We're doin' some speculatin' over in the CBS/Paramount v. Axanar Facebook group about this.I wonder when we'll hear what their announcement will be from Axanar that their lawyers will clear? Think it will be right after Monday's conference?
We're doin' some speculatin' over in the CBS/Paramount v. Axanar Facebook group about this.I wonder when we'll hear what their announcement will be from Axanar that their lawyers will clear? Think it will be right after Monday's conference?
The Pro-Axas(Nice term you came up for them by the way.) don't understand that someone making money off of ideas they don't own is not legal. Axanar will never see the light of day now because Paramount and CBS will win this case and will not let Peters even finish it as a fan picture that supposedly isn't making a profit.@Michael Hinman : I couldn't help but laugh at the comments section of the article. Here we have Dave Galanter explaining exactly what happened behind the scenes, and the pro-Axa drones come right in and start calling it a hit piece full of bias and slander.![]()
There wouldn't be a public viewable version of that would there? Don't do Facebook.We're doin' some speculatin' over in the CBS/Paramount v. Axanar Facebook group about this.
Can you post a link to that page, please??the CBS/Paramount v. Axanar Facebook group
It's like they have this impression Star Trek was made as a gift for humanity. It isn't. We love it, it's a terrific show with some great (and not so great) ideas, but it was never meant to be freely distributed. It exists to make money.The Pro-Axas(Nice term you came up for them by the way.) don't understand that someone making money off of ideas they don't own is not legal. Axanar will never see the light of day now because Paramount and CBS will win this case and will not let Peters even finish it as a fan picture that supposedly isn't making a profit.
https://www.facebook.com/groups/CBSvsAxanar/Can you post a link to that page, please??
Well said.It's like they have this impression Star Trek was made as a gift for humanity. It isn't. We love it, it's a terrific show with some great (and not so great) ideas, but it was never meant to be freely distributed. It exists to make money.
It's like they have this impression Star Trek was made as a gift for humanity. It isn't. We love it, it's a terrific show with some great (and not so great) ideas, but it was never meant to be freely distributed. It exists to make money.
OK, that made for interesting reading, @carlosp.
Two questions.
1) If this turns out to be the case, can the Plaintiffs change the suit in the future to go after the supposed complicit fundraising using Trek IP?
2) What could counter this new tactic if Loeb & Loeb have actually anticipated this possibility?
It will require fancy legal footwork because transformativeness is a largely unexplored area of case law.Even if they rewrite Axanar as a documentary series in the style of Prelude, it'll be an uphill struggle convincing anyone that it's a parody or any other kind of "transformative" work.
It will require fancy legal footwork because transformativeness is a largely unexplored area of case law.
In a 1994 case, the Supreme Court emphasized that transformativeness analysis has to examine the material has been used to help create something new or merely copied verbatim into another work. Two key questions in this analysis:
- See more at: http://fairuse.stanford.edu/overview/fair-use/four-factors/#sthash.ZqBiDBo2.dpuf
- Has the material taken from the original work been transformed by adding new expression or meaning?
- Was value added to the original by creating new information, new aesthetics, new insights, and understandings?
See my post above for the issues to be grappled with regarding transformativeness.Read your analysis as well, Carlos.
I wonder what the precedents are for a deliberate copy of an entertainment work as a property (Star Trek like you've never seen it before) being ruled transformative even though a vast number of the copyrighted elements are not transformed. I am assuming Axanar would try to continue to use the trademarks and copyright races/technology/backstory etc so they are "real" to fans. If the "purpose" is still to tell an entertainment story, what other factors could they fiddle with enough to be "transformative"?
Somehow, I just don't see a whole series or movie in the documentary style while retaining all the Trek elements as a true transformation. It would be a story with a light wrapper around it.
Also, couldn't C/P lock up the funds raised so far on the grounds of the charges about historic Axanar activity which is not tied to speculating about the future Axanar movie, such as products, the Vulcan scene, etc. already cover a large amount of potential damages? And lock up the sale on the grounds an accounting of C/P IP value on the "original" sales pitch needs to be done before the actual fair value sale of the asset can proceed?
See my post above for the issues to be grappled with regarding transformativeness.
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