Dear oh dear. If I had a dollar for every time...It would be a travesty if Neil ever did Cash in his meme chips.
Dear oh dear. If I had a dollar for every time...It would be a travesty if Neil ever did Cash in his meme chips.
Well, the way I see it is this:-
1) Kickstarter terms require a project provider to have IP permission;
We were discussing this earlier in the thread. I think this is where regulation of crowdfunding should come into pay, and of course right now there is none. There is no current regulatory duty to perform due diligence so they can hide behind their terms of service.I wonder, actually, if this opens up Kickstarter to be sued by the donors. Kickstarter put it up on their website. They are getting a cut. Shouldn't that make them responsible to do a degree of due diligence? Shouldn't they check to see if someone has a license?
Is it not reasonable of the donors to assume that Kickstarter would only put up legal projects?
We were discussing this earlier in the thread. I think this is where regulation of crowdfunding should come into pay, and of course right now there is none. There is no current regulatory duty to perform due diligence so they can hide behind their terms of service.
In my country, if the donors sought to claim from Kickstarter then then KS could bring in Peters as what is known as a part 20 defendant, which is where a defendant brings in a third party on the basis that the third party should indemnify them for any loses, in this case arising out of the fact that Peters, by agreeing to their terms, used their service deceptively. I believe similar third party proceedings exist in American litigation procedure.
For what? Failure to do due diligence? I think that's difficult given their potential defence to any claims, which is that Peters agree to their terms on a false basis. If there was a regulation that compelled them to do due diligence then it would likely be different, but I think it's notable that the first time the Federal Trade Commission launched a case (the much discussed Chevalier case) it was against the creator, not Kickstarter, and this was because it was ultimately the creator who has the duty to fulfil the project contract with the donors.OR... Could CBS/Paramount sue them?
Well they are in a roundabout way, from the point of view that it's their service and they're saying "you can only use us on X, Y, Z basis". So obviously they commit to operating by their own terms of service.They are neither donors or project creators, so they aren't signing any terms of service.
For what? Failure to do due diligence?
I think that's difficult given their potential defence to any claims, which is that Peters agree to their terms on a false basis. If there was a regulation that compelled them to do due diligence then it would likely be different, but I think it's notable that the first time the Federal Trade Commission launched a case (the much discussed Chevalier case) it was against the creator, not Kickstarter, and this was because it was ultimately the creator who has the duty to fulfil the project contract with the donors.
Well they are in a roundabout way, from the point of view that it's their service and they're saying "you can only use us on X, Y, Z basis". So obviously they commit to operating by their own terms of service.
Yes, but that's where the regulation would come in, because right now they would say their earnings are legitimate because it was Peters who didn't have IP consent and lied to them by agreeing to their terms, so he should indemnify them against any claims, just as he should indemnify them against any donor claims.Trademark? Copyright? I don't know. Because, obviously, Kickstarter some smart lawyers.
Indie Go Go and Kickstarter DID profit--even the Peters definition of profit--off of CBS/Paramount IP.
No. No they haven't. It was Peters who agreed to their terms, terms which required him to confirm he has permission from the IP holder, which he didn't. Now, you can say that maybe there should be a regulation that they should have to monitor projects for IP breaches, but you can't say it's their fault that Peters lied to them. It's like saying a lawyer or doctor shouldn't have his bill paid because his client gave false instructions.What Kickstarter has created--basically--is a legal way to steal money from someone else's IP. Ugh.
I quit any thoughts of donating through Kickstarter or indiegogo a long time ago.Wow. Kickstarter. I suspect THEY are the real assholes in all of this. It's not just the fan films, but, it's EVERYTHING they have allowed that they shouldn't... and they are collecting on each and every donation. And nicely protected.
Evil.
Bring on the regulation!
OR... Could CBS/Paramount sue them? They are neither donors or project creators, so they aren't signing any terms of service.
Yes, but that's where the regulation would come in, because right now they would say their earnings are legitimate because it was Peters who didn't have IP consent and lied to them by agreeing to their terms, so he should indemnify them against any claims, just as he should indemnify them against any donor claims.
