The big news is always just around the corner............."we have a solid plan that we will share with donors shortly"
Left without comment.
The big news is always just around the corner............."we have a solid plan that we will share with donors shortly"
Left without comment.
This guff about him being the King Of Fan Films, Axanar being a part of Trek history now and Hatch being one of the great Klingon actors he really believes it and, be default, so do his supporters.
...
As far as any “precedent” regarding fair use, fair use is an incredibly fact specific inquiry. The Court’s ruling in this case foreclosing fair use before trial is problematic from our perspective in multiple respects, but is binding on no one (not even another district court in the Central District).....
But I wonder. Isn't the judge's ruling on the summary judgment motions still citeable as precedent?
"we have a solid plan that we will share with donors shortly"
Left without comment.
It sure as hell is, and it is being cited, by the fine folks involved in the Dr. Seuss Enterprises v. David Gerrold et al case. <-- that link leads you back to (natch) Semantic Shenanigans, where I got to wax poetic about citing the plaintiff therein citing Judge Gary Klausner.
Why is Klausner being cited? Because, while Ms. Ranahan states, a lot of fair use is rather fact-specific, the general principles kinda aren't. And Klausner offers good, supported (e. g. documented) backup for his reasoning. His ruling is also new, and newer findings tend to hold more weight.
Gravely, I agree with this. I do so very much hope that you and I turn out to be proven wrong.In most instances you'd be right but with this one, to paraphrase something I read recently regarding President Trump, only proof of child molestation or war crimes would cause people to question their support of Peters and belief of what he tells them. There may well be choppy waters ahead (although I doubt it) but Peters will simply tell his supporters there are no waves.
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he really believes it and, by default, so do his supporters.
Heeyyy...we were promised waves crashing on the firmament, weren't we?There may well be choppy waters ahead (although I doubt it) but Peters will simply tell his supporters there are no waves.
Nothing like betting the farm on a ruling from the most-overturned Appellate Court in America.I am confident that the decision would not have stood up under scrutiny by the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals
Wow. You really can polish a turd. That was watchable.There's a new "fan edit" of Prelude that removes Alec and replaces him with stock footage of Steve Ihnat.
The key was removing a turd.........Wow. You really can polish a turd. That was watchable.
It's like talking shit about a game after it ended in a tie......."Yeah we could have whipped their ass but didn't have the balls to go for the touchdown."Nothing like betting the farm on a ruling from the most-overturned Appellate Court in America.
Shouldn't you have thought about that before blowing nearly a million and a half on sushi instead of making the hour-long film you had initially promised?Mike Bawden said:Quite honestly, I’m encouraging everyone to move along and continue with the planning required to produce the two, fifteen-minute segments we’re allowed to produce to tell the story of Axanar, so I can’t say anyone is going to do anything about this.
She's mis-representing what would have happened with the financials had they gone to Trial. The Judge ruled the Financials (both sets) WERE material to the case and could be introduced as evidence (and witnesses cross examined were they introduced.)Some notes from Ms. Ranahan's interview:
1. W&S Motivations
2. Alec's financials weren't the reason for settling -- the idea they were ordered released was due to a clerical error
"...As much as I was also salivating over the potential of taking the fair use decision up to the Ninth Circuit, I could not pressure my client to take on that appeal when it presented risks and a delay... Of course, having our fair use defense taken away before trial was disappointing, and legally I am confident that the decision would not have stood up under scrutiny by the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals."
3. Was this a good or bad thing for fan films?
JONATHAN: In the end, of course, the two sides did settle. Some detractors have said that the judge’s order (two days before the settlement was announced) removing the redactions from certain key pieces of evidence involving Alec Peters’ financials resulted in a rush to settlement on your side…with you personally signing the Joint Stipulation of Voluntary Dismissal the day after the ruling. Is that what happened?
ERIN: That is not accurate. The Court had found the very same financials to be confidential and sealed them on multiple occasions (despite Plaintiffs repeated efforts to make those public). Here, upon receiving the Order you are referring to, we called the Clerk and realized that the Court did not notice that we had filed the requisite declarations to seal those documents. So it was simply a clerical oversight, and if the case had not settled the same week, it would have been corrected. Also, both sides had been in settlement discussions throughout the case. The impetus was that trial was in less than two weeks; it had nothing to do with that mistaken Order. The notion that we could have finalized a settlement in just two days is also simply not realistic.
JONATHAN: So just to be clear, Alec Peters’ financials were NOT going to be made public?
ERIN: That is correct. They would have remained sealed.
JONATHAN: What do you think the future holds for fan films–both Star Trek and other genres? Did this case make fan films more secure or more vulnerable to new legal challenges from big studios?
ERIN: Fan films will continue to flourish like they always have in the Star Trek community—just those that are not parodies, satire, or other clearly protected speech will have to run a little shorter, which forces a new level of editing and creativity. The studios went a long time without suing anyone, and I would expect that, given the experience in this case, they won’t be running out to sue fan film creators any time soon. Fan films for the most part offer free promotion and enhance the brand, not harm it, so business considerations would make an onslaught of lawsuits like this highly unlikely.
As far as any “precedent” regarding fair use, fair use is an incredibly fact specific inquiry. The Court’s ruling in this case foreclosing fair use before trial is problematic from our perspective in multiple respects, but is binding on no one (not even another district court in the Central District).
observations:
1. Does it make sense that the judge would order the finances to be public as result of a "clerical error" of not seeing another request to seal them? This sounds a bit to me like using your credibility to block the one most damaging fact from view. I thought the judge was ruling against the repeated requests to seal them, not just following through on what would be the default behavior if no request to seal was seen in the final round of filings, as I read Ms. Ranahan's argument.
2. To summarize her statement of whether the lawsuit was good or bad for fan films:
a) films have to be shorter, but this just stimulates creativity
b) knowing that a fan film might get a legal defense, the studios would be reluctant to sue in the future
c) lawsuits against fan films will have deterring business consequences
To me this is making lemonade. Limitations are gains! The mad rush of fan films that wildly overstep copyright will be less likely to be sued, win!
3. "problematic" - this part of 'consequences for fan films' says we lost our main argument, and we note we even created a precedent where fair use arguments can be precluded *before* trial, a consequence that is 'problematic' [what, to other cases in the future?], but fortunately it doesn't have any lasting consequence for fan films.
But I wonder. Isn't the judge's ruling on the summary judgment motions still citeable as precedent?
Aaaaaaand it's gone.There's a new "fan edit" of Prelude that removes Alec and replaces him with stock footage of Steve Ihnat.
How can Axanar productions claim copyright as per the settlement they have to follow the Fan Film Guidelines which state they can Copyright NOTHING with regard to Star Trek?Aaaaaaand it's gone.![]()
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