Lady C wrote:It was on Livejournal afaik - i don't think you're allowed to post real people fic on ff.net anyway.
What about the disclaimer that you don't own the characters and aren't making profit from it that goes with every fanfic? Does the fact she changed the names invalidate that? Because clearly now she is making profit from somthing that started as fanfic.
Let me give you a scenario:
I'm living in Los Angeles and I'm trying to make a career as a TV screenwriter. A show's producers have looked at my sample script and expressed interest in me. My agent calls and tells me I have an appointment to pitch on Monday morning.
Knowing that I have to go in with a minimum of three ideas to pitch, I come up with a couple of treatments for episodes of this show. I look at my shelf, and there sits a treatment for a story I pitched to another show six months ago -- a wildly successful, highly-rated one-hour drama. They passed, but I still have faith that the story is solid. Flipping through it, I realize that this could easily be re-tooled to suit the new show and if I use it, I've got my three I need, and I'm under less pressure. If I come up with more between now and Monday, that's just the icing. So I change the names and the setting, merge two characters into one because this show's cast is structured a little differently.
Monday I go in and pitch. They love me. They buy the treatment, and they like me a lot, so they're going to give me the first crack at writing the script instead of taking it in-house from there. Whether they use my draft or not, I get paid for it, and I'm getting paid for the treatment.
I'm now profiting from something that was made for someone else's show, I've just retooled it into something someone else was willing to buy.
Is what I've done questionably ethical? Because it doesn't strike me as all that different from what the fanfic author did -- and it happens all the time in the professional world, because writers need to eat, and they believe in their ideas.
I know the hang-up point is the original disclaimers, etc., that begin with fanfic. However, one of the factors of fair use is that a work has to be sufficiently transformative to be a fair use of copyrighted material. Yes, the name change added to her original plot may be enough to pass muster in front of a judge. Of course, she leaves herself open to a cease and desist order for the original piece of fanfic if the Twilight people choose, but that doesn't make the new version of the story less transformative. It isn't the author's piece of fanfic a judge is going to compare the commercial work to if this goes to court, it's the Twilight stories they're supposedly derived from. If the story can pass the "amount and substiantiality" factor, fine. If not, she's shot herself in the foot, and will probably take some of the rest of us with her.This is totally untested legal ground, since no case involving fanfic has gone to court.
You'd think people would've learned from Loir Jaero. What she did was different, but the chief complaint in both cases is likely to be that the authors have brought unwanted attention upon the community by going public in such conspicuous ways. That's why my fanfic gets written under a pseudonym, and when I publish, it goes under something else. Fanfic writers have been doing it for years -- except the Trek writers under Gene's watch didn't really have to because he was down with what we do. Hell, he made sure some of them have careers.
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