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Firefly Fans Fight Back Against Universal

Gossi writes "What happens when a film studio and a fanbase get into bed? Fans of Joss Whedon's Firefly, and the movie by Universal Studios — Serenity — are not amused. After being encouraged to viral market Serenity, the studio has started legal action against fans (demanding $9000 in retroactive licensing fees in one case and demanding fan promotion stop), and going after Cafepress. The fans response? Retroactively invoice Universal for their services."

294 comments

  1. Missing the point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative
    From TFA:
    In other words, this site should not be taken as an attempt to actually bill Universal Pictures for all of our time, energy, and effort, nor encouragement for any fan do try to do so. We just believe that there is a point to be made.
    1. Re:Missing the point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I have to say that to me this speaks to a greater problem that I see in the business world. The overwhelming number of bad managers that seem to be running things. When I worked for RadioShack (canada) I saw the company run into the ground by a managment team who was completely incompetent. I predicted that the company would be bought out by walmart, and 2 years later it was bought out by circuit city. Now that I work in health care, I watch a well conceived system collapse under inept management. And to see all these studios, be they movie or music, completely unable to adapt to the changing landscape. I have to ask my self, "how, and why, did we end up with such incompetent management up in the ivory tower?"

    2. Re:Missing the point by free+space · · Score: 5, Interesting
      "how, and why, did we end up with such incompetent management up in the ivory tower?"


      Offtopic, I know, but here's my theory: It's due to a universal (pun not intened) misconception that a manager should focus on the "big picture" and delegate responsibilites to subordinates. So your average manager is totally out of touch with the customers, the employees, and the market. The only thing he or she sees is charts, reports and presentations, and somehow key decisions should be made with this stuff.

    3. Re:Missing the point by nursegirl · · Score: 1

      I wish I had modpoints. Interesting and important point. A

    4. Re:Missing the point by aichpvee · · Score: 1

      I think it's more because greedy and incompetent people are more likely to be driven to do what it takes to succeed in such positions and competent but not greedy people are less likely to because they aren't incented by greed. Same reason you end up with so many crooks and frauds in politics.

      --
      The Farewell Tour II
    5. Re:Missing the point by kaltkalt · · Score: 2, Insightful

      All they are ever shown, and all they see, are fallacious reports and charts showing how much money they "have lost" and "will continue to lose" due to copyright infringement. Just like the RIAA and MPAA, they guestimate how many times people download their movies, and multiply that number (which itself is probably twice the actual amount) by the price at which they sell or plan to sell their movies. This figure is presented to management as their losses. Obviously these figures are bullshit as it is based on two false assumptions. First, that nobody buys a product after downloading it. Second, that every download is an actual lost sale (that is, the downloader would have purchased the product had he/she not downloaded it). Both of these assumptions are false, particularly when dealing with a movie/tv show with a very dedicated cult following. But if you were a wrinkly, fat, 97 year-old white billionaire with liver spots all over your face and severe prostate issues, and you were told your company was losing 75 billion dollars every month due to product "theft" you'd react the exact same way these Universal execs did. You can't be out of touch if you're misinformed ab initio.

      --

      Stupid people make stupid things profitable.
    6. Re:Missing the point by eonlabs · · Score: 1

      I agree,
      I think $75 an hour for being a fan of something with the risk of lawsuits
      seems pretty fair.
      $9000 is a huge risk.
      If they don't back off, you might say that Universal Pictures just isn't getting the picture.

      --
      I wouldn't consider the mad hatter mad. Just reality impaired. He sure can make a mean cup of tea.
    7. Re:Missing the point by mortong · · Score: 2

      I wish I could unbuy the Serenity and Firefly DVDs. I also wish I hadn't convinced other to buy them. This is just sad. You're suing the people who made the show a financial success; who spread the word.

    8. Re:Missing the point by pipingguy · · Score: 1

      It's also status and the perks that often go with the title. A popular and personable individual can fake his/her way into management via suckupitude if the superiors are prone to appeals to their vanity. When you find a manager that can describe in detail a task or help you with your work, stick with that person. It wasn't so important before to be competent technically as a manager but now it is becoming so.

    9. Re:Missing the point by sowth · · Score: 1

      Have you ever had a manager who didn't delegate responsibility? I have. It doesn't work. (I'm sure there is a pun in there somewhere) They sit and micromanage everything, wasting time and pissing off the people under them. (I know how to fasten a stembolt, thank you.)

    10. Re:Missing the point by mpe · · Score: 1

      All they are ever shown, and all they see, are fallacious reports and charts showing how much money they "have lost" and "will continue to lose" due to copyright infringement. Just like the RIAA and MPAA, they guestimate how many times people download their movies, and multiply that number (which itself is probably twice the actual amount) by the price at which they sell or plan to sell their movies.

      Which is rather greater than the actual profit which would result from a retail sale.

      This figure is presented to management as their losses. Obviously these figures are bullshit as it is based on two false assumptions. First, that nobody buys a product after downloading it. Second, that every download is an actual lost sale (that is, the downloader would have purchased the product had he/she not downloaded it).

      As well as ignoring that some people may not have purchased the product had they not downloaded.

    11. Re:Missing the point by RobertLTux · · Score: 1

      The perfect defintion of a manager is to do a few very precise things AND NOTHING ELSE

      1 shield the workforce from upper management
      2 keep information flowing
      3 tell what needs to be done
      4 expect it to be done

      --
      Any person using FTFY or editing my postings agrees to a US$50.00 charge
    12. Re:Missing the point by sowth · · Score: 1

      Yes, this isn't kindergarden.

      I might add a 5th point:

      5 make sure everyone is trained to do their job. Arranging for training those who are not, unless they said they were in the interview/on the resume, in which case, they should be fired.

  2. Serenity by 56ker · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If anyone doesn't think viral marketing works - then they should read this. The first I heard about Serenity was on a friend's blog. I think they'd got into a preview screening on the basis that they'd blog about it. I then watched the first eight minutes of it which was being shown to promote the film and enjoyed it. I then went to see the film and enjoyed it and thought it was worth it too.

    There are very few films I go see at the cinema and because I don't have a TV most of the promotions for them pass me by - and a lot don't appeal.

    1. Re:Serenity by Zarniwoop_Editor · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Step 1: Get fans to promote us
      Step 2: Allow viral marketing to create a demand for our product
      Step 3: Sue the people from step 1
      Step 4: Profit!

      This has to be the most cynical thing I've ever seen.

      --
      - F1 NEWS
    2. Re:Serenity by arachnoprobe · · Score: 1
      most of the promotions for them pass me by - and a lot don't appeal.
      I think here lies the best part of viral marketing. Assuming, that most of your friends know what (style, content...) you like, the company could offer serveral different trailors as promotional videos. When your friend will recommend the movie (or else) to you, he can select which of the trailors will be the most interesting to you, therefore maximizing the effect of it.
    3. Re:Serenity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      This has to be the most cynical thing I've ever seen.

      Meanwhile thousands of people died of famine and war.

    4. Re:Serenity by 56ker · · Score: 1

      In this case it was a she not a he friend. I think I found the trailer/first eight minutes myself online after they'd piqued my curiousity.

    5. Re:Serenity by Maestro4k · · Score: 4, Insightful
      If anyone doesn't think viral marketing works - then they should read this. The first I heard about Serenity was on a friend's blog. I think they'd got into a preview screening on the basis that they'd blog about it. I then watched the first eight minutes of it which was being shown to promote the film and enjoyed it. I then went to see the film and enjoyed it and thought it was worth it too.

      It was indeed a great viral marketing campaign, and most of the people/groups who participated will either be directly affected by Universal's actions (by getting a letter from Universal's lawyers) or know someone who was (often through being participants on a site that has been targeted). The thing that Universal isn't considering is that viral marketing can work to put out the negative word at least as easily as it puts out the positive ones. (It's likely it will be even more effective because people that are mad about something tend to complain to more people than they would if they were complementing something.) This will affect the sales of Serenity going forward, but Universal probably doesn't care about that as they've made the majority of the money from it already (or at least they think they have). I don't think it'll stop there though, people are going to look up what current and future stuff (as well as past titles) Universal owns, and they're going to tell others what those are and what Universal has done to fans of Serenity. It's going to have a financial impact, although it's hard to say how big of one. Univeral's throwing away future income here. I know I'm not going to be going to see any of their movies or buying any of their DVDs from now on and I doubt I'm alone.

      Of course Universal will attribute any drop in sales to piracy and never figure out it's their own damn fault.

    6. Re:Serenity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      You seem to be confusing "cynical" with "tragic".

    7. Re:Serenity by Udo+Schmitz · · Score: 4, Informative
      And here's what Joss thinks about "free advertising" (It's an excerpt from an interview, posted by original submitter gossi at Whedonesque):

      Q. You've also done an absolutely smashing job of ignoring the massive amounts of bootleg "Firefly" fan merchandise. I'm thinking specifically of BlueSunShirts.com... [now closed -gossi].

      A. I'm a Deadhead, and where I come from, bootlegging's a good thing.

      Q. If the movie's a hit, and more official merchandise starts coming out, do you think there's going to be a crackdown?

      A. I have no idea. I never have a piece of merchandising; I haven't reached a place in the Hollywood DNA chain where I can actually ask for that. So it's not like I'm losing money. But even if I was? You know, I'm doin' fine. I have a job. I'm doing just fine. And the fact that people are making this stuff? You can call it "bootlegging" or you can call it "free advertising."

      Q. Let's hope they keep calling it the latter.

      A. You can also call it "the fact that people are taking it to their hearts." It's no different than fan fiction or any of these online communities. It's important to them and they wear it -- and that makes me proud. And I don't give a good goddamn who's makin' money off it.

      Q. Now, do you have a favorite piece of fan -- I'm sorry, "free advertising"?

      A. [laughs] A favorite.... You know, I have to admit, when I first saw the Blue Sun t-shirts, I thought they were pretty cool -- because it didn't announce itself, and I think it had a really good logo.

    8. Re:Serenity by miskatonic+alumnus · · Score: 1

      Of course Universal will attribute any drop in sales to piracy and never figure out it's their own damn fault.

      Not a problem. They'll just get their lapdogs in Congress to pass a video tax that every citizen will have to pay --- because we're all pirates, ya know.

    9. Re:Serenity by bhiestand · · Score: 1, Interesting
      Why don't you have a TV? Are you poor?

      I don't know about the GP, but I'm definitely not poor, and I don't own a TV. I've been considering buying a good projector for gaming and the occasional movie, but I have no desire to watch any of the junk I see friends watching on TV at their houses. I'd rather read a book, go scuba diving, or do pretty much anything else. I guess I just don't see any benefit to having television. The only show I've seen in the last five years that entertained me was Stargate, and I'd rather just download it. If they offered it online at $1/episode I'd definitely pay for it. Why have a big, useless TV taking up space? Just so I can have a reason to pay $30-100 every month on a cable or satellite bill?
      --
      SWM seeks new sig for a brief fling
    10. Re:Serenity by no_pets · · Score: 1

      No joke. No matter the outcome on this situation, fans of any show - specifically a scifi show where fans are probably familiar with the Firefly/Serenity history - will give serious thought before expending time, money and effort to supporting future series from cancellation.

      --
      "A government is a body of people, usually notably ungoverned." - Shepard Book Quoting Malcolm Reynolds
    11. Re:Serenity by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 5, Funny

      So all this time, the "..." was just "Stab the guys who helped you in the back to make more money"? Damn, it's so obvious once you've seen it...

      --
      If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
    12. Re:Serenity by Gossi · · Score: 4, Informative
      Here's some hilarity - that interview was published under a picture of a Firefly fan poster. Designed by 11th Hour. The person being sued by Universal.

      Also, some of 11th Hour artwork was used in the prepublicity material from Universal, and it's seen on the Serenity DVD in the special feature on fans.

      None of 11th Hour's artwork is from the movie. It's all original. It doesn't feature characters, screen shots or anything like that. You can view it here: http://www.cafepress.com/11thhourart.

      Basically, what's happening here is slightly retarded. Universal's lawyers are digging themselves into a hole by not understanding what they are doing in the scheme of things.

    13. Re:Serenity by TychoCelchuuu · · Score: 1

      Viral marketing actually didn't work very well; the movie bombed at the box office.

      On a lighter note, if you liked Serenity, you should watch Firefly, the TV show it was based off of. Same actors and everything, and it's every bit as good (IMHO, better).

      --
      Against stupidity the Gods themselves contend in vain.
    14. Re:Serenity by Blue+Stone · · Score: 1

      It's an interesting flashpoint, I think: the point at which a people's culture and the system whereby someone else can actually own that culture, meet.

      It's a point that the limited times of the early copyright laws directly addressed, and which has repeatedly been swept away by the rich, the greedy and the powerful, for their own mean and selfish ends.

      --
      Corporation, n. An ingenious device for obtaining individual profit without individual responsibility. - Ambrose Bierce
    15. Re:Serenity by c_forq · · Score: 3, Funny

      Holy crap that is genius. The gnome lawyer was going to turn around and sue the underpants gnomes, using the psychological distress caused by lost underwear to get MASSIVE jury trail payouts! It all makes sense now, and it is frick'n brilliant!

      --
      Computers allow humans to make mistakes at the fastest speeds known, with the possible exception of tequila and handguns
    16. Re:Serenity by nihaopaul · · Score: 1

      yeah i agree, i hope universal can say 4:1 thats $:! so for every x people that viewed the movie, expect x4 more people to see the complaint!

      life sucks and i was watching the reruns of serenity on my home entertainment system this week also, from my pirated dvds.. btw F.U.Universal thats a bit FUU!

    17. Re:Serenity by Original+Replica · · Score: 4, Funny

      If Firefly has taught me anything it's that the proper response to this is to: Put the executives responsible in the airlock, and disscuss their transgressions with them as we fly out to orbit. Never mention it to the crew.

      --
      We are all just people.
    18. Re:Serenity by Wellspring · · Score: 1

      I think this is a lesson to people who would participate in fanac: do not cooperate with a studio or publisher's viral marketing programs. Instead, if you are going to participate at all, you need to avoid any contact or interaction with the studio, and behave as if they were hostile to fan promotion and viral marketing from the get-go. The lesson is that just because Universal was actively encouraging it before, doesn't mean that they can't or won't go after you later. Notice that they didn't try to communicate with the fan base, they encouraged fan promotion, then issued the C&D letters.

      IANAL, but even if the fan sites are 100% in the clear legally, the costs of defending yourself against legal action will be enormous. This is what they count on: the ability to intimidate through the sheer cost and time of a lawsuit. It's why the trial lawyers spend huge amounts of money blocking tort reform. They win even if they lose, because their lawyers are salaried and you can't afford to fight them.

      And according to the article, Universal isn't just going after 11th Hour for trademarks that they own. They're trying to claim ownership of the word "serenity" itself, and the chinese character for the word. In other words, even fan material that doesn't overtly use a trademark or copyright is vulnerable to a crippling lawsuit.

    19. Re:Serenity by Pharmboy · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The movie didn't bomb. It wasn't a smash success, granted, but it did mediocre at the boxoffice and very well with DVD sales, as did the one and only season with DVD sales. According to IMDB, it cost $40 mil to make and made about $39mil worldwide, plus an unknown amount in DVD sales. They didn't get rich, but they made money. It would have helped if they actually promoted the movie, and if the new Fox execs who cancelled the series (after showing it out of order at different times) were not such asshats.

      And speaking of viral marketing, it was on a Slashdot poll that I first heard of Serenity. Went and watched the first episode of the series (the real first, not what the network aired first), got hooked, bought the DVDs. Viral marketing at it's finest, as a silly poll produced a customer that bought both the movie DVD and the complete first season DVD set.

      --
      Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
    20. Re:Serenity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If I had the points, I'd mod you up for that. Good comment :)

    21. Re:Serenity by arth1 · · Score: 1
      If anyone doesn't think viral marketing works - then they should read this.

      I hate to tell you, but if viral marketing had worked, the show wouldn't have been canned after half a season.

      Regards,
      --
      *Art
    22. Re:Serenity by Kemanorel · · Score: 1

      Might want to do a bit of looking at the reasons why the series got cancelled. Given that the network (FOX) aired the show out of order, demanded more "action-oriented" episodes from the producers, and constantly messed with which time slot Firefly was aired at, it's small wonder it never found a solid audience. If ABC did that with Lost, or hell, if FOX themselves had done that with The X-Files, neither series would have lasted a season. Hell, if FOX had screwed with X-Files in the same way they screwed with Firefly, I'd be surprised if they were still around as the "4th network" given that X-Files was one of the tent pole series in FOX's early days.

      Firefly not succeeding had very little to do with viral marketing, if anything at all. It had everything to do with TV-execs having their heads stuck up their asses and not giving their viewers credit for being able to think for themselves and be able to get into a show with multi-seaon story arcs.

