% of a 3d model? What percentage change is making the nacelles blue for example?
Is this what's holding up the license negotiations then? CBS only wants to give Pocket rights to 25% of the franchise and everyone's trying to hammer out exactly what they want and what they'll forgo?
I know. I was making a little joke.
The other shows could use the proper one but not this one? Seems fishy.
Just imagine being one of the lawyers trying to figure that out. "I spent five years in law school just to spend my working days pouring over schematics of a fictional spaceship and determine if it's sufficiently different from the fifty year old design it originated from."
Life was much easier when it was just Paramount, one owner, one licensee. If the Abramsverse Star Trek movies were just Paramount and Star Trek was still just a Paramount property then there probably would be no issues with novels including those elements.
But now we have CBS owning the rights, Paramount having movie rights and then add Bad Robot to the mix.
My guess is it was for merchandising purposes, so models and posters and such of the Discoprise can be produced by people making DSC tie-ins without the licensees having to own both a DSC and TOS license.
I guess it's just what they feel is safely distinct enough that they won't get sued. Usually I find one unmissable difference they can point to and say "it's not the TOS Enterprise, look the nacelle pylons are bifurcated!" (Or as Seth McFarlane might say, "It's not Star Trek, our guys don't have transporters!")No I mean, how do you work out 25% of a 3d model? What percentage change is making the nacelles blue for example?
Just imagine being one of the lawyers trying to figure that out. "I spent five years in law school just to spend my working days pouring over schematics of a fictional spaceship and determine if it's sufficiently different from the fifty year old design it originated from."
Wait, I'm confused. Why is this suddenly an issue now when the CBS/Paramount split was years ago? We've gotten quite a few books in that time that used stuff from both the movies and shows, with the first examples that come to mind being Serpents in the Garden, which was a TMP-era sequel to A Private Little War, and Foul Deeds Will Rise, which was a sequel to The Conscience of the King set between The Final Frontier and The Undiscovered Country. I think all or most of the Vanguard books also came after the split, and that used a ton of stuff from both the shows and movies.Scott Schneider and John Eaves recently said on Facebook that the Discoveryprise had to look 25% different to the TOS version for legal reasons, not just for aesthetic ones. Lots of people are speculating on Eaves' Facebook page as to why (and who actually has the rights to the original if neither CBS or Paramount can use it)
Months ago, one of the writers said they can't use stuff from any Trek movies due to the CBS/Paramount split. It was thought debunked, but now the VFX people are saying this.
I'm eagerly awaiting the next wave of Star Trek novels, which can only reference select episodes of Voyager and season two of TOS, and have covers featuring Best of Trek-style Enterprises
![]()
Wait, I'm confused. Why is this suddenly an issue now when the CBS/Paramount split was years ago? We've gotten quite a few books in that time that used stuff from both the movies and shows, with the first examples that come to mind being Serpents in the Garden, which was a TMP-era sequel to A Private Little War, and Foul Deeds Will Rise, which was a sequel to The Conscience of the King set between The Final Frontier and The Undiscovered Country. I think all or most of the Vanguard books also came after the split, and that used a ton of stuff from both the shows and movies.
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