Law School Exam Hypothetical of the Day
Jul. 30th, 2008 07:55 pmI know that some people believe that if TPTB (the powers that be) ask a fan to stop doing something, the fan(s) in question should immediately stop, no questions asked (except maybe to confirm that the request really came from TPTB and isn't a hoax).
Last week, Hasbro sued the guys who created Scrabulous as a Facebook app, claiming copyright and trademark infringement. So now, there's a lot of irate former Scrabulous users who are calling for a boycott of Hasbro, a return of Scrabulous, etc.
No, the situations aren't completely analogous, but there are similarities - the IP owner is upset about an action they view as infringing and asks the entity they believe infringing to stop and....
Do you think that the Scrabulous creators - who are fans of the Scrabble game (which is protected by copyright and trademark laws), who created something similar and yet with strong and obvious differences - should have removed their game as soon as Hasbro asked them to?
[Poll #1232503]
I'm really curious as to what people who have legal backgrounds would think and do, versus what lay-people would think and do, but I'm not really sure how to ask that in the poll without it getting very unwieldy.
Last week, Hasbro sued the guys who created Scrabulous as a Facebook app, claiming copyright and trademark infringement. So now, there's a lot of irate former Scrabulous users who are calling for a boycott of Hasbro, a return of Scrabulous, etc.
No, the situations aren't completely analogous, but there are similarities - the IP owner is upset about an action they view as infringing and asks the entity they believe infringing to stop and....
Do you think that the Scrabulous creators - who are fans of the Scrabble game (which is protected by copyright and trademark laws), who created something similar and yet with strong and obvious differences - should have removed their game as soon as Hasbro asked them to?
[Poll #1232503]
I'm really curious as to what people who have legal backgrounds would think and do, versus what lay-people would think and do, but I'm not really sure how to ask that in the poll without it getting very unwieldy.
(no subject)
Date: 2008-07-31 12:10 am (UTC)I think the Scrabulous situation would depend on economics of it.
(no subject)
Date: 2008-07-31 12:11 am (UTC)NY Times, back in March (it's now the second link in the post)
(no subject)
Date: 2008-07-31 12:16 am (UTC)In the specific case of Scrabulous, my first impression from reading about the game on posts of my friends sounded like they were playing Scrabble on Facebook, and I didn't realize until I joined Facebook that it wasn't actually a Hasbro construct.
(no subject)
Date: 2008-07-31 12:16 am (UTC)I love how NO ONE said that the fans should comply. *g*
(no subject)
Date: 2008-07-31 12:16 am (UTC)I have absolutely zero legal training, in case you didn't know :)
(no subject)
Date: 2008-07-31 12:16 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2008-07-31 12:17 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2008-07-31 12:27 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2008-07-31 01:00 am (UTC)Though that said, it might be in your best interest to take it down. As in, if they send you a letter that says 'take down this site or we'll sue you.' Because even if you've got a great case, if you get sued you'll still have to pay a lawyer. So that in effect is the power that TPTB have. Unfortunately the threat might be just as powerful as the legal power that they don't actually have.
(no subject)
Date: 2008-07-31 01:07 am (UTC)I believe in creative and non-stifling solutions to situations like these in which fans, creators, educators, students, and profit-making entities can receive recognition and profit, while still meeting and stimulating the creative and educational needs of society as a whole.
(no subject)
Date: 2008-07-31 01:11 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2008-07-31 01:29 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2008-07-31 01:38 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2008-07-31 01:59 am (UTC)The Post's IT blog has been covering this for the last few weeks, looking more at the tech implications and aspects than legal. They're interesting to skim through.
(no subject)
Date: 2008-07-31 02:18 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2008-07-31 05:09 am (UTC)As for pulling the game, not just on their say-so, but for the duration of negotiations as a good-faith gesture, sure.
(no subject)
Date: 2008-07-31 05:28 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2008-07-31 01:44 pm (UTC)In the case of Scrabulous, it looks to me like a fairly blatant ripoff of Scrabble. Hasbro shouldn't have left it up that long, but it should have come down the moment Hasbro asked.
(no subject)
Date: 2008-07-31 01:51 pm (UTC)The actual-confusion issue you mentioned is interesting, because I'm sure that Hasbro would try to utilize your experience as evidence of actual confusion since you didn't realise it wasn't really Scrabble, but the Scrabulous guys would deem it an absence of actual confusion because when you saw it, you realised it wasn't actually really Scrabble.
