This, minus the deleted text, is the definition of derivative copyright, is it not? People can claim all they want until they're blue in the face that it's not subject to copyright protection, but black-letter law says they are wrong Wrong WRONG.
Good point... the fannish Klingon may be derived work in the copyright context.
Most unfortunately, but perhaps inevitably, if the Klingon speakers do not seek an accommodation with the studios then they will probably be faced with any future published works being challenged for trademark on Klingon, and for copyright on the dictionary and movie and related licensed works content.
All of which would put Klingon speakers in the same place as Trek fan film makers have arrived at, also pushed there by Axanar. They will be left that they can speak what they want without calling it Klingon or using the core vocabulary (or scripts too?) -- make an off-brand embodiment of the unique spirit they claim is the virtue of the language they defend.
Then we would see if it could stand up on its own, like fan film producers offering to make non-Trek films. Which of course it won't, since Klingon is inextricably tied in with the speakers fanatasizing that they are part of the specific character type and back story created by the studio, not their as yet undiscovered Romulan cousins, or descendendents of the virus that forced amenesia that lost the vocabulary of dictionary, or the like.
And serious do-it-anyway Klingon speakers, while probably never stopped from their hobby, yet being constrained not to publish, would probably fall off the novelty list after a while and face the long (but glorious



The AC filing, for all its enthusiasm, may have pulled the plug on an accomodation, even while forcing the studio to clarify that they are not claiming everything everyone has derived. The studio just needs to hold the core of the language and the name, and that I believe they can do.
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