      Thank you, come again,

      Kemanorel
      Proudly feeding trolls since... fuck, I can't even remember... Where's my scotch?

      --
      Mess not in the affairs of dragons, for you are crunchy and good with ketchup.
    23. Re:Serenity by c0bw3b · · Score: 1

      eh, I think most of the viral marketing didn't really kick in until after the series had been cancelled.

      --
      ||:|::
    24. Re:Serenity by pilkul · · Score: 1

      You also seem to be confusing "cynical" with "tragic".

    25. Re:Serenity by oaklybonn · · Score: 1

      specifically of BlueSunShirts.com... [now closed -gossi].
      www.bluesunshirts.com/index2.php
      seems to work though :-)

    26. Re:Serenity by 56ker · · Score: 1

      Yep sounds like the RIAA/MPAA all over again doesn't it? I'm sure there are first amendment issues to fan-made stuff that doesn't tread on the toes of someone's trademark.

    27. Re:Serenity by pipingguy · · Score: 1

      This will affect the sales of Serenity going forward

      Please stop using marketing and corporate report bullshit terms in the future.

    28. Re:Serenity by Mad+Marlin · · Score: 0

      A mediocre TV show that got cancelled is a poor thing to have as a "culture". I think I'll build my "culture" around that one where they try to pick which briefcase has all of the money in it.

    29. Re:Serenity by mpe · · Score: 1

      This will affect the sales of Serenity going forward, but Universal probably doesn't care about that as they've made the majority of the money from it already (or at least they think they have).

      Maybe Universe think suing their customers will get them more money.

      Of course Universal will attribute any drop in sales to piracy and never figure out it's their own damn fault.

      In the same way that they never think producing a poor product could be responsible for a sales drop...

    30. Re:Serenity by mpe · · Score: 1

      Might want to do a bit of looking at the reasons why the series got cancelled. Given that the network (FOX) aired the show out of order, demanded more "action-oriented" episodes from the producers, and constantly messed with which time slot Firefly was aired at, it's small wonder it never found a solid audience.

      Also Firefly isn't the first example of this kind of thing happening. It appears that these people just can't learn.

    31. Re:Serenity by StikyPad · · Score: 1

      What if they helped you in the front?

  3. Rule number one: by Zadaz · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Don't annoy someone who has more spare time than you do.

    And this group has a lot of spare time and energy and has shown they'll fight for something they believe in.

    But of course no one is required to have any social literacy to head a major corporation. Obviously.

    1. Re:Rule number one: by asb · · Score: 1, Interesting

      And this group has a lot of spare time and energy and has shown they'll fight for something they believe in.

      They have also shown that they will work for free for an international multimillion dollar corporation. They are not exactly the smartest people on this planet.

      Come on! They worked for free so that a corporation could make profit by selling them mind dumbing entertainment! It would be just as stupid if I worked for free at McDonalds and then went to the other side of the counter and bought the hamburgers I just cooked.

      --
      Antti S. Brax - Old school - http://www.iki.fi/asb/
    2. Re:Rule number one: by Reality+Master+101 · · Score: 1

      Don't annoy someone who has more spare time than you do.

      Why not?

      The site is mildly amusing (very mild), but it's hardly going to cause an uprising by the people against Universal.

      --
      Sometimes it's best to just let stupid people be stupid.
    3. Re:Rule number one: by msobkow · · Score: 1

      I'm involved with a wee activist group that has that same power base: people with a lot of free time. It's really quite amazing what a few hundred people can do when they work together and have the time to put in; I can only imagine the power of tens or hundreds of thousands behind an "issue" like the Firefly fan base. :)

      But what I really like is the reverse invoicing -- it's a great response and 100% legal AFAIK. I used the same tactic on a doctor or two over the years. When I had to sit more than an hour waiting for a scheduled appointment and the doc hadn't been called off to some emergency but was merely over booked, I invoiced him for a full emergency consulting service bill rate.

      Obviously he objected, but after a bit of discussion he understood my time was as valuable as his, and I never had to wait more than 15 minutes again. (Except one afternoon when there was an emergency, which was perfectly understandable.)

      I just hope the fan base doesn't underbill. They should make sure they find out what a marketing agency charges for advertising, and what advertising companies charge for creating an ad campaign. Include the service delivery rates for content delivery, the expenses for promotional content creation, and a reasonable overhead.

      Most important of all, don't forget the late fees for failing to negotiate and pay in a timely fashion. :D

      --
      I do not fail; I succeed at finding out what does not work.
    4. Re:Rule number one: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And if it did, what would we do? Boycott Universal movies? I honestly dont' know which movies were put out by Universal. The studio producing a film generally make even less of an impression on me than the director, and I usually don't bother to find out who that is either.

    5. Re:Rule number one: by Greyfox · · Score: 1
      Fans willing to do your marketing for you are an unpredictable bunch. It doesn't take a lot to keep them happy but God help you if they ever turn on you. Treating them like this is a good way to make that happen. Sadly, it's not too surprising that the braniacs at Universal can't figure out how to treat their loyal fan base right. They could still avert the impending PR disaster by claiming it was a mistake and making some gesture by way of apology, but I really don't see them doing that. My prediction is that within a couple of years there'll be a lawsuit started by a fan, something along the lines of Universal was trying to get free labor. You'd be surprised how often those work when a company encourages people to do stuff for it for free. After that, no one will be talking about Firefly anymore.

      Now if Universal wanted to fix it right they'd apologize, throw parties in various states with the cast and the fans over the course of a week or two and announce another season's worth of episodes are about to go into production. But I don't see that happening.

      --

      I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

    6. Re:Rule number one: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You cannot bill people for services that they did no agree to pay for. You cannot bill your doctor for being overbooked, you cannot bill a cable company for missing a service appointment, and you cannot bill a media conglomerate for telling people about their movies. You live in a fantasy world, and you're fortunate your doctor didn't seek recourse for your inane behavior. What it sounds like you did was create a false invoice which is not kosher, in case you did not know that.

    7. Re:Rule number one: by Lemmy+Caution · · Score: 1

      That's the big cognitive gap, there: fans are only vaguely aware that the objects of their affections are, essentially, commodities. I view such fandom as a close relation of the Stockholm Syndrome.

    8. Re:Rule number one: by metamatic · · Score: 1
      You cannot bill people for services that they did no agree to pay for.

      Tell that to the government.

      --
      GCHQ Quantum Insert installed. If only our tongues were made of glass, how much more careful we would be when we speak
    9. Re:Rule number one: by Giant+Killer · · Score: 1
      Don't annoy someone who has more spare time than you do.
      Yep, geeks annoying lawyers is never a good idea.
    10. Re:Rule number one: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > They have also shown that they will work for free for an international multimillion dollar corporation.
      > They are not exactly the smartest people on this planet.

      You've never heard the term 'labor of love'? Donating your time to something you love is not stupid just because the rewards aren't tangible.

      > Come on! They worked for free so that a corporation could make profit by selling them mind dumbing entertainment!
      > It would be just as stupid if I worked for free at McDonalds and then went to the other side of the counter and bought the hamburgers I just cooked.

      It is possible to enjoy consuming, you know. Do you think those millions of shoppers at the mall every weekend aren't having fun spending their money? These fans *love* consuming Firefly. They do something else to make the money that allows them that pleasure.

      If you really really loved McDonald's hamburgers, and they were in danger of disappearing because of lack of promotion, you're saying you wouldn't spend a single minute of your time recommending McDonald's to people?

    11. Re:Rule number one: by saxoholic · · Score: 1

      But really... who could have more spare time than a bunch of nerds? Come on! The person I heard about serenity from very rarely gets off the couch in his mother's basement, and when he does it's to play risk.

    12. Re:Rule number one: by sd_diamond · · Score: 1

      I thought rule number one was "don't get involved in a land war in Asia".

    13. Re:Rule number one: by ronanbear · · Score: 1

      Well they're just trying to do something to get the legal attack dogs away from the throat of a fan. t-shirts of artwork can still be considered viral marketing. A simple take down notice would have sufficed. They went totally overboard and the fans are angry and feel used.

      They've exposed it and it will hurt Universal. Universal should count themselves lucky that this probably won't develop much more momentum and end up turning into a campaign of active un-marketing (sic) against Universal.

      --
      the more they over-think the plumbing the easier it is to stop up the pipe
    14. Re:Rule number one: by msobkow · · Score: 1

      Of course you can bill for services people didn't agree to pay for. Their use of those services is an implicit contract, and if they didn't bother reading it before taking what they wanted, that's their fault.

      Caveat Emptor.

      Even if you didn't think you were buying anything...

      --
      I do not fail; I succeed at finding out what does not work.
    15. Re:Rule number one: by mpe · · Score: 1

      You cannot bill people for services that they did no agree to pay for.

      If they have agreed to being provided with the services the best they can do legally is haggle over the price. Worst case senario for the party provided with the services is to end up being prosecuted for fraud.

      You cannot bill your doctor for being overbooked, you cannot bill a cable company for missing a service appointment,

      These two examples are nothing to do with billing for services they didn't agree to pay for. They are actually breaches of contract by the doctor and cable company respectivly. Also if either had a policy of charging their patients/customers for broken appointments they'd have tough time putting convincing a judge that they shouldn't pay when they broke appointments.

    16. Re:Rule number one: by mhatlau · · Score: 1

      All of you do realize that you are courting legal action and heavy fines by posting on this. I quote the demand letter;
      "That, no later than close of business on October 30, 2006, 11th Hour Art agree in writing to permanently cease and desist from the advertising, promoting, marketing, sale or distribution of any products bearing or referring to Universal Property".
      I specifically point out the word 'promoting'. In plain English, any discussion of any products bearing or referring to Universal Property could be construed as promoting, and is a violation. This would, of course, refer to any movie produced by Universal. So be careful not to mention any movies produced or distributed by Universal, such as Flash Gordon, Jurassic Park IV, Namor, etc.

  4. Fanbase Overboard? by fohat · · Score: 2, Informative

    It seems to me a case of some people going a little overboard with the whole "promote" idea. In this day and age, you can't use a corporate trademark like that and not expect some kind of backlash. Kudos to the fanbase on the other hand for getting the word out there about this fine show(s).

    --
    Is there heaven? Is there Hell? Is that a Tuna Melt I smell?-Primus
    1. Re:Fanbase Overboard? by andypoole · · Score: 1

      But did Joss Whedon not say in the introduction to the preview screenings to tell as many people as you can about it and spread the word?

    2. Re:Fanbase Overboard? by elronxenu · · Score: 1

      It's not a trademark, it's our culture that is being promoted.

    3. Re:Fanbase Overboard? by fohat · · Score: 1

      Does he own exclusive rights to the name? If so it's a moot point, but if not then the people creating merchandise need to license that name from someone. Example: Every Calvin and Hobbes T-Shirt is counterfit, because Waterson never consented to merchandising that name. I'm not aware that he went after people directly, but I do recall there were repercussions for people that sold the counterfits.

      --
      Is there heaven? Is there Hell? Is that a Tuna Melt I smell?-Primus
    4. Re:Fanbase Overboard? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He doesn't need exclusive rights for this. He just needs the right to promote and use the trademark. Unless that right specifically says he can't have helpers do this task for him, I'm pretty sure he's on solid ground for tihs.

      That wouldn't be much different than a graphic designer that doesn't have rights to a trademark he's designing a flyer for, but for which his boss has the rights to create material with the trademark.

    5. Re:Fanbase Overboard? by LatePaul · · Score: 1

      What he definitely didn't say was to infringe Universal's copyright and trademarks.

    6. Re:Fanbase Overboard? by nursegirl · · Score: 1

      Perhaps that is true with the blue sun shirts. The Serenity shirts were definitely not identical to the image/font used by Fox/Universal. I find it particularly reprehensible that 11th hour was told to take down all shirts with Serenity written on it in English or Chinese, no matter the font, layout, or colouring. It shouldn't be legal to trademark a common word. You can only complain of trademark infringement when it might contribute to trademark dilution. I can make a t-shirt with the word "Bounce" on it in my handwriting, and it doesn't violate the trademark of Proctor&Gamble. That said, I can't sell a laundry product called "Bounce" and not expect to have angry lawyers chase me down.

    7. Re:Fanbase Overboard? by Technomancer · · Score: 1

      There is a movie "Bounce" so forget about your Bounce t-shirt idea.
      http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0186894/
      pwned!

  5. Legality? by Krazy+Nemesis · · Score: 1

    I don't know how legal this would all be considering there was not initial contract or bid for services... but just the same: fuckin' ballsy response guys... I love it! I'm a little jealous though, as I'd love to bill a client for over a million someday... well, before a million isn't worth anything.

    1. Re:Legality? by Compholio · · Score: 2, Informative
      I don't know how legal this would all be considering there was not initial contract or bid for services... but just the same: fuckin' ballsy response guys... I love it! I'm a little jealous though, as I'd love to bill a client for over a million someday... well, before a million isn't worth anything.
      They're not actually billing them, if you read the site it says they're trying to make Universal aware of all the time and energy people have put into promoting Serenity/Firefly* without expecting any monetary return.

      * Serenity and Firefly are the intellectual property of "Universal Studios Licensing, LLLP" ;)
    2. Re:Legality? by crossmr · · Score: 1

      Forgetting about when the AOL volunteers turned around and sued AOL for time. That damaged the volunteer movement on websites, and effectively ruined geocities and other websites as they suddenly cancelled their volunteer programs for fear of being sued.

  6. I'm partial to wrath by vandelais · · Score: 1, Funny

    Browncoat+turncoat=trenchcoat

    --
    Game: Player 'Donald J Trump' now has AI skill level 'experimental'.
  7. I hate siding with the movie industry... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Interesting

    ...but just because you're dumb enough to advertise somebody's product free of charge for them, doesn't mean you get to change your mind and invoice them in the end - even if your "invoice" is just a parody. You advertised it because you liked the product. It was your own choice to do so, don't whine to us.

    However, there's a very big difference between telling your friends about a product, and doing things like making T-shirts that attempt to cash in financially on a product you didn't make and have no rights to.

    If you aren't able to tell the difference between these two things, you deserve everything the court throws at you.

    1. Re:I hate siding with the movie industry... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You know what's really dumb? When a poster misses the fact that the "parody" invoice was in direct response to being invoiced by Universal for use of the Firefly trademarks. Trademarks which Universal encouraged those fans to use in order to promote the movie.

      Yep, missing that makes the poster pret-ty dumb.

  8. wish I had someone to bill... by artifex2004 · · Score: 1

    Very soon after the "browncoats" fan site announced it was shutting down, I started getting spam to the site-specific email address at my vanity domain. So I figure someone made money off that.

  9. I wasn't a fan of the BuffyVerse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    it bugged me. So I wasn't a natural for Joss Whedon's Firefly project. After reading fan generated material related to it, I was intrigued. Read more. Bought the DVD. Loved it. Went to see the film & thoroughly enjoyed it.

    Now the studio shills who've raked it in as a direct result of the geek-herds' generous efforts are dumping on them.

    Let's hope Joss's new project's marketing bills are being paid up front out of corporate coffers and not ponced off his fanbase.

    1. Re:I wasn't a fan of the BuffyVerse by petrus4 · · Score: 1

      IMHO there was a fair amount of difference between Buffy and Angel. In my own mind, Angel was targetted at adults, (or at least 20 somethings) while Buffy was targetted at the real-world equivalent of Dawn or Willow...Ergo, 14-16 year old angst-ridden female Wiccan scenesters and/or fake Goths.

      The first few seasons of Buffy I found at least tolerable, and occasionally interesting...although once Dawn and Tara showed up, I lost interest more or less immediately...Dawn in particular reminded me a little too strongly of a number of girls I'd known at high school who I would have preferred left forgotten.

      As others have probably said, Whedon *does* have a wonderful gift for taking well-known stereotypes and turning them on their head...thus effectively re-inventing them. He's probably the closest we've come to genuine originality since the end of the 80s, for my money.

      As I was going to say though, for me Angel is really where the "Buffyverse," hit its' stride...Although to me David Boreanaz, James Marsters, and Andy Hallett had as much to do with that as anyone behind the camera would have. We're not going to see another character with the level of charisma that Boreanaz in particular exhibited there for quite some time, I don't think.

    2. Re:I wasn't a fan of the BuffyVerse by no_pets · · Score: 1

      I'd have to say that I liked "Buffy" more than you did but I'd agree that with "Angel" the Buffyverse went to another level. Much darker and adult and I hated to see it go.

      As has been said numerous times, Joss Whedon is at his best when creating an ongoing series as he has much more time to develop everything as compared to a movie.

      I wish a television network with some balls or nothing to lose would fund another Joss series and just let him run wild. Perhaps the new CW station (or whatever UPN/WB station is called) or even FX would give him a shot.

      Surely there are lots of Joss fans out there that would give nearly any series of any genre of his a chance.

