Aren’t there already multiple publishers with licenses for Star Trek fiction, given the fictional Autobiography series being published? Janeway’s one is due in July.
It's a different format of fiction, presented in the form of in-universe nonfiction rather than narrative prose. So it's under a different license. Titan can publish books purporting to be history books or biographies or atlases or whatever within the Trek universe, but they can't do a conventional novel.
It's a different format of fiction, presented in the form of in-universe nonfiction rather than narrative prose. So it's under a different license. Titan can publish books purporting to be history books or biographies or atlases or whatever within the Trek universe, but they can't do a conventional novel.
There was a really interesting chapter in a collected edition of essays about Blade Runner that covered Boom's "Do Android's Dream of Electric Sheep" which noted that it could not be an adaptation because the rights are with the Blade Runner company - it had to be a literal *graphic* version of the novel and the only elements they were allow to drop where "he said", "she said" - all other prose had to appear as written...
Just last week, somebody other a Marvel published a comic-book adaptation of "Queen of the Black Coast," a classic Conan story by Robert E. Howard. Rather than using the CONAN trademark and logo, the main character is billed as "THE CIMMERIAN" on the cover instead. I'm curious at to the legalities there. Is "Queen of the Black Coast" in public domain now, but the name CONAN is still trademarked?
There was a really interesting chapter in a collected edition of essays about Blade Runner that covered Boom's "Do Android's Dream of Electric Sheep" which noted that it could not be an adaptation because the rights are with the Blade Runner company - it had to be a literal *graphic* version of the novel and the only elements they were allow to drop where "he said", "she said" - all other prose had to appear as written...
I can't speak for that, but I know in the case of anything involving, by example, Frank Baum's stuff, it can be tricky. Some books are out of copyright, some aren't. And the stuff that is specific to the movies, is certainly under copyright. And of course logos, etc.Just last week, somebody other a Marvel published a comic-book adaptation of "Queen of the Black Coast," a classic Conan story by Robert E. Howard. Rather than using the CONAN trademark and logo, the main character is billed as "THE CIMMERIAN" on the cover instead. I'm curious at to the legalities there. Is "Queen of the Black Coast" in public domain now, but the name CONAN is still trademarked?
Don't know the answer. Just speculating.
I can't speak for that, but I know in the case of anything involving, by example, Frank Baum's stuff, it can be tricky. Some books are out of copyright, some aren't. And the stuff that is specific to the movies, is certainly under copyright. And of course logos, etc.
Just last week, somebody other a Marvel published a comic-book adaptation of "Queen of the Black Coast," a classic Conan story by Robert E. Howard. Rather than using the CONAN trademark and logo, the main character is billed as "THE CIMMERIAN" on the cover instead. I'm curious at to the legalities there. Is "Queen of the Black Coast" in public domain now, but the name CONAN is still trademarked?
Don't know the answer. Just speculating.
(edit, and their earlier, somewhat forgotten, Return to Oz, for that matter)
as i understand it, some of Robert Howard's novels ARE in public domain now, but the short stories may not be. All if it will be by 2028, but there will still be legal wranglings over movie specific copyrights, trademarks to logos, etc. And of course,
written by Howard posthumously
Now there's a neat trick!
I usually don't quote unintentional mistakes, but this was too amusing to pass up. No offense intended, Ruthless Nate!
The last posthumously-published content written by Howard that I can see came out in 1969, which would mean you'd have to wait until Jan 1, 2065.
they don't have to be renewed but they do eventually run out.Some of Howard's stories are in the public domain because copyright rules were different when they were written. If they were not renewed (something no longer necessary), they might have fallen into the public domain back in the 1940s or 1950s. This is what happened to HP Lovecraft's work.
From 1909 to 1976, in the United States, copyright was 28 years and you could renew it for a further 28 years. For Lovecraft, whose works were in a complex legal situation after his death, none of them were renewed. For Howard, at least some of them were not renewed.they don't have to be renewed but they do eventually run out.
Oh. I thought that was an interesting concept, and I thought they'd done it because they wanted to, not because they were forced to by vagaries of licensing.
https://www.google.ca/amp/s/amp.the...herlock-holmes-copyright-ruling-public-domainYeah, that's a good question. With trademarks and copyrights being two different things with different rules, it is pretty wonky and beyond my low level of knowledge. I did have to study copyright law some years back in a journalism law class.
From what I can see, the copyrights are kinda wild regarding Conan. In the EU, stuff goes public domain 70 years after the artist's death. Robert E. Howard died in 1936, so in Europe it's all been public domain since 2006. In the US, it's basically 95 years after publication or 70 years after the author's death, whichever is longer, and starting on Jan 1 of the next calendar year after the mark. With Conan being published between 1932 and 1936, we're looking at the first Conan stories going public domain in the US as early as Jan 1, 2028. The last published content written by Howard posthumously that I can see came out in 1969, which would mean you'd have to wait until Jan 1, 2065.
Plus there's the corporate entity that manages Conan properties and owns the trademark, and there have been stories by other authors. It would probably be that only stuff specifically from the Robert E. Howard-written stories and elements from them that could be adapted, re-published, etc., under public domain. Anyone using Conan would have to be very careful not to infringe on elements of the universe that were introduced later in other media under the trademark.
Edit: I may be incorrect on how Howard's works full under US law. They may still be at the 70 year mark, due to their age. I can see some of them are on Project Gutenberg, though I'm not sure if that's due to their European status or US status.
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