I was responding to you're statement "I see no one threatening to take down fanfiction.net" (which, by the way, was a mischaracterization of a reference I made Fanfiction.net to establish an idea of the number of fan works). I was pointing out that some fan fiction on that site was indeed threatened. Your statement is meaningless in that context, especially in a topic discussing proposed changes to the law motivated by threats to fan fiction.
Unsuspecting is the key word in my statement.
I don't see how your use of the word "unsuspecting" is relevant. It seems like you're trying to win an argument entirely on semantics.
Sell my property and move. It isn't like I'm trapped there.
Really? Who's going to buy property they can't get to? The guy who bought the property around you? How much money do you think you'll get from that guy? Enough to cover your mortgage? Enough to pay for moving trucks that--oops, I forgot, they can't move anything because they can't reach your property.
And by the way, if someone buys the property around your house while you're in the house, and you can't legally cross his property, you're absolutely trapped there.
But this is about US law, as well as creators and IP owners to be able to manage their work.
You can't argue about "rights", then turn around and say it's about US law, especially since we're talking about whether particular rights are pertinent to keeping the laws the way they are or changing them.
Fans can expressed themselves right now without profiting from it.
No one is arguing that anyone should be able to profit from fan works. I, in fact, excluded any profit from my exemption, and I'd be happy to incorporate improvements to that language to better address the topic. And there have been instances where people who where not profiting where pursued, by the way.
They've done it for years with minimal litigation.
That would suggest that, for a certain well-defined category of fan works, there isn't a need for the right of litigation.
No, it's not. This discussion is becoming ambiguous because we are dealing with the law as it stands right now.
I don't know what discussion you're having, but mine has been clearly dedicated to discussing how the current law should be changed. That ambiguity isn't coming from me.
If you want to change it, I recommend going to the legislature rather than TrekBBS.
Unless you're a moderator here to tell my that my discussion is in violation of forum rules, I really don't care where you think this conversation should be held. Furthermore, as this proposed legislation relates to fans and fan film makers, why would I not seek their input here? As such, your response seems more like an attempt to suppress the topic then an actual concern over venue.
That isn't my point, at all. Please don't twist my words. If this was an individual's intellectual property the argument would be made in favor of the owner.
That's an assumption without a stated basis, and I never said there should be distinctions drawn regarding the nature of the copyright holder.
It does because you are still using another person's labor for your own work. I'll call it research because it sounds better.
Here's the definition of plagiarism: the practice of taking someone else's work or ideas
and passing them off as one's own.
Emphasis mine. Note that not only do I require attribution, but I exclude works from exemption that are basically copies of the original material, which would make up the bulk of actual plagiarism even if the attribution clause was removed.
I'm being naive? Because I don't think that the companies accounting practices are any of my business?
If they're admissible as evidence and not under seal, they're public record anyway. Furthermore, if you're the one being sued, and the plaintiff submits those numbers as evidence, it's most certainly your business, as you have a right to challenge evidence against you. Not that any of this is relevant, as I'm not the one proposing that damages should be a determining factor in whether or not people would be exempt under fair use.
They still get the practice. They don't need protection for fan fiction. They didn't lose those skills if fanfiction.net gets taken down. This is illogical in an extreme.
What's illogical is that you keep ignoring the context of what I write. I was responding regarding whether or not the copyright holder could benefit from fan works. The fact that a fan fiction writer can turn pro and write officially for the very franchise he used to write fan fiction for seems to be pertinent in that context.
Yeah, the corporations could, but would face significant backlash. Poor business.
I actually said as much, if you were paying attention: "Not that they would. Just saying."
The point was that they don't actually have a shelter against claims of taking from fan films in the first place. I'm not claiming they actually take stuff from fan works. I've actually stated that they wouldn't do that as a matter of standard policy in another thread.
Instead of changing the law, allow the corporations to decide how their product gets used. Like CBS did and Lucasfilm did and on and on.
That's what we've been doing, with little or no effect. The Guidelines are the exception, not the rule, and not even the best exception to boot.
The larger point is is that this is their property. I, as a fan, don't have a right to it.
Because that's the way the law is written, which I propose changing. You're going around in circles and not saying anything new.
You can't assign rights to one group that diminishes the rights of another group.
That's exactly what copyright does. It takes a way my rights with regards to free expression and how I use my own property to give rights to the copyright holders, a right that is fundamentally anti-captialist because it creates an state-instituted monopoly. Don't pretend that copyright isn't based on a compromise regarding the rights of different parties, because it is.