      --
      "A government is a body of people, usually notably ungoverned." - Shepard Book Quoting Malcolm Reynolds
    3. Re:I wasn't a fan of the BuffyVerse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Odd how i know plenty of adult Buffy fans. You must respect that people have different taste.

  10. Well, the thing is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Ok, having only briefly looked it over... I think what Universal is objecting to is this knucklehead selling merchandise for profit, utilizing their images. This isn't promoting the film, this is promoting his bank account. If I am reading it correctly, they're not telling him to stop promoting the film, they're telling him to stop promoting his products using their IP.

    So, well, what's the problem?

    1. Re:Well, the thing is... by Warlokk · · Score: 5, Insightful

      But if you read even a little (I know, I know, it's Slashdot), he points out he isn't using ANY of their property or images, he's using his original work and just making references to Serenity/Firefly in the text on the site. Their objection includes even MENTIONING their property on his website... which is, of course, ridiculous.

    2. Re:Well, the thing is... by LordKronos · · Score: 1

      But if you read even a little (I know, I know, it's Slashdot), he points out he isn't using ANY of their property or images

      But if you read a little MORE (I know, I know, it's Slashdot) you'll see he said this:
      "The questionable image in my shop were, for the most part, already pulled down by Cafe Press after the first email notice I got last week."

      So it would appear at one point he WAS using their images. And then his wording of "for the most part" sounds like he removed some of them but STILL was trying to profit off of a couple. I can't imagine that Cafe Press makes it THAT difficult to remove a product from your store offering, so I get the impression he was dragging his feet a bit on the matter.

    3. Re:Well, the thing is... by raduf · · Score: 1

      As far as I can tell (if I got it right), this is the second or third time I hear the same story: fan gets letter telling him/her (nicely) that he's breaking copyright. Fan says sorry and does what the letter says. A few days later comes a different letter, from a different source inside the same corporation, telling in very not-nice terms (read threatening) that he's breaking copyright, and he'd better start dancing on a chair on the table, painted in blue, or else he'll lose his house and spend a few years in jail.

      Fan is... upset by this.

      So again, the problem is not with the corporation protecting their profits. The problem is with sending a very threatening letter to a person who's been helping their interests for a while now. And again, for the fan it's not an abstract matter. It's a real letter, from very real lawyers, saying they're going to ruin him and not even miss lunch over it. For selling t-shirts with serenity on them.

    4. Re:Well, the thing is... by swelke · · Score: 1

      Ok, having only briefly looked it over... I think what Universal is objecting to is this knucklehead selling merchandise for profit, utilizing their images.

      So, well, what's the problem?


      No problem whatsoever, if that was in fact what was happening. The trouble is that Universal is claiming this with regard to images this "knucklehead" made himself, related to Serenity, but not using any of their copyrighted work. If anything it's a violation of trademark, not copyright. That's a more subtle case entirely. Copyright infringement is clear-cut. Either a derivative work contains copyrighted components, or it doesn't. Trademark infringement is difficult to prove, especially when the trademark involved is one on a word that's been in the English language since long before the trademark holder got around to claiming it.

      Of course, the guy was probably infringing more directly back when this started. In the forum linked to, he says that he's already removed all of the stuff that mentions serenity. The most closely related thing left is this, a T-shirt based on the Chinese character translated as "serenity".

      --
      Have you ever wondered How to Take Over
    5. Re:Well, the thing is... by parcel · · Score: 2, Interesting

      But if you read a little MORE (I know, I know, it's Slashdot) you'll see he said this:
      "The questionable image in my shop were, for the most part, already pulled down by Cafe Press after the first email notice I got last week."


      And if you keep reading (this could go on forever, I'm sure) there was an original C&D related to the copyright and images, which was complied with (the 'already pulled down...' part). These being images that Universal had previously encouraged use of for promotion of the movie - there have even been (unsupported) claims that Universal employees had at least turned a blind eye, if not passively encouraged, use of the images on infringing merchandise. Of course, I could encourage someone to use my company's logo, that doesn't mean it's okay for them to do so... but keep in mind, the people infringing copyright here are the 'average joe' types that are not nearly as aware of copyright law as the slashdot crowd. They're scared to death, because they're honest people who made an honest mistake by taking these Universal employees at face value, and are now taking these letters at face value as well, thinking they suddenly owe a tremendous amount of money to Universal.

      It sounds like the first letter (the C&D) was for the copyrighted images, and the second letter billing for the retroactive licensing fees - in addition to other demands, including a year's backlog of customer order information - was for Firefly/Serenity related original works.

      What apparently happened is that Universal sold T-shirt rights to a third party, which is now either enforcing on behalf of Universal, or demanding that Universal enforce (all this is going through a... fourth(?) party law firm, of course) the Firefly/Serenity copyright. Again, no supporting evidence, but that's what's been said.

      Seems to me, the appropriate/ethical thing for Universal to do would be to acknowledge that they have sent mixed signals to the fans of their IP, and take care of this. I've heard it said that Universal has in the past been pretty even-handed with their IP enforcement, so maybe there's still a chance that they'll step up to the plate with this one.

    6. Re:Well, the thing is... by Physician · · Score: 1

      I'm pretty sure the guy is hosting it on his own server. If he is using Universal's IP then I'm sure that violates some sort of hacking law. :)

      --
      Does God treat us as servants or friends? Check my homepage.
    7. Re:Well, the thing is... by jafuser · · Score: 1

      What apparently happened is that Universal sold T-shirt rights to a third party, which is now either enforcing on behalf of Universal, or demanding that Universal enforce the Firefly/Serenity copyright.

      Whoever that third party is, good luck selling many T-shirts now.

      --
      Please consider making an automatic monthly recurring donation to the EFF
    8. Re:Well, the thing is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem is:

                a) Whedon had said he was fine with fan-made merchandise in the past. At movie-related events, including company-sponsered ones, various products were sold with full company knowledge without complaint. This was viewed as helping the "viral marketing" campaign for the movie.. this was not just fans overlooking rules, the people involved in the movie and TV show encouraged this.

                b) The big problem -- Universal is not just asking for people to quit selling these products, WHICH THEY WERE OK WITH BEFORE, but are trying to bill retroactively for sales. I think asking vendors to quit vending, for instance, shirts is OK and people involved would not object, but retroactive billing is bullshit and they know it.

                c) The other problem -- they're going after products that do not have shots from the movie, likenesses, etc. at all. Some just have a few chinese characters on them (also not copied out of the movie or TV but custom-drawn.) This is not company IP, period.

  11. Money Money Money / Must be funny... by BeeBeard · · Score: 1

    Free time is one thing, but financial resources are another. I really like their response by retroactively invoicing Universal for marketing and promotion--it's funny, clever, and ballsy. But will that spirit translate into meaningful legal protection? It's doubtful.

    1. Re:Money Money Money / Must be funny... by garylian · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I don't think resources are an issue for the fan base. They've already shown a willingness to go to bat for a show/movie they liked, and did it all for free.

      It can be pretty amazing what people can accomplish out of pure passion for the work, as opposed to the profit to be made from it. In this case, the fans are more than willing to make the effort. The question is, will it be for or against Universal releases of the future?

      If it goes against, there could be some problems for future TV and movies from Universal, as this loyal block will remember and potentially boycott. Universal knows that the potential loss of revenue from a rabid base of fans in that much coveted "18-35 male without an understanding of credit card debt" demographic would be something advertisers would look at closely. It would certainly cost them more than the 9,000 they are looking for in liscensing fees.

      Then again, the MPAA and RIAA are dumb enough to cut off the hands that feed them all the time. Why should this be any different?

    2. Re:Money Money Money / Must be funny... by swelke · · Score: 1

      If it goes against, there could be some problems for future TV and movies from Universal, as this loyal block will remember and potentially boycott. Universal knows that the potential loss of revenue from a rabid base of fans in that much coveted "18-35 male without an understanding of credit card debt" demographic would be something advertisers would look at closely. It would certainly cost them more than the 9,000 they are looking for in liscensing fees.

      Don't fool yourself. The Firefly fanbase is an infinitesimal drop in the vast ocean of the '"18-35 male without an understanding of credit card debt"' demographic. They won't make any notable difference in the revenues of a mainstream movie or TV show.

      For a science fiction movie/series, however, they could be a big enough chunk of the market to make a difference, but only if they show solidarity and don't just go see the movie anyway. I don't think enough of them would feel strongly enough about it for that, however (I know I don't, and I'm the most ardent Firefly fan I know).

      --
      Have you ever wondered How to Take Over
    3. Re:Money Money Money / Must be funny... by 91degrees · · Score: 1

      Legal action isn't the only method at our disposal. Firefly fans are organised, and highly fanatical. This is pretty much the point. It's actually possible that they would be able to encourage a lrge part of the fanbase to avoid all universal products. More tactically, they could pick on a single specific proerty, and decide to encourage a direct competitor. If Universal's #1 big budget film is pushed into the #2 spot, they might just notice.

  12. Boycott by ronanbear · · Score: 4, Informative

    I just went onto the universal studios website to find out what movies to not watch. Shouldn't have bothered.

    The Black Dahlia
    Man of the Year
    Idlewild
    Accepted
    Miami Vice

    You, Me and Dupree

    coming
    Lets go to Prison
    The Good Shepherd
    Children of Men
    Alpha Dog

    --
    the more they over-think the plumbing the easier it is to stop up the pipe
    1. Re:Boycott by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Children of Men
      Well, I know I'll be seeing this one at least.

      I used to try boycotting movie studios when they did stuff like this. Then I ran out of studios, and movies to see.
    2. Re:Boycott by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A good way to fill the time you spend not watching movies is to create, rather than consume.

    3. Re:Boycott by Oronar · · Score: 1

      I was going to watch that crap in the first place?
      Wow, I must by psychic and I can boycott bad movies before we decide to boycott them!

      --
      1 4/\/\ 1337
    4. Re:Boycott by mcmonkey · · Score: 2, Funny

      I just went onto the universal studios website to find out what movies to not watch. Shouldn't have bothered.

      I don't think the boycott is going to work. How do I not see those movies any more than I was already not seeing them?

    5. Re:Boycott by DigitalSorceress · · Score: 1

      Dear Ronanbear,

      Please cease and desist forthwith all usage of any words in the title or script of any Universal intellectual property.

      We have reviewed all of your previous posts and have constructed an invoice for One Billion Zillion Trazillion Dollars for your usage of such intellectual property as "and" "the" "Ronan" "bear" etc...

      Sincerely,
      Dowee, Cheetham, and Howe
      Attorneys at Law
      on behalf of the greedy bastards at Universal. /sarcasm

      --

      The Digital Sorceress
    6. Re:Boycott by Malfourmed · · Score: 1

      I have to say that Children of Men is the best SF movie I've seen in years. It's better than (but very different to) Serenity.

    7. Re:Boycott by WilliamSChips · · Score: 1

      Universal also makes Battlestar Galactica.

      --
      Please, for the good of Humanity, vote Obama.
    8. Re:Boycott by Rixel · · Score: 1

      Don't Boycott....Bittorrent

      That drives them up the wall.

      --
      Never play chicken with a passive aggressive.
  13. Invoicing? by teslar · · Score: 2, Informative
    The fans response? Retroactively invoice Universal for their services."
    Wrong. From TFA:
    In other words, this site should not be taken as an attempt to actually bill Universal Pictures for all of our time, energy, and effort, nor encouragement for any fan do try to do so. We just believe that there is a point to be made.
    1. Re:Invoicing? by Rob+the+Bold · · Score: 1
      The fans response? Retroactively invoice Universal for their services."
      Wrong. From TFA:

      In other words, this site should not be taken as an attempt to actually bill Universal Pictures for all of our time, energy, and effort, nor encouragement for any fan do try to do so. We just believe that there is a point to be made.

      One of these headlines in interesting and makes me want to read the story and discover the quote in the second. The other is not and does not.

      --
      I am not a crackpot.
  14. you gotta be kidding me by fontkick · · Score: 4, Insightful

    So a guy decides to print up some Serenity t-shirts and sell them on cafe press, and is surprised when he gets sued by Universal. How braindead can you be? Viral marketing means putting a mention of Firefly/Serenity on your website with a link to Amazon.

    That said, bring back Firefly. Best sci-fi series since ST:TNG in my opinion.

    1. Re:you gotta be kidding me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Actually his t-shirts are just the chinese characters, drawn by him, that translate as "serenity". No pictures or artwork from the movie at all. Think Universal should be able to control the expression of single word? (as opposed to a substantial quote from a movie)

    2. Re:you gotta be kidding me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Anything is better sci-fi than ST:TNG.

      Firefly was orders of magnitude better than ST:TNG.

    3. Re:you gotta be kidding me by anethema · · Score: 1

      Try BSG. Most intense show ever.

      --


      It's easier to fight for one's principles than to live up to them.
    4. Re:you gotta be kidding me by 91degrees · · Score: 1

      What was so bad about TNG? Well, okay, apart from the moralising.

      I think it was one of the finest sci-fi series of the 80's. It covered various real world issues, the production values were top notch, it had some excellent actors, and the stories could be about just about anything.

  15. Here's a tip by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    Here's a tip for those of you who don't get it. Viral marketing means promoting via word of mouth/press. It does not mean I can take copyrighted/trademarked material and sell it for my own profit. Otherwise I'd be running around selling DVDs of my favorite movies and shows and claim that I'm "marketing" it for the studios.

    1. Re:Here's a tip by punkelf · · Score: 1

      yes, but we're not just talking about 'round the watercooler talking up here.
      The Browncoats printed posters, ran websites, really ran a promotional campaign.
      sure, there was some infringement, and the selling of merchandise is a little sketchy.
      But ultimately this is about on the level of the Grateful Dead suing tape traders, and ordering them to quit trading tapes, because they're supporting that enterprise by selling homemade "steal your face" tiedyes.

      It's called the hand that feeds you, when you bite it, you're gonna get smacked.
      it's about time the entertainment industry learned this.

      --
      "It's the year 2000, where are the flying cars?"
    2. Re:Here's a tip by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Great Idea!

    3. Re:Here's a tip by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why shouldn't we be able to run around and sell DVDs and other merchandise? I am not talking about recent movies, like the original thread is, I am talking about movies or other items created over ten years ago. Why can I not make my own StarTrek or StarWars merchandise or even stuff based off of that stupid mouse? The answer is copyright law and how it is so messed up.

      A few years back I came across a site where a guy was taking his VHS originals (non SE) of StarWars, and transferring them to DVD. His screenshots sure looked a whole lot better than what Lucas put out on DVD regarding the non SE version of StarWars.

      Another thing, the comic Diesel Sweeties received a Cease and Desist letter from Lucas regarding some of their shirts. With the exception of the Robot Jesus shirt, the others should not be targetted in anyway under current copyright law, however, technically he should be able to do whatever he wants with characters and ideas from something created and released almost thirty years ago. Link to some of the information regarding this incident and there is more above and below that bookmark, and as of this moment the image of the letter is not loading. I just recently found that comic and it is entertaining most of the time.

      As for Serenity, it is still new, so what they are doing is legally acceptable, but they should really look over how they go after this type of thing. Regarding Firefly? Well it came out years ago but still is within a copyrights acceptable range. However, I believe Mr Whedon should be the one who decides this, it is his creation, they really need to redo those contracts.

  16. Then the most important question is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Would you like fries with that post? (then make them yourself, tee-hee :)

    Sorry, couldn't resist.

  17. I've never seen firefly by fmwap · · Score: 4, Funny

    and I hated this movie, but I still paid my $8 dollars to watch it on opening night because of all the hype.

    Can I get a retroactive refund?

    1. Re:I've never seen firefly by fdiskne1 · · Score: 1

      I've never seen firefly

      That would be the problem. I could understand how not seeing the Firefly series would make the movie not so interesting. For me, the series by itself was okay, but not great. The movie by itself was okay, but not great. If you've seen the series, the movie makes much more sense and I think they did a great job in the movie of explaining a lot of what happened in the series. There were several "Ah-HA!" moments for me where I now understood what was going on in the series, which probably made my view of the movie that much better. While I'm glad I watched both the series and the movie, taking 12 hours or so to make the experience worthwhile seems a bit excessive. Of course, it took Babylon 5 four seasons to do the same.

      --
      But why is the rum gone?
    2. Re:I've never seen firefly by RyuuzakiTetsuya · · Score: 1, Insightful

      if sitting down to watch a mediocre sci fi show is a requirement for a lame 2 hour movie after paying 8 bucks...

      Fuck Joss Whedon

      --
      Non impediti ratione cogitationus.
  18. Browncoats by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    There's something about the color brown and Mr Whedons work that I'd rather not put my finger on...

  19. Some people are just ... stupid. by BrianRoach · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Sorry, but that seems to be the sad truth.

    Somehow, because they volunteered to promote a movie for little or no compensation, they think they have some right to personally profit from selling merchandise which uses the IP from that movie without getting permission or paying a licensing fee.

