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Re: Copywrite laws are they to vague?
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Wait, no - you still couldn't make skins - the characters you are making skins of would be trademarked in perpetuity. Interesting suggestion though. |
Re: Copywrite laws are they to vague?
What I don't understand about this discussion is why Marvel or their 'reprentatives' sent the letter in the first place, when on their web site is "The Freedom Force Webkit contains awesome assets to help you build your own fan site".
So they will help you build your own fansite but acording to the letter Rojero received, he "is not permitted to copy or reproduce the copyrighted images or distinctive likenesses of Marvel's characters, nor use the registered trademarks associated with those characters such as Spider-Man, Wolverine, Nightcrawler, etc". http://forum.shrapnelgames.com/image...s/confused.gif Why the hell do they have the fan site web kit, if you can not use their images on the web? If they have tools avaiable for people to use, they can't then claim that their images are copyrighted, can they? |
Re: Copywrite laws are they to vague?
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Re: Copywrite laws are they to vague?
Here's another real-life IP issue : the company I work for purchases machine parts from a certain supplier (the only one in the country for those specific parts).
Our maintenance people would like to have the supplier's drawings for a few critical parts so they could measure them on arrival, to ensure that they will assemble correctly when needed. The problem is that the drawings are the supplier's IP and they might not want to hand them over, no matter how many non-disclosure agreemeents we sign. The reason is that if those drawings get out, the market may be flooded with pirate parts and the damage to their business will be so extensive that it isn't worth the risk. We are essentially paying for other people's crimes. There may be a solution but it won't be easy. |
Re: Copywrite laws are they to vague?
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Note, ofc, that greed doesn't have to reflect only material acquisitiveness. If you do something "because it makes you feel good to help people" ... that good feeling is what you're greedy for; the more you can manage to get it, the more you will, until the cost exceeds the gain (IOW, until you bump into some other element of greed in your life). |
Re: Copywrite laws are they to vague?
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When you go beyond that liscense ... the whole thing can be revoked, and ALL your use of such images can become a problem -- even the ones used as-is from the website kit. |
Re: Copywrite laws are they to vague?
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Re: Copywrite laws are they to vague?
Greed:
n 1: excessive desire to acquire or possess more (esp material wealth) than one needs or deserves 2: reprehensible acquisitiveness; insatiable desire for wealth (personified as one of the deadly sins) Many actions do not fit the above definition. Eating a bowl of cereal in the morning is not greed. Eating 20 is. |
Re: Copywrite laws are they to vague?
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That is the very sort of thing copyright law is supposed to address. While I do disagree with the indefinite extension of copyright, I also cannot agree with "no profit, no foul" fallacies. </font><hr /></blockquote><font size="2" face="Verdana, Helvetica, sans-serif"> Ok, but that's not what I meant. I didn't mean you could replace my word "it" with "piracy" or "nuclear holocaust" - I was just talking about fan art. If someone wants to draw a picture of Spock and not make any money off it, I say that should be allowed, and I have zero sympathy for any imaginary damage done to Paramount Pictures Inc.. Nor should they be required to mount such attacks in order to preserve their rights. Quote:
"Marvel exists to profit..." yeah well, I certainly don't feel much concern for the continued existence, let alone support, of organizations which "exist to profit". You do? Quote:
It may be true too that you're discussing practical legal reality under the current system, whereas I'm arguing what I think should ideally the the case. PvK |
Re: Copywrite laws are they to vague?
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Greed would be having a million bucks, and buying all the cereal in your town so you can re-sell it to everyone for more than you paid for it, so you can have more than a million bucks. Some people might call that entrepreneurship, though. Pax saying any action has elements of greed in it though, seem to me to be mistakenly thinking greed means simply the desire to improve one's position. PvK [ June 25, 2003, 20:36: Message edited by: PvK ] |
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