Likewise, copyright law (and ONLY copyright law, not patents and trademarks) allow for Fair Use exemptions. This, then, would be the reasonable path of access. Just as a land owner may have a single-lane road and not a four-lane highway to his land, Fair Use allows for a limited amount of "borrowing" from a copyright work. Technically, a full-length fan-fic / fan-film is the four-lane highway, but the copyright holder may permit such as his discretion.
I appreciate you're well reasoned response. It's a good analogy, but it's not entirely applicable. The original analogy was just to demonstrate that property rights can't be absolute, not to serve as an analogy for copyright in general. If I were to change this analogy to make it more about copyright, I would have the property owner buying all the property around a city, because there are typically many fans to a single copyright holder. In that context, you would need a four-lane road through the property owner's property because of the sheer number of people who need to get in and out of the city.
Now, obviously, we could spend all day going back and forth with different analogies, but that's kinda my point. Analogies alone are insufficient for this type of conversation.
Situations where individual content creators have been significantly harmed - where does 'significant' play into any of it? Because you're carving out a ridiculous premise, that big corporations can't have significant harm because they're big, and small creators like me don't get significant harm because we don't make a lot of $$ from our stuff.
Fair enough, I will concede the possibility of significant harm to individuals, although you don't actually give any instances where small, starving artists are being crushed by their own fan base run amok. If you're going to argue potential harm, argue it. Give me a real world example of fan artists crushing their original source of inspiration. The only examples I've heard involve the very works I would continue to prohibit.
Spoiler alert - unless you are a VERY big time author (think Rowling), you don't quit your day job if you've got a lick of sense. Markets can dry up. Or you might have serious expenses for some reason or another. Indie author money just isn't that reliable.
Unless you make it big, you probably don't have much of a fan base to begin with, nor will it be easy for people to find fan works based on your copyrighted materials. (This sounds more like an anti-piracy/anti-plagiarism argument.)
But that doesn't mean that knockoffs don't harm indies. Of course they do.
They can, but that harm would largely come form piracy and works that fail to cite the original artist. Properly attributed and transformative fan work that can attract eyeballs to a copyrighted work that would otherwise receive little attention is most likely a benefit to the copyright holder, not a burden.
And where has Rice harmed her fans? She just said, don't make fan works.
According to accounts, Anne Rice and her entourage directly harassed people, doxxed them, and went after their non-Anne-Rice fan fiction, among other things. Anne Rice is not the metaphorical hill you want to die on.
And gee, that's awfully sweet of you to care about my nephews (plural). Truth is, they'll get my house. But that's not the point. If some producer comes knocking for original work, I have it.
I don't actually know what your point is in this paragraph.
But why should I be able to will them my home but not my intellectual property? Because of value? Then I guess I can't will them my furniture, my dishes, or my books.
You can will them anything you want. Just don't pretend that having nearly unending copyright is a good idea because your then-elderly Nephew needs a new pair of shoes.
Intellectual property doesn't work this way. It's not something that has to be big to be important, and too big for it to hurt. IP law doesn't perform those sorts of convoluted contortionist-style measurements.
First of all, you're doing a disservice by grouping laws governing patent, copyright, trademark, trade secrets and likeness and pretending they all work the same way. Secondly, you're misrepresenting the benefit of these laws to single individuals with limited resources. For example, most people can't afford to file a copyright law, and even if they can, most of the people you could sued with regard to fan works aren't going to have enough money to pay the legal fees. I once worked for a company that basically went under because they spent a small fortune on patents that nobody wanted to license. Even the fellow running the company could have found a large patent violator (which would be a pharmaceutical company in this case), he probably wouldn't have had sufficient funds to fight the case in court anyways.
I also write for charity anthologies. I don't make a dime off those, and none of us do. The proceeds go to the American Cancer Society or the Alzheimer's Association. That doesn't magically make the IP no longer mine. It's simply a donation.
Are you saying that you'd have to sue on their behalf? Who's writing obscure anthology fan fiction? What if the fan fiction author puts in a line urging people to donate to American Cancer Society or the Alzheimer's Association? What if he donates his fan fiction to their anthology to be put right next to your submission?
And I have even seen those works pirated.
That's why I'd excluding pirated works from exemption. However, if you feel there is stronger/better language I could use, I'm all ears.
PS Have never seen the Power Rangers (except in passing - very brief passing) and not a fan film about them, either. Can fan works reinterpret the originals and even improve on them? No argument here. But that does not magically stop those works from being knockoffs.
With all due respect, there's no way you're going to mistake the fan film for the original Power Rangers. They have fundamental differences in tone and style.