    This is one of those cases there copyright is working exactly as it is supposed to.

    - Roach

    1. Re:Some people are just ... stupid. by Triskele · · Score: 4, Interesting
      This is one of several comments that assert that since Universal own the IP and there was no format agreement, then Universal were completely right to c&d and even bill their volunteers. Sad loser geeks eh?

      However this is missing the point of how viral marketing campaigns are supposed to work. Viral marketing can be scary particularly for large control-freak companies, as the essential point behind viral marketing is to give away control of the brand to the fans / early adopters and let them be a mouthpiece for your product, a voice that other fans and their less fanish friends, family and acquaintances will trust when they wouldn't even notice a conventional marketing campaign via TV, radio, print and billboards.

      I wouldn't be surprised if Universal's marketing dept were over the moon with all the fan promotion including Serenity T-shirts (free advertising by the wearer). And at the same time their IP dept were doing the only thing they know how to do. Plenty of YouTube vids were posted by marketing depts only to be retracted by their own lawyeres.

      It seems to me that part of the deal with viral marketing is giving away control to the fans and while this may be informal (how do you contract for that 20th C-style?) and the fan volunteers have a right to be treated with respect for their work. Even if that means they make a little money out of the owner's IP. Under the technicalities of the law that may be "unlicenced" use, but there is an implicit grant of rights in marketing a product that we consumers have let slide and given the corporations free rein to trample over. Otherwise every time we told a mate about a great product we'd have to pay a licence fee and balance that by billing the corporation for marketing services. Just as these Browncoats have tried to show...

      --

      --
      USA: home of the world's largest terrorist training camp.

    2. Re:Some people are just ... stupid. by wubboy · · Score: 1

      I understand if they were selling pictures or screenshots of the movie on a T-shirt, but from the site's blog it seems that they are more "inspired from" a movie. To what level is a thought inspired from a movie and placed on a shirt IP from the movie? If I liked "Cars" and I draw a car with a smile on a tee shirt does Disney have rights to my t-shirt If that's the case wasn't there a cartoon car (a dunebuggy I believe) that talked and had animated expressions who's creators should be getting rich right about now.

      --
      Sit... Speak.... Shake.... Good Dog!
    3. Re:Some people are just ... stupid. by BrianRoach · · Score: 0, Troll

      This is one of several comments that assert that since Universal own the IP and there was no format agreement, then Universal were completely right to c&d and even bill their volunteers. Sad loser geeks eh?

      Yes. That is exactly correct.

      If you do not have explicit permission from the copyright holder, you are SOL. Ignorance is not an excuse for violating copyright. Thinking you have some implicit right is also not an excuse. That's why there's a law that covers what your rights are and aren't.

      While I generally abhore what the RIAA/MPAA are doing these days, and think there are some real problems with copyright laws in the US ... this isn't one of those cases.

      - Roach

    4. Re:Some people are just ... stupid. by BrianRoach · · Score: 1

      I understand if they were selling pictures or screenshots of the movie on a T-shirt, but from the site's blog it seems that they are more "inspired from" a movie. To what level is a thought inspired from a movie and placed on a shirt IP from the movie?

      It's called a "Derivative work", and you need permission from the copyright holder.

      If I liked "Cars" and I draw a car with a smile on a tee shirt does Disney have rights to my t-shirt If that's the case wasn't there a cartoon car (a dunebuggy I believe) that talked and had animated expressions who's creators should be getting rich right about now.

      Lets put it this way: If your car on the T-Shirt looked like the animated car in the movie, and other people thought it was from the movie ... you don't have an original work, do you?

      Please point out a car in "Cars" that looks just like Speedbuggy, or is an obvious derived work. I'll wait. Oh, and you can't copyright an IDEA, so we're talking about actual depictions.

      This isn't rocket science. If you profit (and not just financially) from someone else's copyrighted work without their permission, you're violating copyright. None of these people came up with or created any of the characters.

      - Roach

    5. Re:Some people are just ... stupid. by wubboy · · Score: 1

      Thanks Roach. Now I just have to find the owner of that xxx movie my wife and I were watching and pay for my daughter. ;-)

      No really, I understand your point now thanks for taking the time.

      --
      Sit... Speak.... Shake.... Good Dog!
    6. Re:Some people are just ... stupid. by Triskele · · Score: 1

      Sorry mate, I disagree. You are wrong. You clearly believe in the absolute rights of copyright holders. I believe in fair use and implicit covenants between seller and buyer. But then we in the UK have more of those enshrined in law than you do in the US.

      --

      --
      USA: home of the world's largest terrorist training camp.

    7. Re:Some people are just ... stupid. by DaAdder · · Score: 1

      Jesus Christ.

      People were *NOT* using property owned by Universal. At least in a large degree, if at all.

      They were using originally created artwork, granted referencing Serenity/Firefly.

      Why on earth you'd do anything to the fanbase, that was pretty much responsible for giving you the money to make this movie break even, and would keep doing so indefinitely with some goodwill, I will never ever understand.

      Oh, except of course if the people in charge were found to be ignorant asshats.

      That could explain a lot.

    8. Re:Some people are just ... stupid. by BrianRoach · · Score: 1

      Sorry mate, I disagree. You are wrong. You clearly believe in the absolute rights of copyright holders. I believe in fair use and implicit covenants between seller and buyer. But then we in the UK have more of those enshrined in law than you do in the US.

      Where am I "Wrong"? That's how copyright currently works in the US. You do not have a right to create a "Derivative work" from another. And yes, I do believe that the copyright holder should have ... a copyright, especially when it comes to for-profit endevours.

      As for "Fair use" ... what's the fair use in this case? (Seriously). He didn't buy anything from them (except maybe a movie ticket or DVD), and he's selling things wholey based on their creation. If the series/movie didn't exist, neither would these items. He can only sell these things because someone else spent a lot more money and did a lot more work.

      And taking this idea of fair use to its conclusion, you're saying that the creators of film, art, etc do not have any exclusive rights to their creations - anyone can just copy them and make money. This is the whole reason copyright exists - to protect the rights of the creator.

      - Roach

    9. Re:Some people are just ... stupid. by BrianRoach · · Score: 1

      People were *NOT* using property owned by Universal. At least in a large degree, if at all.

      They were using originally created artwork, granted referencing Serenity/Firefly.


      Really? "Originally created", yet it wouldn't exist and no one would buy it unless someone else had made a TV series called "Firefly" and a movie called "Serenity". Interesting concept.

      It's called a "Derived Work". And it's a copyright violation unless they received permission from the copyright holder to create it.

      If you think that you should be able to profit from others' work and disagree with copyright law, I respect your opinion, I just don't happen to agree with it.

      - Roach

    10. Re:Some people are just ... stupid. by parcel · · Score: 1

      As for "Fair use" ... what's the fair use in this case?

      There were two letters, a C&D related to copyright-infringing merchandise (which was complied with), and a second letter afterwards demanding licensing fees for Serenity-related original artwork (a T-shirt that has the chinese characters for 'serenity' - Universal is asserting that they own the word. At least, the word in chinese.)

      So, you're probably right... fair use doesn't really enter the picture.

    11. Re:Some people are just ... stupid. by Triskele · · Score: 1
      And taking this idea of fair use to its conclusion, you're saying that the creators of film, art, etc do not have any exclusive rights to their creations - anyone can just copy them and make money. This is the whole reason copyright exists - to protect the rights of the creator.

      What are you some kind of MPAA shill that must make absurd leaps of logic to make his point?

      What I SAID was since the copyright owner had been taking advantage of the fanbase to market their IP, some quid pro quo seems perfectly reasonable. While copyright exists to protect the rights of the creator, we as democratic societies also have the rights to limit what those rights are particularly in stupid cases like this. Show me harm to Serenity's sales (which was the original purpose of copyright) and I might start taking you seriously.

      --

      --
      USA: home of the world's largest terrorist training camp.

    12. Re:Some people are just ... stupid. by parcel · · Score: 1

      This is the whole reason copyright exists - to protect the rights of the creator.

      USC pertaining to Copyright, emphasis mine -
      To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries. 17 U.S.C. sec. 105

    13. Re:Some people are just ... stupid. by BrianRoach · · Score: 1

      What are you some kind of MPAA shill that must make absurd leaps of logic to make his point?

      The point was made in the extreme opposite of the one presented. You said "Fair use", I asked what was fair use about using someone else's work for your own personal gain.

      What I SAID was since the copyright owner had been taking advantage of the fanbase to market their IP, some quid pro quo seems perfectly reasonable. While copyright exists to protect the rights of the creator, we as democratic societies also have the rights to limit what those rights are particularly in stupid cases like this. Show me harm to Serenity's sales (which was the original purpose of copyright) and I might start taking you seriously.

      How was the fanbase taken advantage of? Did someone promise them something in return and not deliver it? I was under the opinion that this was not the case.

      What you find reasonable and what the copyright owner does is obviously not the same. Universal never granted the right to use the copyrighted material or derived works on T-Shirts to these fans, therefore they don't have the right under US copyright law. This makes perfect sense to me.

      The fact of the matter is that if the original work (Firefly) didn't exist, then neither would any of this. We wouldn't be having this conversation. This work is based on someone else's work, without permission.

      If you disagree with this part of US copyright law, I respect your opinion, I just don't agree with you.

      - Roach

    14. Re:Some people are just ... stupid. by Firehed · · Score: 1

      As far as I know, the Chinese language isn't under copyright. Which is what was used on the merchandise being sold. By your logic, just about everything in existence is a derived work, which I'm fairly certain isn't the case.

      --
      How are sites slashdotted when nobody reads TFAs?
    15. Re:Some people are just ... stupid. by sabernet · · Score: 1

      1) I don't believe any items sold were anything more then loosely based on the property. I may be wrong, but actually reading up on this and RTFA, that appears to be the case.

      2) Some of the material created by these fans WERE USED ON THE DVD EXTRAS. In other words, UNIVERSAL ALREADY PROFITED FROM THEM.

      3) This did not cause any damages to Universal nor cost them any money. It more then likely did the opposite of just that.

      4) How many fucking Elvis plates are painted by Priscilla?

    16. Re:Some people are just ... stupid. by ecuador_gr · · Score: 1

      You mention "fans" and "volunteers". This is the point, that viral marketing is supposed to involve people who are doing it for the movie/series they love. The studio will have to give them slack, for example they could make T-Shirts and sell them close to cost etc.

      Then I go to the 11th hour website. Ok, they look nice, but $23 T-Shirts???? It is obvious they are not doing it to promote Serenity. They are more expensive than official Star Trek merchentise (and that should say something given Paramount's paramount greed). Serenity was just an opportunity they took advantage of, just like Universal took advantage of the REAL fans.

      And to those that say there is no infringement, as there is no mention of Serenity, this is only AFTER the seller got a notice. So, if you sell bootleg stuff for a year and you get a notice, they can't ask you to provide details of how much you made and compensate the IP holder, just because you stop from the moment of the notice?

    17. Re:Some people are just ... stupid. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If causality is the only requirement for being considered a derived work, then Universal should get a C&D letter from George Lucas for their popular Friday night Sci-Fi series.

    18. Re:Some people are just ... stupid. by seebs · · Score: 1

      Inspiration does not a "derivative work" make. You have to be actually *copying something* before you are creating a derivative work.

      A lot of the material in question is in no way going to pass any coherent test for derivation, even if it was made in response to the movie in some way.

      But we're not talking about pictures of things from the movie, in some cases; we're talking about much more general stuff, uncopyrightable short phrases or words, things like that.

      --
      My blog: http://www.seebs.net/log/ --- My iPhone/iPad app: http://www.seebs.net/seebsfrac/
  20. if they ever try to send this invoice by superwiz · · Score: 2, Informative

    They will be guilty of fraud. Doing something for someone does not entitle you to compensation unless you have a prior agreement that these actions will be compensated for. This is equivalent to me showing up on your lawn, mawing it and sending you a bill that I deem is fair. You didn't agree to pay for before hand, so you don't owe the money. Billing someone for the money they don't owe you is fraud.

    --
    Any guest worker system is indistinguishable from indentured servitude.
    1. Re:if they ever try to send this invoice by xRizen · · Score: 1

      If Universal knew about it beforehand and profitted, it can be considered a quasi-contract (quantum meruit, I believe is the latin term).

    2. Re:if they ever try to send this invoice by bigskank · · Score: 1
      They will be guilty of fraud. Doing something for someone does not entitle you to compensation unless you have a prior agreement that these actions will be compensated for. This is equivalent to me showing up on your lawn, mawing it and sending you a bill that I deem is fair. You didn't agree to pay for before hand, so you don't owe the money. Billing someone for the money they don't owe you is fraud.
      This is entirely incorrect. Law in the U.S. and other common law countries has long recognized the legal principle of quantum meruit. Quantum meruit allows for a person who has undertaken labor for another party with that party's implied consent to sue for compensation. It is an equitable principle, and the court decides what fair compensation should be, as well as what could fairly be implied as being allowed to be done by the party doing the work. If the studio really did encourage these people to promote, and now is suing them for it, quantum meruit (being an equitable principle built around fairness) may very well allow them to recover compensation from the studios based on the studios promise and subsequent bad faith actions. Your lawn mowing analogy is incorrect. It would be more proper to say that you asked someone to mow your lawn, but didn't agree on the price to pay the person mowing it. When that person was done mowing, you said "Ha! We didn't agree on a price for your labor, and now I'm not going to pay you." Quantum Meruit would provide a remedy. Wikipedia has a great entry on it. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum_meruit
    3. Re:if they ever try to send this invoice by superwiz · · Score: 1

      Well, I would say that the lawn mowing analogy is incomplete rather than incorrect. It is like putting up a sign on your lawn saying, "please, maw my lawn". And then when being presented with a bill claiming that there was no prior agreement to exchange of compensation for services. In light of this, I will take exception to your sentence, "If the studio really did encourage these people to promote, and now is suing them for it, quantum meruit (being an equitable principle built around fairness) may very well allow them to recover compensation from the studios based on the studios promise and subsequent bad faith actions." The fact that the studio encouraged these people to promote the movie does not constitute a promise to compensate. After all they encourage people to do all kinds of things (for instance, to see movies), but that does not mean that they agree to compensate the said people for these actions or in any way imply that such a promise exists. By explicitly encouraging fans to promote the movie they recognize these people as having a priori self-interest in promoting this product and therefore tacitly reject any potential claim of promise of exchange of future compensation for the work done. To put it blantly, asking someone to do something for you does not constitute any promise. I read the wikipedia article. I don't buy it. It doesn't seem fair to be forced to pay a bill that you never agreed to pay.

      --
      Any guest worker system is indistinguishable from indentured servitude.
    4. Re:if they ever try to send this invoice by superwiz · · Score: 1

      Now that I thought about it a bit more, I will re-iterate that sending such an invoice would constitute a fraud. An invoice is a statement that the money is owed. The money is not owed unless the other party agreed to pay or a court has made a judgement stating that the money is owed. Absense of these two, sending and invoice is making a false statement about level of debt. A false statement about such a large amount has got to be fraud. Quantum merit (if you accept that it applies here) allows the fans to sue for compensation or to request a compensation. But requesting that someone agree to compensate is not the same as demanding that someone fork over the money because it is owed (which is what an invoice does).

      --
      Any guest worker system is indistinguishable from indentured servitude.
    5. Re:if they ever try to send this invoice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      what would be wrong with billing for it? I can bill you for anything, you're also welcome to put my bill in the shredder. If I send the baliffs round, that's when I'm in trouble. You may not have noticed from the linked site, "The Demand continues, and includes such stipulations that within 72 hours I must agree to: pay a retroactive $8,750 licensing fee;" They have effectively billed him for $8,750 worth of trademark usage, do you also believe that they're commiting fraud because he never agreed to pay that to them beforehand? Just like suing, anyone can sue anyone else for anything, it's just that it'll be laughed out of court if it's completely groundless. A bill is no different, you can't get it enforced without going to a court, where it'll be laughed out.

    6. Re:if they ever try to send this invoice by Loki_1929 · · Score: 1

      You cannot bring legal action for theoretical harms. In other words, one must request payment (as an invoice explicitly does) before one can claim payment was refused. Ergo, they wouldn't have a legal leg to stand on unless and until Universal is invoiced.

      An invoice may be challenged in a lawsuit or its validity may be decided in a lawsuit brought for non-payment. If the fans submitted the invoice, Universal could sue the individuals or the group that submitted the invoice challenging its validity. If they win, the issue is dead. If Universal ignored the invoice, only then could the fans in question bring a suit claiming quantum meritus.

      By your logic, Universal's request for payment of $9,000 in retroactive licensing would be prosecutable as fraud if the individual(s) involed successfully challenged Universal's right in court to seek said licensing compensation. That isn't how it works because that just wouldn't make sense - you'd have 100,000 fraud cases a day filling court schedules across the country to the exclusion of all else.

