Re: How is it legal for Star Trek fanzines to be sold on Amazon and eB
That brings back some memories. I haven't been involved in RPGs in decades. Partly it was from having a model train dealer who was firmly convinced that they were crypto-satanic, but mainly, it was a combination of (a) not having any friends who did them (with the result that once I was out of high school, it was nothing but randomized solitaire dungeons), and (b) TSR, and later WotC, assuming too much control over what had originally been an extremely open universe, where anybody was free to incorporate anything into anything else (e.g., incorporating elements of Arduin into D&D), and in which house rules trumped everything.If you want a good example of that, there was TSR in the 90s. . . . The C&Ds stopped once Wizards of the Coast acquired them, and the rift healed pretty quick after, thankfully.
Which was, I gather, Roddenberry's take on the matter.JD said:I was thinking about this more, and I think IP owners taking legal actions against fan fics/films is kind of a bad idea, unless it somehow threatens the viability of later official products. By taking legal action against fans, you take a pretty big risk of alienating those fans . . .