Curious me!
Date: 2008-07-31 01:53 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2008-07-31 01:54 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2008-07-31 01:54 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2008-07-31 01:56 pm (UTC)But the thing is, even without having $ on hand, there's places that give free legal service, like the EFF and the Stanford Project - and the OTW (Organization for Transformative Works) is also able to help facilitate access to legal services, so Jane Q Fangirl isn't on her own when she gets a C&D.
Re: Curious me!
Date: 2008-07-31 02:06 pm (UTC)For example, I'm a writer for Firefox News, which someday hopes to make a profit with advertising while writing *about* fandom. I might even get paid for writing reviews of fannish shows. I'm totally comfortable with Leva maybe someday making a salary from fandom. But...we don't publish fanfiction or anything like that on the site.
Also, I do see a difference between fanfiction and Scrabulous, but I'm not coherent enough to articulate it :D
(no subject)
Date: 2008-07-31 02:22 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2008-07-31 04:23 pm (UTC)Arrgh! To me this is just silly business. The popular product is already out there. Yes, you missed opportunities to make money off of it already, but they are offering to let you cash in now. All they have done is create bad will toward their new product.
(no subject)
Date: 2008-07-31 10:06 pm (UTC)I thought Unique And Innovative games would be patented, not just have elements trademarked?
Anyway. I vote Fight The Powers: don't take it down, don't assume you should take it down, until the judge says so.
(IANAL. IANALawstudent. I work in an office scanning legal documents; I can abbreviate "plaintiff's first opposition to motion to suppress" about nine different ways. And as a fan interested in fanfic, I know a bit about copyright law, less about trademark law, and nothing about patent law.)
(no subject)
Date: 2008-08-01 12:44 am (UTC)I voted "something else I will explain in the comments."
Do you think that the Scrabulous creators - who are fans of the Scrabble game (which is protected by copyright and trademark laws), who created something similar and yet with strong and obvious differences - should have removed their game as soon as Hasbro asked them to?
I love both Scrabble (I own the deluxe turntable edition) and Scrabulous. I play Scrabble at home with friends, and I play Scrabulous on Facebook instead of paying attention during class. :D
And, I'd like to know what "strong" and "obvious" differences exist between Scrabble and Scrabulous. They even use the same colored tiles for Godssake. There are also licensed Scrabble versions online. So, I'm not really sure that any "strong" and "obvious" difference exists. (I'm not trying to be sarcastic or facetious. I really have no idea what differences you are referencing.)
With that said, I think fans are perfectly within their right to fight C&Ds. You want to fight it, go right ahead. More power to you. Fans are also perfectly within their right to comply with a C&D. Don't want to fight it? Fine. I respect that, too. The fan takes the personal risk, so the fan gets to decide what to do when they get a C&D. I don't think fandom (or any other entity with a tangential interest in the outcome of a case) should be allowed to dictate how a fan responds to a C&D.
That said, if you refuse to take down the allegedly infringing material, then don't come crying to me when your ass gets sued. Because that's how lawyers and companies respond to non-compliance with a C&D. They sue you. They might win. They might lose. They might try to settle. But, if they were bothered enough to pay an attorney $500 to send you a C&D, there is a very real possibility that they're going to be bothered enough to sue your ass come payday.
(no subject)
Date: 2008-08-01 08:56 pm (UTC)I don't think they dragged on long enough to trigger a laches defense.
The way I see the legal status of fanfic is that the ownership of the "bundle of rights" allows control over *commercial* exploitation of derivative works. I don't have a cite at hand, but I'm pretty sure the PTO said that just transferring something from print to digital is not a protected transformative work. (There are other issues in the National Geographic case--more to do with compilation copyrights than change of medium.)
I do see fanfic as a protected transformative work--we're not just transcribing a TV episode, we're adding something (often very implausible things!) But AFAIK Scrabulous is simply an attempt to cash in on Hasbro's intellectual property--especially since I agree that licensed online Scrabble has been available for a long time.
(no subject)
Date: 2008-08-02 12:32 am (UTC)As for the fan issue: I assume you are referring to the kerfluffle regarding the Jensen Ackles fansite/LJ comm. I made a post about it in my personal journal (which is flocked, so no link, sorry, though I'd be willing to add you if you wish to read it), but my understanding in this circumstance is that they may have been sued for libel (definition here), or possibly even libel per se (definition here). In this instance, the lawyers may not have acted tactfully (I don't know, as I've only read second-hand accounts of what has happened), but the order to C&D should have been followed, no questions asked, because libel is a serious offense which can have major consequences for all involved.