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    7. Re:if they ever try to send this invoice by Matilda+the+Hun · · Score: 1

      Actually, I'd argue that your analogy is incomplete, because it's not that the mower charged the person who's lawn he just mowed. For one, the sign says "Please mow my lawn for free." And two, it's more a matter of the person who had his lawn mowed turned around and sued the mower for trespassing. Mower then says "Hey, that's not cool; this is how much work we put into mowing your lawn and this is what it should've cost you, but it didn't because we're not charging you, so stop suing!"

      The issue I take to all of these "Oh, those stupid geeks, working for free" things is because they're not stupid. They enjoyed a show and pushed it to people they knew, and they got the word out because hey, they enjoyed the movie, why shouldn't other people know about it? I don't hear anyone who pushes linux distros to people they know being called stupid for doing free marketing for said linux distro. And another key point that keeps being missed is the fact that it's not like they're saying "Wait, pay us!" The entire invoice is just a little reminder to Universal, "This is how much your free advertising would have cost you". Is it accurate? Of course not. Could you take it to court to force Universal to pay? Helluva no. But if there's any non-lawyer types with a shred of decency in Universal, it is an eye-opener.

      --
      Tluin natha Linux xxizzuss uriu olt bwael mon'tun.
    8. Re:if they ever try to send this invoice by parcel · · Score: 1

      The fact that the studio encouraged these people to promote the movie does not constitute a promise to compensate. After all they encourage people to do all kinds of things (for instance, to see movies), but that does not mean that they agree to compensate the said people for these actions or in any way imply that such a promise exists.

      But watching a movie is an activity that is typically not compensated for. Advertising is an activity that typically is. Not a lawyer and all that, but it seems that is the difference.

      The wall example (from wikipedia) seems a little crazy, but the lawn-mowing example makes sense to me. Self-interest shouldn't really enter the picture (perhaps short of compensation from a third party) - if I derive satisfaction from mowing lawns, am I not entitled to compensation for doing so?

    9. Re:if they ever try to send this invoice by superwiz · · Score: 1

      Actually, if it can be shown that Universal did encourage people to make these promotions, I believe that their demand for retroactive licensing fees does constitute fraud. The fact that fraud is as wide-spread as you claim it is doesn't change the fact that it is fraud.

      --
      Any guest worker system is indistinguishable from indentured servitude.
    10. Re:if they ever try to send this invoice by superwiz · · Score: 1

      You are not entitled to anything that noone promised you. This is the fundamental premise of a free society. The only reason the government owes you anything is because you have a social contract with the government. Whatever you do for anyone does not entitle you to anything. You are free to do whatever you want as are they. If you agree to something, then both you and the other parties are obliged to follow through on the agreement. Otherwise, "to each according to his efforts" is a fundamental premise of a socialist society (please, don't confuse with communist). Again, in a free society, everyone is entitled to do whatever they wish (as long as they don't harm others in whatever ways the society defines what harm is) as long as they don't enter into an agreement to do otherwise. The moment that freedom goes away, you no longer live in a free society. If you want to be paid for what you love to do, you have to get someone to agree to pay you before you start doing it.

      --
      Any guest worker system is indistinguishable from indentured servitude.
    11. Re:if they ever try to send this invoice by parcel · · Score: 1

      You are not entitled to anything that noone promised you. This is the fundamental premise of a free society.

      I agree with you, at least to an extent. This "quantum meruit" thing (I wish Wikipedia had citations for the entry) seems to disagree - again, to an extent - with that premise.

      I could definitely see some pretty clear-cut cases, even more so than the lawn mowing example... Say I am a satellite TV company, and you call me and ask me to install satellite TV in your home, and I come and do it, and then present you with a bill. Not previously making any agreement on the cost of said services should not mean you don't need to pay. Now, I should have told you what the price would be before starting work (and on the other side of that, you should have asked), but it definitely seems that when services are requested from a business, compensation is implied.

      Which doesn't mean that I can bill you $50,000 for installing satellite TV. The gist of the concept seems to be that, when I do work for someone, I deserve to be reasonably compensated for my service. I imagine, had I billed you $50,000, that you would refuse to pay, and I would need to take you to court, where it would be found that a reasonable price installing satellite TV was $79, and you would then be required to pay me $79.

      Well, in that specific case, you could probably counter-sue me for extortion or something similar related to that ridiculous bill, but that's a different story.

      This whole thing kind of reminds me of getting "estimates" for things... which I always thought was crazy, but I can see the other side now.

    12. Re:if they ever try to send this invoice by Darkman,+Walkin+Dude · · Score: 1

      As far as I can see from one of the links above in the headline, Universal actively encouraged and attempted to "consolidate" the large fanbase in an effort to virally market the movie. To take your lawnmowing analogy, they gathered up a bunch of kids that liked mowing lawns, and asked them to mow their lawn, before suing some of them for selling "Great Universal Lawnmowing Festival, everyone invited for another one next year!" t-shirts. Not only is it stupid, its probably illegal, so the kids are now asking for payment for their time and effort.

    13. Re:if they ever try to send this invoice by Loki_1929 · · Score: 1

      "The fact that fraud is as wide-spread as you claim it is doesn't change the fact that it is fraud."

      In the social sense of the word, possibly; but not in the legal sense.

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    14. Re:if they ever try to send this invoice by Darkman,+Walkin+Dude · · Score: 1

      Doh, can't edit posts on slashdot. In addition, the smart move would have been to buy out these fansites and merchandise and incorporate it into their Firefly merchandising efforts. Everybody wins, and they get to keep selling the merch for their own profit for the foreseeable future.

    15. Re:if they ever try to send this invoice by superwiz · · Score: 1

      The thing is they are not suing the kids (in this analogy) they are asking them for licensing fees. And since it seems like Universal has tacitly granted them this license, Universal is committing fraud here. But the fraud on part of Universal cannot be remedied by the fraud on the part of the kids. This is not a school yard. We have courts for this. The fan sites should sue Universal for fraud instead of trying to bill them for work which they clearly volunterly did without any prior promise of compensation.

      --
      Any guest worker system is indistinguishable from indentured servitude.
    16. Re:if they ever try to send this invoice by ToastyKen · · Score: 1

      If you read the FAQ on the "billing" site, you'll see this quote: "In other words, this site should not be taken as an attempt to actually bill Universal Pictures for all of our time, energy, and effort, nor encouragement for any fan do try to do so. We just believe that there is a point to be made."

      The billing is meant as the kind of statement you make, not the kind of statement you get in your mail. :)

  21. Mod parent up by Exsam · · Score: 0, Troll

    This isnt about some guy spreading the word about Serenity and getting sued for it. This is about some jerk trying to profit by selling Serenity T-shirts on Cafepress and Universal rightfully protecting their IP and then whining about it when they bring the hammer down. That said if you're looking for some really good SciFi go ahead and start watching Battlestar Galactica, I personally think its even better then Firefly; which is impressive in and of itself.

    --
    "To face death, that's nothing much. But to feel really stupid when you die, well, that would be insufferable."
    1. Re:Mod parent up by 91degrees · · Score: 1

      This is probably not in breach of trademark. Just like after Jurassic Park, there were countless cash-in products, with the word "Purassic" in their name, and nobody could touch them because Jurassic is an ordinary word used to describe dinosaurs. It can clearly be argued that "Serenity" shirts are about expressing the sentiment. Just because it's a cash-in doesn't always mean it's a trademark violation. Key points are that this is in a different market from the movie, the font used is nothing like that used on official merchandies, and the trademakred term is a commonly used word in the English language.

  22. The Second Sundering? by lupine_stalker · · Score: 1

    As a convert of the "guerilla campaign", I am shocked that Universal, who I had hailed as the saviours of the 'verse after the Serenity movie was announced, would stoop to this. I really can't understand why they would seek to alienate the fan base this way.
    If Universal aren't planning on making another movie, then there is no reason that they shouldn't allow the fans they're 'memorabilia'.
    If they are, why go after the fans who will only be driving more people in to see the sequel?

    Sorry if this post isn't particularly insightful or interesting, this is just a fan and loyal browncoat venting steam. You can't stop the Signal.

    --
    Ninjas use italics.
    1. Re:The Second Sundering? by BrianRoach · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I really can't understand why they would seek to alienate the fan base this way.
      If Universal aren't planning on making another movie, then there is no reason that they shouldn't allow the fans they're 'memorabilia'.
      If they are, why go after the fans who will only be driving more people in to see the sequel?


      They're not going after fans. They're going after people stealing their IP for personal profit.

      I'm quite sure you can buy your "memorabilia" from them (Universal). You know ... the ones who actually own the rights to sell it to you.

      Or, you can buy it from someone ripping off the studio and selling it without a license for personal gain. Your Call.

      Want to sell the stuff? $9k sounds like a pretty reasonable license fee. I'm quite sure the companies that license IP from other movies/sports/etc pay a LOT more.

      - Roach

    2. Re:The Second Sundering? by lupine_stalker · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, the $8750 price tag is a retroactive one, and (as I read it) would involve closing down the stores anyway. I can agree with a coporations need to protect its copyright, but as far as I can tell (having looked for 'official' merchandise on the Universal web site) there isn't even Serenity gear available.
      Now, I agree these people were making money off items that they did not own the IP for, but designing and shipping these things would take an awful lot of time and effort, so there would have to be some small recompense. Oh well, just my opinion.

      --
      Ninjas use italics.
    3. Re:The Second Sundering? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are saying that if somebody goes to "an awful lot of time and effort" to make illegal profit, it's OK? That's like saying that a bank robber deserves some money if they put "an awful lot of time and effort" into a robbery.

    4. Re:The Second Sundering? by A+beautiful+mind · · Score: 1
      They're going after people stealing their IP for personal profit.
      There is no such thing as stealing of copyrighted material and there is no such thing as Intellectual Property. Intellectual property is a misleading term coined by lawyers to umbrella up copyright and patents. It is not a term of law and it is misleading to use.

      I'm sure you think I'm just a grammar nazi for mentioning this, but if you allow the redefinition of the language of the law this way, don't be suprised when the FBI gives you a greeting, by which they mean a 'visit', by most other people would mean a warrantless search.
      --
      It takes a man to suffer ignorance and smile
      Be yourself no matter what they say
    5. Re:The Second Sundering? by swelke · · Score: 1

      They're not going after fans. They're going after people stealing their IP for personal profit.

      Come on, this is Slashdot; do you think I'm going to let you get away with making a statement like that? First, there's no such thing as "IP". There's copyright and there's trademark (and patent, which doesn't apply here). Second, you cannot "steal" any of those things. Putting somebody else's picture on a T-Shirt you're selling isn't stealing, in exactly the way that downloading music off the internet (without copyright-holder permission) is not "stealing" the music. It's copyright infringement, which is a completely different crime. "Stealing" the music would be walking in to Wal-Mart, putting the CD in your pants, and then running away. Stealing something means that you now have it, and the original owner now does not have it. Infringing on somebody else's copyright means that you now have it and the original owner might have a reduced market available to sell their stuff (but that's nigh-on impossible to prove definitively). The word "stealing" being applied to copyright is a political tactic, intended to make increased copyright protections palatable to the general populace.

      Why yes, I have been reading RMS's writings lately. How did you guess?

      --
      Have you ever wondered How to Take Over
    6. Re:The Second Sundering? by BrianRoach · · Score: 1


      You're absolutely correct.

      Let me change the post so it's literally correct:

      They're going after people using their copyrighted material without permission for personal gain, which they are 100% within their rights to do. :)

      - Roach

    7. Re:The Second Sundering? by BrianRoach · · Score: 1

      Let me change the post so it's literally correct:

      They're going after people using their copyrighted material without permission for personal gain, which they are 100% within their rights to do.

      - Roach

    8. Re:The Second Sundering? by wytcld · · Score: 1

      It's not "stealing" intellectual "property" - and the "for profit" part ... would you say it's okay if it's to "steal from the rich and give to the poor"? Probably not. So how does it make a difference to your argument?

      It's not stealing because it's potlatch. Gifts are being passed around at the cultural feast. The movie is getting promoted as a gift, in part by people wearing t-shirts. Those t-shirts are got in exchange for money, but t-shirt makers most always expect to make some return on their labor. So in the potlatch circle promotion is gifted to the movie studio, which then uses that promotion to achieve profit. And those doing the promotion, those involved in actually producing goods, also are allowed some small profit. Those doing just blogs on it may get some profit through advertising links.

      Potlatch was an important part of Northwest Native American economies - which were until disrupted by European culture among the most prosperous in the world. They ate and lived very, very well. Those who made the most profits in their various lines of work were expected to also be the most generous at the potlatch festivities. It was part of how they solidified their positions, got the social cred to go on living even better than their neighbors, because they were for whatever reason getting more profit from their positions in the business and governmental communities than their neighbors were.

      So a whole lot of us joined in the Serenity Dance at the feast. Many gifts were passed around, but in the end the Leader of the Serenity Dance ended up even more prosperous than before the dance. The circle of giving establishes the basis for profit - it is not a distraction from it (except for an evening), let alone an undermining of it. But now Universal doesn't understand that the circle has to be, well, "universal," or it won't continue to work - both cultural and economic idiots.

      --
      "with their freedom lost all virtue lose" - Milton
    9. Re:The Second Sundering? by BrianRoach · · Score: 1


      Blah Blah Blah.

      Since you want to nitpick what I wrote literally instead of simply taking it for what it was, let me rewrite it for you:

      "He was using their copyrighted material without permission. This is a copyright violation".

      You can't create a "Derivative work" without permission (for any reason, not just profit). He did. He did not have explicit permission. They told him to stop. End of Story.

      That's the way US copyright law works. Look it up.

      - Roach

    10. Re:The Second Sundering? by Ed+Bugg · · Score: 1
      You can't create a "Derivative work" without permission (for any reason, not just profit). He did. He did not have explicit permission.

      Right on point one, but are you right on point two? The site was selling a derivative work of the movie Serenity, but from the links in the article and the comments elsewhere in this discussion, there seemed to be an implied permission for the fans to be allowed to self-promote the movie. From the very first link:

      Members were encouraged to form regional groups to promote the film and perform activities that would help generate word of mouth, like creating bumper stickers and gift cards to accompany the DVD release.

      While no contract with the groups where signed, it sounds like Universal knew that some forms derivative works or use of Universal's trademarks where going to be used in the form of promoting the movie. So does Universal have a right to demand retroactive license fees, from the members of these groups?

      --
      -- Ed Bugg --You have freedom of choice, but not of consequences.--
    11. Re:The Second Sundering? by BrianRoach · · Score: 1

      Right on point one, but are you right on point two? The site was selling a derivative work of the movie Serenity, but from the links in the article and the comments elsewhere in this discussion, there seemed to be an implied permission for the fans to be allowed to self-promote the movie.

      They can have a whole boatload of implied permission. They didn't have explicit permission.

      Nevermind that in all honesty, I don't see "Hey, you can sell stuff for profit" was what they were implying :) The simple fact is that if he asked for permission to sell merchandise on the web using their material, the answer would have been no. The jump from "Members were encouraged to form regional groups to promote the film and perform activities that would help generate word of mouth, like creating bumper stickers and gift cards to accompany the DVD release." to "Sell T-Shirts on the internet months later" seems a bit of a stretch to me.

      While no contract with the groups where signed, it sounds like Universal knew that some forms derivative works or use of Universal's trademarks where going to be used in the form of promoting the movie. So does Universal have a right to demand retroactive license fees, from the members of these groups?

      They only demanded the fee if he wished to continue selling merchandise using their copyrighted material, unless I read his blog wrong. As for knowing that some works would be created, that's fine ... but some is not all. I haven't seen that they have gone after anyone that was doing the things they told people to do.

      - Roach

    12. Re:The Second Sundering? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They only demanded the fee if he wished to continue selling merchandise using their copyrighted material, unless I read his blog wrong.

      You read it wrong.

      They took down the content. Then some time later, they got a message saying Universal *also* demands $9k retroactively in licensing fees, to permanently close down their entire store, and send them 12 months of sales logs.

  23. Main point by TrisexualPuppy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    For Universal, don't mess with the kind of people who have a lotttt more spare time than you do. The group is the kind of group that *will* get into a good television show (especially as good as Firefly was). These fans were and still are super-dedicated to the show and have and will have a lot of energy to spare for the show that is practically their religion.

    However, that being said, Universal will disregard everything that they (and anyone else) do. It's going to take a hot poker to get Universal to do anything pro-consumer. Remember, all of the decisions are made by a group of women and men sitting at a table trying to figure out how to maximize profit. And that they are going to try to do, even if they are shortsighted about it.

    1. Re:Main point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      These fans were and still are super-dedicated to the show and have and will have a lot of energy to spare for the show that is practically their religion.


