RE: [SkunkworksAMA] Stuffed Toys, Copyrights, And Etc...

From: Andrew Greene <blaze_at_netaxs.com>
Date: Fri, 24 Oct 2003 12:43:05 -0400

OK. looks like you can have the room.

  -----Original Message-----
  From: David Parenteau [mailto:kitfox_at_firstlight.net]
  Sent: Friday, October 24, 2003 3:51 AM
  To: SkunkworksAMA_at_yahoogroups.com
  Subject: Re: [SkunkworksAMA] Stuffed Toys, Copyrights, And Etc...


  Said time and time again...

        You Cannot Copyright a Character. Period. Not possible. Copyright
law
  does not cover characters.

        You can TRADEMARK, or PATENT a character for use in specific trade
  situations, or as an idea as a whole, however that requires specific
  registration of the character description and likeness.

        Copyright covers the permission or lack thereof to reproduce a given
"Work".

"Copyright protection subsists, in accordance with this title, in original
  works of authorship fixed in any tangible medium of expression, now known
  or later developed, from which they can be perceived, reproduced, or
  otherwise communicated, either directly or with the aid of a machine or
  device.

"In no case does copyright protection for an original work of authorship
  extend to any idea, procedure, process, system, method of operation,
  concept, principle, or discovery, regardless of the form in which it is
  described, explained, illustrated, or embodied in such work." (US
Copyright
  Law)

  A picture of Natasha is Copyrighted, and may not be reproduced, displayed,
  or have a derivative work created without permission. (Please note: To
  qualify as a derivative work means that the plushie of Natasha would have
  to be precisely identical in pose, look, composition, etc, as the original
  piece of art. If you cannot take said plushie, take a picture of it,
  compare said picture to a pre-existing graphic, and say "They are
precisely
  identical", then it is not a derivative work.)

  The CONCEPT of Natasha as a character, however, is not copyrighted, and is
  not copyrightable. A specific description of her can be copyrighted,
though
  that means the text of the description itself is, not the ideas and
  concepts behind it.

  So, 99% chance or greater that the plush is not a copyright
  violation. ALSO noteworthy, damages cannot be sought unless the copyright
  is REGISTERED. Otherwise only a C&D is applicable. (Registering a
copyright
  on a piece of art requires form VA or Short form VA, and is a $30 fee.)

  Summary:
  A character cannot be copyrighted.
  The artist can't do much about it legally anyway... HOWEVER...

  That brings us to the other side of the coin...

  Just because a character cannot be copyrighted, and there is no legal
  recourse for the creator of the character under almost all circumstances,
  it is important to point out that ASKING is the best practice, as is
  honoring a No if that is the answer.

  Among other things, there are MANY recourses that exist other than Legal
  ones... and NONE of them are good.

  Want a shining example? Find for me 10 furry pictures on the internet by
  Joseph D Nye. Pretty ruddy tough, ain't it? J Nye was a pretty darn good
  artist who was burned by people stealing his work. So, he up and
  left. Pulled his work off the net, and Poof! Gone.

  Now, think, how many people would be slightly annoyed if Jim pulled his
  work, and stopped making any more? Do you think they would blame Jim,
  though? Oh, nonononono... They would blame the idiot or idiots who pissed
  Jim off enough to make him leave... And the sight would NOT be at all
  pretty if they ever FOUND those idiots in real life.

  And this applies to ANY artist, or even any individual.

  And seriously, even if the person has no weight to pull that way, it's
  simple courtesy to ask first. People work hard on their creations, and
  even though they can't protect all of them with threats or weight, you
  should respect that work. How would you like it if somebody screwed with
  something YOU created or were proud of? You'd probably want to kill
  them. You don't like the feeling of that desire. Neither does anybody
else.

  Best to ask first. Keeday?

  But also, best to not wave around fictitious "Character Copyrighted By" or
  other threat flags. Too much waving of those flags means that the entire
  rights issue is built on the wrong foundation.

  If people THINK they can be sued, they won't do it. BUT, when they find
out
  they CAN'T be, they -WILL- do it.

  However, basing the right on respect, and on being an intelligent person
  and doing the right thing... There is no workaround for that, and it
builds
  the bonds much more strongly.

  So, just think... Can he sue me, or do anything legally? Nope. BUT...
Can
  my actions cause very bad things to happen to thousands of people? Yes,
  they can. And unless you are a terrorist, that is probably not a palatable
  thought to you.

        Keep Well,

              - Kit

  Yes, this message is copyrighted, and by Me. It is not registered, so no,
  I cannot sue you if you copy it. HOWEVER, as the copyright owner, it is
my
  prerogative to state that this message is released for reproduction, and
  may be copied, distributed, and otherwise reproduced WITH NO
MODIFICATIONS.
  (Ie, Derivative Works may not be created.) Pass it out wherever you like,
  with the entire thing intact (Including this notice at the bottom.)


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Received on Fri Oct 24 2003 - 09:40:12 CDT

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