Fan Fiction: Writers, Readers, and Enablers
This thread is for fanfic recs, links, and discussion, but not for actual posting of fanfic.
Argh. Author of the article persists in getting things wrong -- although I think I'll have to give him a pass, considering members of fandom sometimes get the same things wrong.
At least the tone of the article wasn't condescending.
Of course, when you're interviewing Tham, it might be a bit hard to condescend to her without getting spanked.
Hmm.
I haven't read much HP, but I imagine that disclaiming to J.K. Rowling is enough- she still owns the rights, even if they've made a film. For Star wars, all disclaimers need to mention George Lucas, at least.
Intresting article- I was a bit disconcerted by 'fanfiction.net have banned slash' until I realised he meant NC-17, not m/m.
Although, realistically speaking, isn't a broad disclaimer better -- well, as far as the legality of a disclaimer is worth anything -- rather than a narrow one?
"No hedgehogs were harmed in the making of this production" means that they might have been slaughtering badgers wholesale, but "no animals..." is nice and complete.
Then again, my disclaimers tend to run to "If I owned the intellectual property herein, I would have millions of dollars and not be uploading from a 56K connection."
All about the contrary-to-fact, yo.
Broad is probably better, yes- but for Tolkien, you tend to disclaim to him, and not worry about, say, Peter Jackson. That's what I based it on.
With books, the authors generally own their copyrights -- Rowling or Tolkein should do it in those cases. It's more complicated with TV and movies, where the intellectual property usually belongs to the corporation.
The characters and universe of Dreamwalk Blue are the property of J.K. Rowling, Bloomsbury Publishing, Scholastic, Inc. and AOL/Time Warner, Inc. This writing does not intend to infringe upon copyright or trademark.
The characters and universe of Iteration are the property of George Lucas, Lucasfilm, Ltd and Saban Entertainment. This writing does not intend to infringe upon copyright or trademark.
The characters and universe of more like LA are the property of Joss Whedon, Warner Brothers Network, 20th Century Fox, Mutant Enemy, Sandollar, Kuzui, and Greenwolf Productions. This writing does not intend to infringe upon copyright or trademark.
Does that sound right?
I love Google.
That looks fine, RL. Kisses for Google!
I thought the article was better than most.
And I might get flak for this, but...
The Road Home
by Meredith Lynne (inspired by Smallville)
from the article seems like something of an advertisement. If she doesn't want her fiction easily accesible by the masses, why put it up in an article that can be read by said masses?
This, of course, is assuming she meant for it to be on there.
But damn, that seems so hypocritical.
Argh. Author of the article persists in getting things wrong -- although I think I'll have to give him a pass, considering members of fandom sometimes get the same things wrong.
It wasn't actually that bad, I don't think, beyond the obsession with porn. So very tired of the assumption that it's All Porn. (I mean, I like porn, don't get me wrong, but my tastes run much more strongly genward and there really is quite a lot of it out there too...)
This, of course, is assuming she meant for it to be on there.
I don't know -- I don't think the author of the piece would need to contact an author before mentioning something she's written. I've had my pseud and/or sites thrown into articles about fanfic without my knowledge or permission.
It wasn't actually that bad, I don't think, beyond the obsession with porn.
See, that's the thing -- even when it's a good article that doesn't make us out to be really big losers with too much time on our hands, there's still a troublesome conflation.
It's tantamount to saying all movies are porn just because some movies happen to be porn. Not, of course, that I think there's anything wrong with porn. Porn is great! I simply think it's ridiculous to refer to all movies as porn when all it takes to debunk that statement would be to convince the article's author to walk out of the adult movie section of the rental place. To, you know, where all the other movies are.