      Which is fine if tast what they choose to do. What everyone here is overlooking is that the $9,000 in retroactive license fees is in regards to T-shirt sales the web site has been making; in other words they have been profiting from Universals images and trademarks. Perhaps the site was unfamiliar with trademark law, perhaps they thought they could fly under the radar like the guys selling concert T's outside the show. Were they so clueless as to think they could sell items stamped with other peoples trademarked and copyrighted stuff without repercussions? Did they not realize how much Burger King pays Disney to stuff Happy Meals with "Bambi" toys? If they had negotated the rights to sell T-shirts when they were desperate for promotion, they might have a legal leg to stand on.

      But the bottom line is that if Universal doesn't take steps to protect its Trademarks and other intellectual property, they lose the rights to it.

      Oh, and if they didn't have an agreement to be paid for their work in advance, submiting a bill for $1.5 million could potentially be a criminal offense. They are digging themselves a pit. Call a lawyer, claim you believed the promotional agreements you had in place covered T-shirt sales, offer to split the profits for all past sales and cease & desist selling in the future. Above all, STFU and resolve this in private.

    2. Re:Main point by civilizedINTENSITY · · Score: 1

      Well but should they be able to stop me from buying a t-shirt that says, "Shiny, Captain!"? Logos are one thing, sure. But "Nothing in the 'verse can stop me."?

    3. Re:Main point by dfung · · Score: 1

      AC here has highlighted the key point which is that Universal must make a good faith attempt to protect their trademarked property or lose it.

      The solution for the guy who got the warning letter is probably even easier than what AC suggested. Perhaps the guy selling CafePress shirts sold thousands of shirts that violate copyright licensing, and made a ton of money. But the chances of that are actually happening are pretty slim. If he makes a reasonable showing that he sold some nominal number of items and didn't really make a significant profit from it and agrees to not sell them anymore, that will probably end the issue. A real accounting of costs would be better, and having a lawyer present it would help even more, but Universal will only press this if there's enough money coming out of it to make it worth doing (unlikely) or if they're trying to make an example of somebody (also unlikely even if they keep this up). CafePress probably made more profit from this than the originally cited guy did.

      As will be pointed out endless times, if somebody says "hey, fanboy, help me promote this movie" you probably shouldn't plan on getting rich from it. That doesn't mean a smart guy coudln't get some bucks for it, but that meant asking questions up front like "how much will I get paid?" and "how about licensing?" instead of assuming that these were being granted.

  24. Wrong interpretation! by Wylfing · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This is the clue bat. This is your head. This is the clue bat hitting your head.

    As others have already pointed out, it's not copacetic to sell merchandise like that. You think you can start selling Star Wars t-shirts and Lucasfilm will be OK with that? Not likely.

    But that is entirely beside the point. The point is that Universal believes this is a valuable franchise, and acts to protect it. They are not trying to shut down the fan community. Simply, there are people at Universal who think a Serenity sequel is a possibility, and they want to maintain control over that so when they fund the next movie they're going to get a proper ROI. That is all.

    It's basically good news that they want to defend this.

    --
    Our intelligent designer has never created an animal that we couldn't improve by strapping a bomb to it.
    1. Re:Wrong interpretation! by An+Onerous+Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting
      It's basically good news that they want to defend this.
      I disagree with your interpretation. While I think you're right that the fans overstepped the bounds of "viral marketing" here, my interpretation of this action is that they figure they've pretty much milked the franchise dry, to the point that the good will of the fan base is worth less to them than the $9000 licensing fee.

      Ah, well. Firefly, we hardly knew ye.
      --

      You want the truthiness? You can't handle the truthiness!

    2. Re:Wrong interpretation! by swelke · · Score: 3, Interesting

      As others have already pointed out, it's not copacetic to sell merchandise like that. You think you can start selling Star Wars t-shirts and Lucasfilm will be OK with that? Not likely.

      At present, this is the closest thing I could find to an infringement of any copyright or trademark on the T-shirt site in question. The product itself has no hint of infringement, and the description of the product has the word "serenity" but it's just a translation from the Chinese character in the picture on the shirt. Maybe the site used to contain more infringing stuff; I don't know. But at present, the Universal lawyers are still demanding that he take down the site (and holding the usual obscene $150,000 per instance copyright infringement damage number over his head to make sure he does it).

      There is a danger to the Firefly/Serenity franchise here. Viral marketing works, but it works in both directions. The whole mythos of Firefly is about rebellion against a powerful government. If it looks like the franchise is in the hands a pseudo-government (big corporation) the most ardent fans will rebel. Of course, Firefly/Serenity has been in the hands of a big company since it was started, but the Browncoats might actually notice it now and become rather disillusioned rather than support it as fervently as they have done so far. No viral marketing means (maybe) no market. No market means no movie.

      --
      Have you ever wondered How to Take Over
    3. Re:Wrong interpretation! by DrJimbo · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Right back at ya.

      The key point IMO is that Universal allowed their trademarks to be infringed when the infringement served as "free advertising". Universal is not allowed to come back now and try to retroactively enforce their trademarks. In the legal world, this is called estoppel:
      1. [Universal] has done or said something to induce an expectation
      2. The [Browncoats] relied (reasonably) on the expectation...
      3. ...and would suffer detriment if that expectation were false.

      It is perfectly copacetic to sell merchandise like this as long as the trademark owner knows about it and does nothing. It is not copacetic for Universal to come back now, years later, and try to change the ground rules upon which people have developed a business model.

      I also disagree with your interpretation that this indicates Universal is considering a sequel. I think it indicates the exact opposite: they've given up on a sequel and are now trying to wring the last few pennies out of the franchise on its way to the trash heap. If Universal were planning for a sequel then they would have wanted to encourage the fan-base buzz, not squash it.

      Someone is going to have to hit Universal with a cluestick before they realize that the "legal bootleg" nature of the fan merchandising was a significant factor in its success. I almost never buy logo-wear but I've bought several items from Blue Sun Shirts. I'm sorry they've been shut down because I would have continued to buy things from them. There is no way in Hell that I'd buy any Firefly merchandise from Universal now. The actions of the fans mimicked the actions of the heros in the series and the movie. Universal got cool points for letting these small businesses prosper. Now Universal is acting like the evil Alliance.

      --
      We don't see the world as it is, we see it as we are.
      -- Anais Nin
  25. Well, while they're suing for IP use, why not... by Channard · · Score: 2, Funny

    .. go after the 'authors' - and I use that word in the loosest possible sense - of all those responsible for the inevitable shitty fan fiction based on Firefly, as well as all the crappy Buffy/X-Files stuff. If I'd created or owned the rights to a series, I'd be more concerned about that. To say nothing of the really disturbing slash stuff.

  26. Firefly has been one single corporate fuckup by Nice2Cats · · Score: 3, Interesting
    I hope somebody uses the whole Firefly case in business school one day as an example of how to fuck up something great. First, they let the guy do his stuff just enough to show everybody it is a brilliant idea. Then, they pull the plug. They piss of the guy. They piss of the fans. Then, they make one movie, and seem to have off the guy even more while doing it. And now they piss off their customers some more. These are the best and brightest that are running America's economy?

    Don't you wish Bill Gates were a Sci-Fi fan? He could just finance a whole season, no strings attached, just for the heck of it, and donate the the sales of the DVD to his charity fund. I'd buy.

    1. Re:Firefly has been one single corporate fuckup by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This isn't a Troll post. It is simple his opinion. Improper moderation makes baby spock cry.

  27. Re:Well, while they're suing for IP use, why not.. by An+Onerous+Coward · · Score: 1

    Generally, I think they leave the fanfic world alone, because there isn't any money to be made from it. Now, if somebody started selling a hardcopy of their favorite River/Buffy crossover slash, I think they'd invoke the wrath of the demon lawyer hordes.

    --

    You want the truthiness? You can't handle the truthiness!

  28. I am a lawyer on the wind by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Watch how I sue.

    1. Re:I am a lawyer on the wind by Schwartzboy · · Score: 2, Funny

      Say again?

      A lawyer on the wind, watch how I... *KA-CHUNK*

      Well, there's that sorted out.

      --
      "Linux doesn't exist. Everyone knows Linux is an unlicensed version of Unix"- Kieren O'Shaughnessy
  29. quantum meruit by Anomalyst · · Score: 1

    I remember that show. Something about David Bowie and spiders from mars leaping back and forth within their own lifetimes earning merit badges or something like that.

    --
    There is no right to feel safe thru security vaudeville at the expense of everyone's freedom, privacy and tax money.
  30. Here is the thing..... by jonfr · · Score: 1

    I did look into this matter a bit. I find it intresting that the author of the drawing that did contain the word "Serenity" did make here own artwork, based on what I saw here (http://www.cafepress.com/11thhourart). Since I am no laywer and I don't live in the U.S, my own estimate that this is Universal trying to claim ownership of something that they don't own. This is a, in my opinion a corporation blackmailing a person becose they can. I don't belive for one second that this is a trademark issue or a copyright issue.

    1. Re:Here is the thing..... by XiX36 · · Score: 1

      But you forget, Universal owns the copyright to the Chinese character for 'serenity'.

      --
      Insert witty sig here.
    2. Re:Here is the thing..... by BrianRoach · · Score: 1

      The link you provide takes you to his store which now only contains non-infringing items - he removed the ones they told him to.

      Since I am no laywer and I don't live in the U.S, my own estimate that this is Universal trying to claim ownership of something that they don't own

      They own the original work, and any "Derived work". He was selling works wholey derived from their creation without permission. Under US copyright law, he can't do that.

      - Roach

    3. Re:Here is the thing..... by jonfr · · Score: 1

      Actually, I do belive that letters and words are under public domain. If you had just bother to check the story and the webpage of the author that got C&D demand. You would have known better.

    4. Re:Here is the thing..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, I do belive that letters and words are under public domain.

      Right. Like the word "Windows". Ask Linspire about that one.

  31. But the point is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    that they have been ordered to stop talking about it. Tring to scare people with letters from lawers is ridiculous. The only reason I can think of for them to try destroying their fdan base is that the Sci Fi channel have asked to buy the rights if Universal don't want to carry on making it and they refused. If they agreed and the Sci FI channel made money then someone would have to be fired at Universal so they all said no.

  32. I have a solution by cryfreedomlove · · Score: 0, Troll

    Good morning everyone. I have a solution to this problem with your frustration over how Universal is handling their property.

    Create an alternative that has the same potential and then market it in the way you want. Create a great story, acquire the financing needed to produce the film, produce the film on time and in budget, and then let your fans virally market the film.

    What's stopping you? If you practice what you preach with property that you own then perhaps your example will convince Universal to do the same with their property.

    1. Re:I have a solution by blue+l0g1c · · Score: 1

      You mean "acquire the financing without ceding all rights to the bankroll" since I would gamble that Joss Whedon's signature isn't the one on the cease-and-desist orders.

    2. Re:I have a solution by cryfreedomlove · · Score: 1

      Wow! Do you mean that film production is hard and risky?

    3. Re:I have a solution by SoulRider · · Score: 1

      What a tool, you must live in a terrible, lonely, harsh world. I feel sorry for you.

      On topic, if I am reading this correctly there is a chance that Universal could have given away the rights to the trademark when they enlisted the fans to help them market the movie. This would then make the offending t-shirt perfectly legal. Of course all correspondence needs to be reviewed by a court to determine what the actual terms of use were.

      There are two things that may have prompted this, 1) Universal is planning on a new series/movie based on the franchise and they dont want the fans using the new properties or 2) Universal is essentially being a bratty 4 year old and shouting "MINE" now that Serenity/Firefly has achieved some success with DVD sales. My guess is 2 since you would think there would at least be rumors floating around if they were planning anything new.

    4. Re:I have a solution by cryfreedomlove · · Score: 1

      Why do you feel sorry for me?

    5. Re:I have a solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What's stopping you?

      Oh, you're right, we'll just independantly break into hollywood's business.
      Then, for an encore, we'll win the Iraqi's hearts and minds, and cure cancer in our spare time.

  33. Firefly fans being short sighted here. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not only are dead wrong on copyright issues, these fans are being short-sighted.

    If unofficial sites make the money off t-shirt sales, etc. and not the studio, then that makes it that much harder to justify the making a "Firefly" production. Studios do not make movies so that other organizations can generate revenue.

    They are clearly wrong on trademark/copyright issue. Clearly one must have permission to sell "Firefly" merchandise. The law is clear about this. And if the studio fails to give notice about its copyrights and trademarks violations it could lose some of those protections by setting a precedent. Fans of any series here are simple rules: don't sell series merchandise to the general public without explicate written permission, online video/audio should be short and low-quality, and be sure to clearly acknowledge the copyright owner every time.

    That being said, "Firefly" was a great series. If it had lasted more than a half-season and was able to keep up the quality, it would have been the best "sci-fi" series ever.

    -- Michael Hopkins
    / Comments on Slashdot very rarely so not worth the trouble to register.

    1. Re:Firefly fans being short sighted here. by jonfr · · Score: 1

      Look into the issue, then speak about it. You did fail on the first one, you where successful on the second one. When that happens, you usally don't know what you are speaking about and usally just say some nonsense that makes you look stupid.

      Have a nice day!

    2. Re:Firefly fans being short sighted here. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Um yeah. I thought that way until I saw the 'infringing material' i.e. the t-shirt. You gotta be nuts if you think that's wrong. It's a t-shirt in black or red with a Chinese character inside a circle. How does universal own a LETTER?

  34. What does Joss have to Say? by archieaa · · Score: 1

    I am curious, what does Joss have to say about this? Seeing as he is the one that got the ball rolling, I would think he would have something to say about these goings on. I would imagine that he would have mixed feelings about this. One of his stuggles has always been to get support for his projects. Using "viral marketing" is one tool at his disposal to show the studios that there is a market for a project. That being said I would also imagine that It would be bad juju to double cross those who made the project possible in the first place. That is to say many fans would likely think twice before putting so much effort into getting the word out if what once was theirs suddenly is ripped from their hands and given to the media corps. To my eyes this looks rather like trying to close the barn door after the cows have left. Part of the reason that fans put so much energy into things like senerity and firefly is there is a feeling of ownership involved. A bit of " hey, look what I found.". That feeling of "Look, Heres something really cool that the big guys have overlooked. Its ours now. Lets show the world what they missed.". While this sort of thing is good in that you tend to get loyal fans you do have to be carefull in that they will take things personally. One of the thing I have observed in my daughter (15) and her friends is that they wear their media much in the same way that we wears clothes. They delight in finding something interesting that has been passed over by the mainsteam. They in large part define them selves by their taste in music, movies, blogs, and the like. An example would be if asked what someone is like they might decribe them as " Elliot Smith and Degrassi.". If one of their finds gets taken from them, so to speak, they aren't going to look so kindly on the next release from the same artist, reguardless of quality.

  35. This just in... by blue+l0g1c · · Score: 5, Funny

    As an addendum, Universal has stated that they also want the sky back.

  36. Snakes on a Plane by DoorFrame · · Score: 1

    There are THOUSANDS of shirts on CafePress for Snakes on a Plane. How many of those shirts infringe on New Line's copyrighted material? And yet, does anybody doubt that New Line would have been better off not having that fan-based for-profit marketing? New Line was even smart enough to partner with CafePress so everything became more or less legally legit.

    And here's the real issue. If Universal REALLY didn't want this person selling those t-shirts... just ASK them to stop. A nice letter with an explanation of why you'd like them to stop with a few official promo goodies would probably be more than enough to get someone to modify what they've been doing. Why do these companies think it's wise to open with threats as opposed to genuine dialogue?

    Ugh, I hate people sometimes.

    1. Re:Snakes on a Plane by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      New Line cinema specifically allowed fans, through cafe press to promote Snakes on a Plane. They gave licensing rights to fans through cafepress.com, so that can't be used as an example against the actions of Universal, who did no such thing.

      http://www.prohiphop.com/2006/08/snakes_on_a_pla.h tml

    2. Re:Snakes on a Plane by Oligonicella · · Score: 1

      "A nice letter with an explanation..."

      That's what a C&D is.

    3. Re:Snakes on a Plane by whitehatlurker · · Score: 1
      Why do these companies think it's wise to open with threats as opposed to genuine dialogue?

      After seeing quite a few films where the dialogue was hackneyed, clichéd, corny, or simply stolen from previous films (BTW, Serenity is an exception to this); I believe that many film companies don't know what original dialogue is. This could go a long way to answering your question.

      --
      .. paranoid crackpot leftover from the days of Amiga.
    4. Re:Snakes on a Plane by jafuser · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Except the issue here isn't with the C&D. The C&D came and was complied with well before the second message demanding a retroactive $9k in licensing fees, to close their entire store permanently, and logs of the last 12 months of sales.