No. No they haven't. It was Peters who agreed to their terms, terms which required him to confirm he has permission from the IP holder, which he didn't. Now, you can say that maybe there should be a regulation that they should have to monitor projects for IP breaches, but you can't say it's their fault that Peters lied to them. It's like saying a lawyer or doctor shouldn't have his bill paid because his client gave false instructions.
I quit any thoughts of donating through Kickstarter or indiegogo a long time ago.
That's the Carol Publishing case, @oswriter, which Paramount won in 1998, I believe. Represented by Jonathan Zavin, the lead attorney for CBS/P in the Axanar case.Indeed. As the judge in a prior Trek-related copyright law said:
This is an important point, because what AP wants to do, similar to the defendant above, is to make this case about other parties' alleged infringement. The judge above refused to do so, and there's no reason to believe that the judge here will either.
Oh, I still donate from time to time. But, never to something that clearly isn't a projects to sell/build/whatever.
And mostly to friends.
Ranahan is trying to make both points — fair use and inequitable treatment of fan films. You see such possibly contradictory defenses in copyright cases — namely, "We did NOT infringe, and even if we did it's not fair to single US out. Waahhhh!"I think they have been saying they intend to make this kind of point through "fair use" (probably in appeals) rather than by claiming any failure to enforce copyright. And they seem to have been playing their cards close on this, as you might expect.
The rest, I think, is trying to lay down fire breaks and put out brush fires until the fire passes. They seem to have a bit of a brush fire starter in their midst, tho. And fire breaks won't help if there's a ton of incendiary emails hidden on the roof, just waiting for the wind to drop an ember.
Neil, I love you so much.Did someone say "Cash"?
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Neil
It's legitimate in the sense it's what Peters agreed to and that they were assured by him he had permission.Isn't it legitimate? They don't just have to say it. It sounds, by the way you are describing, it IS legitimate.
No, because they aren't.Ok, I shouldn't say they are STEALING it...
Why? They never made him deceive them. They are an agency service that takes a commision, nothing more, nothing less. If an employment agent puts a candidate in touch with an employer and that employer hires the candidate, is it the agent's fault if the candidate lied about his CV and gets sacked, wasting the employer's time? No - because the agent was deceived.and it certainly sounds legal, or at least they have protected themselves very well legally. But, it feels--and yes, the law shouldn't be about feelings--but it FEELS wrong. I mean, they are profiting from the IP just as Peters did. The thing that protects them (and their profit) is that they can say: he lied to us, we didn't know it was not his.
Which... is kinda bullshit.
Legal bullshit. But... bullshit.
Obviously this situation should not cloud honest projects, but the nature of how it all works should nonetheless open some eyes. Kickstarter isn't the one promising a return on donations/consideration. The project creators are.Oh, I still donate from time to time. But, never to something that clearly isn't a projects to sell/build/whatever.
And mostly to friends.
You guys are such drachma queens.Dear oh dear. If I had a dollar for every time...
That's called pleading in the alternative, which is what any good lawyer does to protect their client's position.Ranahan is trying to make both points — fair use and inequitable treatment of fan films. You see such possibly contradictory defenses in copyright cases — namely, "We did NOT infringe, and even if we did it not fair to single US out. Waahhhh!"
I wouldn't know about that. I'm just a euro......You guys are such drachma queens.
Did someone say "Cash"?It would be a travesty if Neil ever did Cash in his meme chips.
I've always felt Kickstarter and Indiegogo had some exposure because of the DMCA 'safe harbor' provision, which holds that platforms can't be sued for having infringing material on their servers as long as they have a procedure for copyright holders to have the material removed. Kickstarter absolves itself from responsibility by putting the onus on the project to attest that it has the intellectual property rights to carry out their project. Essentially, Axanar didn't tell the truth if it subscribed to Kickstarter's terms of service.Wow. Kickstarter. I suspect THEY are the real assholes in all of this. It's not just the fan films, but, it's EVERYTHING they have allowed that they shouldn't... and they are collecting on each and every donation. And nicely protected.
Evil.
Bring on the regulation!
OR... Could CBS/Paramount sue them? They are neither donors or project creators, so they aren't signing any terms of service.
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