The Boston Globe has yet another story about fanfic. It's pretty insulting, in my opinion. To add injury to insult, they don't quote me, though they do quote [livejournal.com profile] heidi8 and Meredith McCardle, whose article about the legality of fanfic is here (scroll down; the article is in .pdf format). McCardle's article is written for either a legal or a fan audience. She says many things I agree with and some that I don't; she's clearly less comfortable with trademark law than copyright, and makes the trademark issues too complicated. (The short of it: there's not a trademark problem with fan fiction. Really.)

I have over twenty books stacked up that I ought to review and stories I ought to finish, but the Supreme Court really screwed me in my professional life by refusing to decide Nike v. Kasky, which I was planning to write about, and I need to figure out what to do about that. I already knew they were going to strike down sodomy laws, so the announcement didn't make me feel all that good. In fact, this Term was a real drag; my mom lost her prison visitation case 9-zip, and the end-of-Term cases make the Court look more moderate than it really is, which can only help Bush because people will think that the Court will keep the Republicans from going too far to the right.

At least Derek Lowe continues to make me happy: "They're advocating a mixture of aspirin, a statin, folic acid, an ACE inhibitor, a diuretic, and a beta-blocker. The idea is to go after cardiovascular disease with pretty much all the known therapeutic options at once. This is a touchingly linear approach to drug therapy. It's actually kind of sweet." A man who can think that an approach to drug therapy is cute is my kind of commentator.

From: [identity profile] executrix.livejournal.com

Re:


(Mostly) just playing devil's advocate here--after all, I write fanfic, so I must have been able to convince myself that it was not an absolutely morally abhorrent thing to do.

1. I think we have to look at the trademarked character as an independent object of commercial value--almost as if the character were a person who could be "libeled"--certainly one that has a reputation that, perhaps, is harmed by the hijinks we assign to the character. Now, whether any more or any fewer Harry Potter lunchboxes will be purchased because of the number of Harry/Snape stories, I can't quantify...
2. On the copyright side, I don't think that all transformative uses are fair for either legal or moral purposes--of course US law has only a very limited recognition of droit morale, but perhaps there should be some recognition of the creator's belief that "my characters wouldn't do that!" or even "I get to write about my characters, you don't--get your own characters" or the copyright proprietor's belief that the property will be less valuable if its characters are widely thought of as "doing that."
3. I wonder whether the initial reasons for enacting a fair use exception were a) political (one should be able to comment on issues of interest to the community) and b) academic/scholarly, and fan usage generally falls outside these.
4. I assign a much higher relative value than you do to the "control of derivative works" within the "bundle of rights" of the owner of intellectual property!

From: [identity profile] executrix.livejournal.com


Ooops--sorry--I thought Version #1 didn't post so I rewrote it after reading the cited law review article.

From: [identity profile] rivkat.livejournal.com


I think I got 1 & 2 already -- did you post twice? LJ does that to me on a fairly regular basis -- but I'll go for 3 & 4. Fair use comes from the common law; its formulation in the US is generally traced from the early-1800s case Folsom v. Marsh, in which a Supreme Court justice sitting as a circuit judge set forth what is essentially the four-factor statutory test we have today. The kinds of uses thought to be fair have never been limited to any category or categories, though oddly enough we're seeing that now in an attempt by copyright owners to limit fair use only to transformative uses like parody, to the exclusion of things like personal-use copies and educational copying. Politics, particularly, has never been in the list of "good" purposes, though academic uses are frequently mentioned, as are parodies, when courts list examples of fair uses. Certainly in the 20th century, it was reasonably common for courts to say that parody or satire is likely to be fair use.

4. I assign a fairly high value to control of high-capital-investment derivative works. Movie rights are a great idea; other merchandising rights, like stuffed animals and souvenir cups, seem to me reasonable in today's economy. The right to control derivative works just because they're derivative, though, seems to me likely to conflict with others' expression in unfortunate ways and not add greatly to copyright owners' incentives; I would confine the derivative works right pretty tightly to those big-ticket items.

From: [identity profile] executrix.livejournal.com

Re:


Writing in great haste here--I apologize for the double post, and LJ devoured the TWO previous responses to Rivkat's scholarly and thoughtful contributions.

We really, really need a true 21st century set of intellectual property standards that respond to the needs of other than Disney!The tangled web of print/video/Web etc. rights has to be disentangled, and the interests of the creators of works, the owners of copyrights and trademarks, and those of noncommercial users have to be balanced. IMO, political debate was the essential reason for the Constitution's copyright clause, commercial development fitted in later and awkwardly.

Hmmm, maybe what I'm driving at is that characters are "artificial persons" in ways that corporations are not, and have rights of privacy/rights of publicity although of course those would be controlled by a creator or corporate rights owner. And I do think more European intellectual property concepts should be grafted into US law--not just droit morale but library lending royalties!
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