      --
      Please consider making an automatic monthly recurring donation to the EFF
  37. Totally wrong, not a grassroots effort at all by BeeBeard · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Sure, we can all agree to that, but you miss my point about legal protection. Unlike the labor of fans, it takes money to buy the labor of lawyers. Promoting something by posting about it on your free personal blog about how you like it is not even close to the same ballpark as filing a motion in court. Not even close. This community you are so fond of has yet to pool together money to mount a legal defense--it is only free time they have pooled. And like it or not, money and labor are not the same thing. And who is going to pony up the money to pay the legal professionals who can actually help them wriggle out of this problem? Mr. Free Blog Post? Probably not. It's a very real problem that cannot be glossed over by fandom.

    Not only that, but if you read the copy of the email that was sent, it seems that Universal's issue is with the unlicensed sale of shirts. Hmm let's see...selling something for profit like a shirt is hardly the benevolent, grassroots effort that it's being made out to be. It's making that sweet merchandising money off of a property you absolutely don't own and have no right to profit from in that manner. For a community that loves the GPL and loves to espouse rhetoric such as "You can only license something you own", Slashdot sure does want to have its cake and eat it too. I would rate seeking compensation for unlicensed clothing as something no less petty than, say, demanding that "GNU" precede the word "Linux" in the name of an operating system.

    1. Re:Totally wrong, not a grassroots effort at all by Blain · · Score: 1

      Actually, on Whedonesque, there were offers to help provide for legal costs, and some indication that the attorney helping 11th Hour was to some degree the product of donation from the community. So let's not be too quick to judge whether the community is contributing to this effort substantially. This is a community where individuals were known to buy out the tickets for entire showings of Serenity in the theater so they could give them away, or to buy boxed sets of the series and give them away to friends to get them hooked on it. For folks like that to donate $5 a head would not be a stretch, and that can add up when you're looking at the size of the Firefly community. Browncoats don't always know when to fight and when to run, but they tend to be very loyal toward their own, and Universal isn't in the crew unless the conjure they are.

      Selling T-shirts for profit with your own designs, using none of the trademarked images or likenesses thereof is definitely a commercial endeavor. I suppose, if it were competing with similar products from those paying license fees for those images, it could be seen as unfair, if it used the same images or designs, or in any substantial way cashed in on the work of Universal. But evidence of that kind of thing hasn't been shown in my seeing. If somebody can show a bunch of Universal licensed t-shirts that are similar to products 11th Hour is selling (even if 11th Hour was selling them first), I'd be a bit more sympathetic to their claim of injury. I can't imagine that products with those trademarked images having any problem competing in the marketplace -- who's not going to want shirts with the faces of the BDHs with memorable lines and the Serenity logo? I'd love one with River standing in the doorway to the infirmary saying "Besides, I can kill you with my brain." But I'm having a hard time taking seriously a company of their size complaining about being injured by a small operation like this, and the other fan-based businesses they've been sending c&ds to. Especially with the idea that they're unfairly competing with the products they could license that would be way cooler than they can be without that material. Why aren't they discussing a licensing agreement with 11th Hour to bring that licensed material to play with the 11th Hour creativity that's capable of unfairly competing with the apparent wusses they've sold licenses to?

      I appreciate to the end of the day Universal making this movie, and I don't want my displeasure with the choices of their legal division to get in the way of my gratitude on that count. I disagree with the folks who are calling for boycotts -- we're not going to make friends, nor movies, with that kind of approach. I think the site the FA is talking about is good at making a point that Universal is showing a lack of gratitude to those who have helped sell it's product, and that the suits in the other part of the Universal building should go to the folks at legal and suggest they back off with the jackboot approach and treat these folks like friends in a misunderstanding rather than thieves. That would be the smartest possible outcome for all involved, and I won't even bill them for the idea on the site the FA is about -- that one's gratis.

    2. Re:Totally wrong, not a grassroots effort at all by Gossi · · Score: 1
      And who is going to pony up the money to pay the legal professionals who can actually help them wriggle out of this problem? Mr. Free Blog Post?

      a) She has legal representation from a fan's company. There's also a donate button on her website.

      I would rate seeking compensation for unlicensed clothing as something no less petty than, say, demanding that "GNU" precede the word "Linux" in the name of an operating system.

      b) Have you actually seen the artwork? Here's the store: http://www.cafepress.com/11thhourart. Universal are currently disputing the designs with serenity written in chinese on them. Yes, you heard it here first, Chinese folk: Universal own one of your words.

    3. Re:Totally wrong, not a grassroots effort at all by _Sprocket_ · · Score: 1
      I would rate seeking compensation for unlicensed clothing as something no less petty than, say, demanding that "GNU" precede the word "Linux" in the name of an operating system.


      Don't sell yourself short. I would say it was even more petty.
  38. Why should anyone be shocked? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Universal paid for the DMCA. Why is anyone shocked that they wouldn't use it?

    Any calls for boycott will be forgotten when the new movie you want to see is being shown. Just like it has always been.

    1. Re:Why should anyone be shocked? by Alizarin+Erythrosin · · Score: 1

      What movie I want to see? The last movie I saw in theaters was Clerks II on opening night. Before that, I can't even remember what movie it was. Mission: Impossible III maybe? Somewhere in there was Cars and that's it for recent.

      Movies pretty much suck now-a-days.

      --
      There are only 10 kinds of people in this world... those who understand binary and those who don't
  39. The Marketing worked here... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    I keep hearing how Serenity was a flop, and yet the cinemas i saw were packed when it came out, and the dvd is selling well in the stores i check.

    I was never a fan of Firefly, in fact i've never seen an episode and yet the 8 minute trailer sold me on going to see Serenity (despite the tv Ad that gave me shivers and a horrible sickening feeling). I would love to see a sequel to Serenity or anything along the lines of it and would buy the dvd, even though im not a dvd buying person.

    As far as i can see the marketing worked, not the traditional marketing though. I think somone has some sore feelings after having their "tried and trusted" marketing system shown to be as unrealible and broken as it is.

    1. Re:The Marketing worked here... by eskayp · · Score: 1

      AC:
      "... would love to see a sequel to Serenity or anything along the lines of it and would buy the dvd, even though im not a dvd buying person. ..."
      I stumbled onto Firefly while browsing for some new video to watch while using our exercise machine.
      Walmart had a 4 disc set of all the Firefly episodes, in the right order.
      ( Unlike Fox TV, who ruined the product with their botched, out of sequence broadcast version. )
      I tried Firefly and liked it -- great storylines, effects, dialogue, and character development.
      I still re-view episodes from time to time as there are always nuances that I missed previously.
      Serenity carried on the Firefly storyline, and possibly ended it.
      If you liked Serenity you will enjoy the Firefly DVD's.
      Firefly will provide new insight and background on the Serenity characters and their struggles.
      One Serenity disappointment was Shepherd Book dying without learning of his enigmatic past.
      Firefly made it evident that he wasn't always a preacher, quite the contrary.
      Sidebar: don't know if the rental places have Firefly on the shelves or not.
      I buy what I like so I can watch it anytime I want.
      Without the distractions of brats, phones, and conversations which infest the cinemas.
      The spouse uses NetFlix, giving me a chance to review unknown titles.
      The biggest problem is finding time to watch what's available.

      --
      I didn't desert Windows; Windows deserted me: BSOD
    2. Re:The Marketing worked here... by idobi · · Score: 1

      Not including DVD sales, the production budget for the movie was $39 million - not including advertising. Worldwide gross was $38.5 million.

      By those standards, the movie was a flop. So what if the theater was packed... that $38.5 million came from somewhere...

  40. Here we go again, FF this, Debian that... by AlXtreme · · Score: 3, Funny

    Why don't they just call it Iceweasel and be done with it?

    Oh, Firefly. Nevermind, do carry on.

    --
    This sig is intentionally left blank
  41. What the heck? by NubKnacker · · Score: 1

    In this era where TV is everywhere, in your room, on the internet and even on your handheld devices, this action makes no sense. We have a craving for good TV, sure there are enough crappy shows that we can watch and not whine when they get cancelled but to cancel a show which has a huge fanbase doesn't seem to make sense.

    I simply don't understand why a studio would want to cancel such a show.

  42. I do it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    My wife and I don't buy anything that has a Sony name on it or affiliated with it. We look at EVERYTHING for Sony.

    We've started doing the same for Universal a few months back (over other issues). Do we make a difference? No.

    But we tell our friends and family about it, and we know it does make a difference. Why? Because they've not bought any Sony electronics, or even gone to any recent Universal movies. It's gotten to the point that we even get e-mails from friends and family asking us about a particular movie or CD -- and we'll do a quick Google or IMDB or Amazon search to confirm if it's Sony or Universal.

    Does that make a difference? Probably not, but in the long run I'm happier not supporting those companies. That's all we can do, and big companies have been surprisingly toppled by individual decisions (see GM).

    --dada / anarcho-capitalist

  43. Should I buy Serenity to watch it .. now? by Mirar · · Score: 1

    I few days I was reminded that I have not yet watched Serenity, and was pondering buying it to support the coming back of Firefly as much as possible (as opposed to just download it).

    Now I'm not sure anymore. I'm not sure I want to support a greedy company, but I want Firefly back.

    What should I do?

    1. Re:Should I buy Serenity to watch it .. now? by punkelf · · Score: 1

      find a friend who has the series on dvd borrow it, make a copy for your legitimate personal use, while you are borrowing it.
      and out of great loyalty to universal destroy it when done.

      or not.

      again, entertainment industry... the fans are the hand that feeds you. DO NOT BITE US!

      --
      "It's the year 2000, where are the flying cars?"
    2. Re:Should I buy Serenity to watch it .. now? by arth1 · · Score: 1
      I'm not sure I want to support a greedy company, but I want Firefly back.

      What should I do?

      Simple:

      1: Buy the rights
      2: Fund a production run
      3: ???
      4: Profit for someone else who DIDN'T pitch in to buy the rights, but sells merchandise you purchased the rights to.

      Regards,
      --
      *Art
    3. Re:Should I buy Serenity to watch it .. now? by sabernet · · Score: 1

      Firefly == Fox.

      Serenity == Universal

      They're both asshats, but if you buy the Firefly DVDs, you're paying Fox.

  44. their own damn fault by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    Oh, they will figure it out. Its just they will still claim its piracy, to help push the anti-digital-freedom agenda along.

    Looks like the lawyers took over there too.

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  45. The Fans are Wrong by grapeape · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Sorry but the fans are wrong in this one. Viral advertising doesnt mean stealing intellectual property and copyrighted material to show your "love" for whatever is being promoted. I liked firefly alot (have the box set and serenity on dvd) but browncoaters are just about the nuttiest tv fan club out there, even Joss thinks they are a bit off.

    The efforts to save firefly were valiant and managed to get a movie done but fans are out of excuses. No one (outside the fans) watched the first run, numbers didnt grow for the second well advertised and announced run on Sci-Fi and Serenity made only $25 million in the US (It cost $40 million to make). To put in into perspective..for every single person who went to see Serenity, four people went to see that steaming pile of poo called The Pacifier.

    This "franchise" is dead, many are stating that universals actions are a good sign and that they are trying to protect what they see as a valuable property. Perhaps they are just trying to recoup their losses by going after the ones who convinced them they would make buckets of cash in the first place. The cast has moved on so should the fans, you fought a good fight but its over.

    1. Re:The Fans are Wrong by eskayp · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "May have been the losing side. Still not convinced it was the wrong one." (Bushwhacked)

      --
      I didn't desert Windows; Windows deserted me: BSOD
    2. Re:The Fans are Wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I watched the first run of Firefly. I love the show. I have only had cable tv since January, so the second run they had on SciFi, I believe, before this year I did not see.

      Here on /. I heard of the marathon awhile back, I had forgotten it was on by the time the date came about. I do not watch the SciFi channel, nothing there really interests me. I happened to be bored that day and saw it listed on the guide channel, I watched a few episodes before I went to work. I have the season of Firefly on my comp which I did d/l off the net. None of the stores in my area carry Firefly. I currently don't order off of the internet. I would love to have the first season of Firefly on DVD but I will probably not get it. I don't have the extra cash to pick it up. After I cancel the cable tv next month I will eventually have the extra cash to put towards picking it up, but even after RTFA I don't know if I will. Whedon doesn't get any real cash out of the purchase and they have pretty much made their choice regarding another movie. I went to the first movie twice, I have only done that once ever before. I did d/l the movie off the net, as I waited for my birthday so that my family could buy me the DVD. It was the only thing they could understand that I wanted. Have to throw them a bone when I can.

    3. Re:The Fans are Wrong by Garse+Janacek · · Score: 1

      Sorry but the fans are wrong in this one. Viral advertising doesnt mean stealing intellectual property and copyrighted material to show your "love" for whatever is being promoted.

      Aha -- then presumably you think that the fan site being billed (11th Hour) should also be compensated for its original artwork that was included in extra features on the Firefly DVD release? Since, you know, the studio shouldn't be "stealing" "intellectual property"?

      See, this is what I don't get. Obviously the studio has a legal right to do at least most of what they're doing, but that completely ignores the unwritten ethics of the situation -- yet everyone is jumping all over the fan site.

      The studio encouraged this site earlier. Even up to including their work in features about fan support, on the official DVD. You don't see any hypocrisy (albeit legal hypocrisy) in then turning around and trying to shut the site down and take its money?

      The thing is, the $9000 they're asking for is a huge deal for a fan site, but means very little to the studio. They aren't going to pump up their income from the movie by getting money in this way. They could have requested that sites take down allegedly infringing material -- it seems like the guy has done everything he can to comply with the law since getting the letter, at least, so this would have been a very easy way to solve the "problem" -- but instead they are being assholes, and trying to take money from someone they not only benefitted from, but actively encouraged.

      Sure, it's legal, but that doesn't make it right.

      --

      I am the man with no sig!

    4. Re:The Fans are Wrong by russotto · · Score: 1
      See, this is what I don't get. Obviously the studio has a legal right to do at least most of what they're doing, but that completely ignores the unwritten ethics of the situation -- yet everyone is jumping all over the fan site.
      Everyone? Or have the pro-draconian-copyright people finally cottoned to the idea of Slashdot shills?
  46. Viral marketing by Vivieus · · Score: 1

    Well, it's really an appropriate name. You sleep with someone of ill-reputation (movie/music/tv major), it feels good on the moment ("oh fans, we love you! Just bend over a little more"), but it burns like hell in the long run (C&D in the butt).

    --
    ___
    *insert sig here*
  47. Universal gave up their rights by nbauman · · Score: 1
    I'm not a lawyer, I'm just the guy who cleans the coffee maker in the secretary's lunchroom, but until a real lawyer comes along --

    There's a principle in law that if you allow someone to infringe on your rights long enough, and to depend on that infringement, you can lose those rights.

    For example, if you let people cut across your lawn for 50 years, you may have given up your right to stop them from using your lawn. That's why sidewalks in front of some buildings have a brass plate saying, "Permission to cross revokable at will."

    If Universal encouraged those fans to promote Firefly, using images from Firefly (and how else can you promote it), and knew that they were using those images, and permitted them to use those images, and didn't charge them fees to use those images because Universal thought they were getting enough benefit from their fans to make it worthwhile, they have a pretty weak case for demanding damages now.

    This varies with the state, but the fans could reasonably argue that they had an implied contract with Universal that the fans could use the images, Universal would benefit from their use of the images, and so the fans could use the images free.

    Universal signaled their agreement to this contract because they knew that the fans were using the image, they allowed it, they didn't protest promptly, and they even encouraged it.

    There's a principle in law called "reasonable reliance". The Cafe Press vendor could argue that Universal indicated that activities like his would be tolerated, in return for the benefits of viral marketing, and he reasonably relied on their knowledge of his activities and their silence. (He wasn't making much money, because he said he couldn't afford a lawyer.)

    I think the vendor would win this case in court (if you were on a jury, would you give Universal $9,000?) but unfortunately it would take a lot of money for legal fees to defend it. However, a lawyer might take the case and ask Universal for his legal fees after he won.

    I think the reaction on Slashdot indicates that most people (and jurors) think Universal's actions are unfair.

    What does a real lawyer think of this?

  48. Let's see if this works... by The+name+is+Dave.+Ja · · Score: 1

    Oh yeah?
    Well, how would you like it if Hitler killed you?

    I win!

    Reference: http://www.dilbert.com/comics/dilbert/archive/dilb ert-20061028.html

    --

    Serial emergency: any old port in a storm

  49. Universal idiots by Volante3192 · · Score: 1

    As you presumably are aware, Universal owns the valuable copyrights and intellectual property in and to an assortment the theatrical motion picture "Serenity" and all images contained therein

    Wait, first they revive a hit show in movie format, treat it like garbage, rely on it's fanbase for marketing (which really shuts out the mass majority because viral advertizing doesn't hit the masses...), express shock and horror that it tanked, let it die...

    And now they call it valuable?

    Make up your mind, Universal!