The counter-argument might be "Well, JA's an actor, so it's easier to dismiss accusations of libel!" but I suspect that any lawyer worth his (or her) salt would have threatened libel per se, due to the fansite's claims that Jensen has "functional illiteracy" (which could be seen as a claim that he is inable to perform his job).
Just a note: I come from a family of lawyers - grandfather, father, two uncles, two cousins (and a third who may become a lawyer herself), all of whom have a tendency to talk legal issues at meals. So yes, I have a bit of background in the field.
ETA: Um. I didn't mean to blather on about fannish legal issues in your comments. Sorry.
(no subject)
Date: 2008-08-02 12:47 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2008-08-02 01:04 am (UTC)I don't believe fans should do what TPTB say simply because it is what TPTB say, no more than I would simply take an adversary in a negotiation at their first word. Each fan faced with a demand from TPTB regarding their fannish property must look at their own willingness to continue doing whatever they were doing, seek advice, consider their own opinion on where they stand legally and go on from there. It's not like there's a boss of fandom who says, 'Vera, I want a deal with these outcomes for us: make it so.' Nor can any fan impose on any other fan a requirement to take the kind of risks that disagreeing with big companies can involve. Of course, as anyone who has successfully disagreed with their insurer can tell you, just because a big company says it doesn't make it true.
(no subject)
Date: 2008-08-02 06:10 am (UTC)Aieee. This is very similar to the last hypothetical that was on my IP exam last semester. And I really wish it weren't, because I feel like I should have opinions and things in this comment, but my brain can't get past "EIGHT HOUR EXAM. FLEE."
Brief opinion, as a rising 2L who has survived an intro IP course at a top-tier law school: I think the Scrabulous situation is VERY different from a fanfiction situation (though I admit I'm not very familiar with the issues arising from fanvids and the like), in that Scrabulous actually could serve as a supplement for Scrabble if someone didn't want to shell out the cash for the game itself. One of my favorite IP cases is the Ty vs. publisher-of-collectors-guide, where the book actually contained images of each Beanie Baby in the Ty line, but the court found that the book could not substitute for, and in fact enhanced the value of, the toys themselves - and Ty's lawsuit failed on those grounds. I really like the supplement/complement test, and I think Scrabulous very well might fail it while most (if not all) fanfiction would not.
That was kind of a tangent - as far as whether I think fans should automatically take down work upon receiving a C&D, it depends on the kind of fanwork and, basically, how legit they think the claim against them might be. If it happened to me, as someone who is only involved in fanfic, not fanvids or fanart, I'd think it was ridiculous and leave the work up because I'd expect it to withstand an infringement suit. For other fans, I'd say they should seek legal advice before complying.
Edited because I fail at words.
(no subject)
Date: 2008-08-04 02:06 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2008-08-04 02:11 am (UTC)Because that's how lawyers and companies respond to non-compliance with a C&D.
Sometimes - but a lot of the time, if they are replied to with a list of reasons why the work is noninfringing, they will back down. $500 isn't much of anything to a large corporation, and oftentimes the C&D comes from a firm they have on retainer or someone who's in-house, so there's no actual cost for that specific project to the copyright or trademark owner. I think these days, with so many law school clinics and organizations who're able to help fans who get a C&D letter, the first action someone can take is now to get in touch with someone who can help.
I don't think fandom (or any other entity with a tangential interest in the outcome of a case) should be allowed to dictate how a fan responds to a C&D.
I agree with this. But fans should act from a position of knowledge and information, and remember that just because a company or an actor says something doesn't mean they're right.
(no subject)
Date: 2008-08-04 02:15 am (UTC)My understanding in the Jensen-matter is that nobody was sued, and that it's impossible for all the content on the comm and on the website to have been libelous - although I don't know the whole of the situation, either. But it's the kind of thing where sorting through the content on the site to see if anything actually was libelous would've been a possible approach, and pull down the things that are, rather than pull down everything.
(no subject)
Date: 2008-08-04 02:25 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2008-08-04 03:48 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2008-09-14 11:59 pm (UTC)