  50. Comment from an attorney by Damiano · · Score: 3, Informative

    Looking at the postings and the takedown notice, it seems that the person being threateded with legal action might have a strong position.

    Yes, they are clearly creating derivative works and would normally be violating Universal's copyright. However, it seems that Universal specifically was encouraging fans to create derivative works to promote the release of the movie. I would personally subpoena every document involving the viral campaign and look for language that I could use to prove a grant of license to the fans.

    Disclaimer: I am not your attorney, I am most likely not even licensed to practice in your state. This is simply an academic discussion.

    1. Re:Comment from an attorney by mamamoonie · · Score: 1

      *smacks forehead* They didn't want us to sell t-shirts to promote the movie? D'OH!! Then I guess they shouldn't have given out the Official Movie Logo graphic out free on the website, Hmmm? Especially not in suitable-for-making-transfer size and reverse image format.... We Browncoats had that logo graphic right from Universal MONTHS and MONTHS before anyone else knew there was even going to be a movie. On the Official Movie Fansite no less. Hmmm again. Low down dirty...decievers!

  51. Battlestar Galactica fansites take notice!!!! by Picass0 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    There's nothing stopping the mentally challeged lawyers at Universal from doing the very same thing to the fansites promoting the new Galactica. In fact, those websites would be doing themselves a favor by raising awareness of this action.

    The new Battlestar Galactica series is popular and has good ratings by cable standards, but not great ratings by new. The season premier got a 1.5 share. The CBS evening news pulls a 5, and CBS is embarrassed by the low rating. So there's some perspective.

    Sci-Fi recently encouraged fans to "Make Galactica #1" with a spread the word campaign. Sound familiar? Kinda like what the Browncoats were encouraged to do?

    Next year the marketing machine for Star Trek will ramp up to promote the new TOS based movie. Do you think they might reach out to the fans? Do you thing Paramont might be desperate for some old school Trekkie action? Perhaps it would be stupid for Paramont to sue fan sites, biting the hand and all that.

    Universal hasn't learned this leason.

  52. Oh bullshit by theshowmecanuck · · Score: 4, Interesting

    There is a line between blogging about the movie and showing trailers on your web site, and marketing licensable items (like shirts). The first two are viral advertising, the latter is, well, marketing something that someone else owns as your own products.

    From the fucking article:

    Members were encouraged to form regional groups to promote the film and perform activities that would help generate word of mouth, like creating bumper stickers and gift cards to accompany the DVD release.

    I don't see any mention of marketing t-shirts as viral advertising.

    Now while I generally think of movie executives as dick heads, but to be fare, they put up a lot of money to finance a movie that returned not so much. If they make a few million dollars on this, then good for them. They put up US$39 million dollars in production costs, around US$15 million in advertising costs, and about US$8.5 million in distribution costs. The film made US$38.3 million GROSS at the box office (meaning before the theaters take their cut). If the movie ran over production budget, or flopped, etc. You wouldn't give a rat's ass about the folks who would have lost their shirts. They paid for the right to market shirts.

    Just because you REALLY REALLY like something, doesn't mean you can take if for your own and do whatever you want with it. This is also the reason we have patents (real patents, not business rules patents). If someone spends time and a lot of money to develop a new something, whether directly as an investment, or in their own time (so they can't earn money elsewhere), why do you think it should be OK for someone else to profit off of it. Or is it a matter of "if it's the little guy getting ripped, then defend the hell out of him, but if it is the big guy, or they have something you really really like, then fuck it, rob him"?

    Man on the street to another guy: "Excuse me, but do you know what time it is?"
    Second guy: "It's three P.M."
    First guy: "Thank you... and I really really like your watch... I want to sell it to that guy over there."
    Second guy: "What? Excuse me, it is my watch, I paid for it."
    First guy (gathers a mob around him): "We don't care. We want it , and we're going to sell it."

    I know this can easily be called a troll since there are going to be a lot of fanboys reading this thread, but really. And I happen to really really like Serenity (saw it twice in the threater), and watched and really really liked Firefly when it first came on TV... and was supremely disappointed when it was canceled. But I still think that showing trailers on your web site is one thing and selling someone else's idea as your own is another.

    --
    -- I ignore anonymous replies to my comments and postings.
    1. Re:Oh bullshit by Belial6 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      yes it is a troll.

      1) When it comes to advertising, t-shirts are indeed... "like creating bumper stickers and gift cards"

      2) Man on the street to another guy: "Excuse me, but do you know what time it is?"
      Second guy: "It's three P.M."
      First guy: "Thank you... and I really really like your watch... I want to sell it to that guy over there."
      Second guy: "What? Excuse me, it is my watch, I paid for it."
      First guy (gathers a mob around him): "We don't care. We want it , and we're going to make our own and sell it."
      Second guy: "Ohhhhh....well, I'm glad that I could spark your creativity. Good luck. (shakes second guy's hand)

    2. Re:Oh bullshit by eno2001 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Quit being stupid.

      THIS is NOT what we're talking about here: "We don't care. We want it , and we're going to make our own and sell it."

      If it were, the t-shirts would have been "spin-offs" from the original. They would have been more like Fan Fiction, in that they would have featured NEW characters that didn't exist in the original. They would have had different names instead of Firefly or FIrefly related names. THAT DIDN'T HAPPEN HERE. Wake up and stop decieving yourself.

      --
      -"...bad old ideas look confusingly fresh when they are packaged as technology" - Jaron Lanier (Digital Maoism on Edge.o
    3. Re:Oh bullshit by aevan · · Score: 1

      What fanfiction do you read? In the majority of fan fiction I've came across, it all used the original characters, occassionally introducing original characters (flagged as "OC" and often heavily criticised for imblance), and for the most part are just plot deviations or continuations OF THE ORIGINAL EVERYTHING.
      Just check out FanFiction.net for a million instances of it.

    4. Re:Oh bullshit by Richard_at_work · · Score: 1

      While anti-IP culture has people like you touting it, it doesnt stand a chance. Congratulations on being the destroyer of your own point.

    5. Re:Oh bullshit by LunarCrisis · · Score: 0, Troll
      There is a line between blogging about the movie and showing trailers on your web site, and marketing licensable items (like shirts). The first two are viral advertising, the latter is, well, marketing something that someone else owns as your own products.

      From the fucking article:

      Members were encouraged to form regional groups to promote the film and perform activities that would help generate word of mouth, like creating bumper stickers and gift cards to accompany the DVD release.

      I don't see any mention of marketing t-shirts as viral advertising.

      Why should T-shirts be any different from bumper stickers? They are both licensable and are both worn advertisements. It seems only logical that such a link would be seen as implied.

      Now while I generally think of movie executives as dick heads, but to be fare, they put up a lot of money to finance a movie that returned not so much. If they make a few million dollars on this, then good for them. They put up US$39 million dollars in production costs, around US$15 million in advertising costs, and about US$8.5 million in distribution costs. The film made US$38.3 million GROSS at the box office (meaning before the theaters take their cut)

      Excuse me, but you aren't showing the whole picture. From the very next paragraph of the article:

      While the theatrical release of Serenity met only modest success at the box office, the Browncoats campaign maintained momentum through the DVD release, whose success spurred additional sales of the original Firefly DVD. At one point following the release of Serenity on DVD, both Serenity and Firefly were #1 and #2 on Amazon.com's bestseller list despite the Firefly DVD being over a year old.

      Okay, and finally:

      Man on the street to another guy: "Excuse me, but do you know what time it is?"
      Second guy: "It's three P.M."
      First guy: "Thank you... and I really really like your watch... I want to sell it to that guy over there."
      Second guy: "What? Excuse me, it is my watch, I paid for it."
      First guy (gathers a mob around him): "We don't care. We want it , and we're going to sell it."

      No. Judging by the way you are portraying copyright violation as property theft, you are either being fooled by all of the industry's "intellectual property" bullshit or you are trying to propogate it. The laws governing physical property and the laws governing copyrighted works are completely different.
      Even leaving that aside, the situations are completely different, Universal asked for this.

      But I still think that showing trailers on your web site is one thing and selling someone else's idea as your own is another.

      So what you are telling me is that people sold this merchandise all while telling people that they had created Serenity? Unless that is the case, that opinion is irrelevant to the situation.
      --
      Mr. Period: Nine is the one that's right by ten!
      Nine: One day I will kill him. Then, I will be Ten.
    6. Re:Oh bullshit by theshowmecanuck · · Score: 1
      and we're going to make our own and sell it.

      Just another way to say, we're going to take your ideas or things you have spent a lot of money developing because we think we appreciate it more. Regardless of the fact that you spent the money to bring it to this point and should be able to make a return on your investment.

      Grow up. You need to ask before you take, otherwise you are breaking the law. It doesn't matter if you think you are being creative. And no, **selling** t-shirts is not like making your own bumper stickers (and they didn't say anything about allowing you to *sell* bumper stickers either, just create them). **Selling** anything that comes from someone else's ideas, work, or investments, including bumper stickers is wrong unless the right is explicitly granted. The studio has to go after those who are doing it, otherwise a precedent will be set, and they will have to allow it in the future.

      If they were sending cease and desist orders out to people who were making t-shirts and **giving them away for free** I would see the point of your complaining. However all we can see is that the studio is going after people who are trying to make a buck off of the studios investment.

      If you are really that creative, come up with your own movie, finance or talk others into financing it, and then market the goods afterwards. Or allow others to take your ideas and make money off them if you are that generous. Just don't presume to be so generous with other people's money.

      --
      -- I ignore anonymous replies to my comments and postings.
    7. Re:Oh bullshit by theshowmecanuck · · Score: 1
      --
      -- I ignore anonymous replies to my comments and postings.
    8. Re:Oh bullshit by russotto · · Score: 1

      Consider this before you stick up for the studio -- if _Universal_ had sold the T-shirts, and any of the artists who worked on the images on the shirts had demanded Universal give them residuals, would they have? Damn right they would not have -- they would have claimed the T-shirts were "promotional items" and therefore not covered.

    9. Re:Oh bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      There is a line between blogging about the movie and showing trailers on your web site, and marketing licensable items (like shirts).

      From TFA:
      That, no later than close of business on October 30, 2006, 11th Hour Art agree in writing to permanently cease and desist from the advertising, promoting, marketing, sale or distribution of any products bearing or referring to Universal Property
    10. Re:Oh bullshit by version5 · · Score: 1
      If someone spends time and a lot of money to develop a new something, whether directly as an investment, or in their own time (so they can't earn money elsewhere), why do you think it should be OK for someone else to profit off of it.

      You argument is incoherent. This scenario applies equally as well to writers and authors -- it is not OK for them to be influenced by and make a profit off other people's intellectual property without proper clearances and providing compensation to the original author. There is nothing new under the sun. Every idea is rooted in a prior idea, so to claim that an idea is property, you have to restrict the property to only the completely original contributions, and license the borrowed parts. Otherwise, its stealing. That would be coherent, but I don't see you making that argument, I see you making an arbitrary determination about who owns an idea and who is authorized to license a work, and by strange co-incidence, that determination favors profit-making.

      --

      "It's Dot Com!"

    11. Re:Oh bullshit by Lonewolf666 · · Score: 1

      While you are right about the legal situation, it seems a bit unfair (and very stupid) to me if Universal first encourages people to do their advertising for them and then goes after them for selling fan articles. Especially at a point where they seem to have given up on marketing Serenity themselves.

      As others have mentioned, Universal might have a hard time to find similar fan support for any of their future products. Personally, I would refuse to do viral advertising for anything which is from a big company and NOT released under GPL, Creative Commons or a similar free license.

      --
      C - the footgun of programming languages
    12. Re:Oh bullshit by FLEB · · Score: 1

      Y'know, I've found myself getting to the point where I want to make a page of "FLEB's 100 Stock Editorials About Copyright", then just reference them by number. It's always the same old misconceptions and the same old lousy arguments (ntm the analogies).

      Of course, then I just remember that old quip about arguing on the Internet, and I calm down a bit... then I realize what an empty shell it is that composes my life... ::sob::

      --
      Information wants to be free.
      Entertainment wants to be paid.
      You just want to be cheap.
    13. Re:Oh bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      First guy: "Thank you... and I really really like your watch... I want to sell it to that guy over there."
      ATTN BELIAL6: your post appeared incomplete on my server. The marginal cost of duplicating data is zero. The marginal cost of duplicating a watch is not zero. The part where you explain why this doesn't render your example meanliess is missing.

      Maybe you can post a few PAR blocks? Thanks.

  53. One word: estoppel by DrJimbo · · Score: 4, Interesting
    IANAL but I think the browncoats have an excellent chance of prevailing with an estoppel defense:
    • [Universal] has done or said something to induce an expectation
    • The [Browncoats] relied (reasonably) on the expectation...
    • ...and would suffer detriment if that expectation were false.
    This is one of the many defenses IBM is using against SCO. IBM claims that for 20 years the owners of the AT&T contracts let IBM publish its own home-grown code and therefore SCO is estopped from now trying to interpret the contracts differently.

    Since Universal Pictures knew about the "infringing" activities and did nothing when those activities helped promote their film, their retroactive licensing fees should IMO be estopped. I don't know if Universal's cease and desist orders can be estopped or not. Since people built business models based upon Universal's tacit acceptance of the use of their trademarks, I think a good argument could be made that Universal delayed too long and have thus invalidated their own trademarks. If trademarks are not vigorously enforced, they are forfeited.

    --
    We don't see the world as it is, we see it as we are.
    -- Anais Nin
  54. I had NEVER seen firefly til by ChaoticLimbs · · Score: 3, Interesting

    A buddy showed me a bit of Serenity because I'm a sci fi fan. I hadn't seen Firefly because I worked nights during its run. I had heard of it but didn't see it.
    I went and bought Serenity, watched it, loved it and bought the entire DVD set of Firefly. Showed them to the Mrs., and she loves it too. Too bad it was underwritten by douchebags.

    1. Re:I had NEVER seen firefly til by BgJonson79 · · Score: 1

      You're giving a SERIOUSLY bad name to douchebags.

      --

      There are four boxes used in defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order.

  55. It was the lawsuits... by monopole · · Score: 1

    The lawsuits that we served to the web sites. It was supposed to calm the population, weed out aggression. Well, it works. The people here stopped fighting. And then they stopped everything else. They stopped going to work, they stopped breeding, talking, eating. There's 30 million people here, and they all just let themselves die...
    I have to be quick! About a tenth of a percent of the population had the opposite reaction to the lawsuits.

  56. All About Timing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Only the Hardcore fans will actually make the effort to actually try and avoid fox/universal movies and studios and themepark, and bad mouth them at every turn. Most people will go "oh thats shitty, hey wanna go see a movie?" once the name has been made they know there is no concern about backlash...

    Look at the MP3 format, Frauenhoffer started charging money for every hardware unit sold after a long period which was unoffically understood to be allowing the public to get what MP3 was. There was an outcry people said they would use OGG instead because it was free and that made good business sense, and it did the same thing anyways, and there are those who say OGG was better and all that as it was... fast forward to the present... still difficult to find a player that supports ogg, and though some of the players don't actually play MP3's but rather AAC and the like, yer average music toting IPod clone doesn't think AAC OGG or anything else... but MP3!!!

    Its the same here, Universal isn't too concerned about the fanbase, they made their money from it, and they will continue to make their money from it, if they pulled this crap before, well... it might have hurt sales... now however, they figure they reached the line on the chart some guy in sales/marketing made, where they have probably reached the turning point and now the lawyers can jackboot to their hearts content and not concerning themselves with the feeble backlash that some hardcore Serenity/Firefly okatu try.

    Yes profiting from someone elses IP is not just wrong its REALLY wrong, but waiting before bringing out the lawyers was just good business sense.

    Fox/Universal isn't going anywhere, and the memory of the public is remarkably short, and getting shorter every season...

  57. Mod parent insightful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have never heard truer words.

    --Firefly Fanboi :)

    1. Re:Mod parent insightful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      agreed. heck of a post.

  58. Silly Universal... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Don't they know that they can't stop the signal?!!

  59. Summary makes no sense! by Bob+Hearn · · Score: 2, Informative

    "After being encouraged to viral market Serenity, the studio has started legal action against fans"

    I hate what the Internet has done to basic language skills.

    1. Re:Summary makes no sense! by Gossi · · Score: 2, Funny

      It wasn't the internet, dude - it was all those rock'n'roll songs I listen too. Either that or, you know, I just didn't pay attention in skool. Or Muslim's made me do it. Or Darth Vader.

    2. Re:Summary makes no sense! by Bob+Hearn · · Score: 1

      OK, that I can understand; the dark side can be hard to resist. But sure are you that Yoda instead it was not?

    3. Re:Summary makes no sense! by Gossi · · Score: 1

      That's it! I'm sending George Lucas a cease and desist.

    4. Re:Summary makes no sense! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      "After being encouraged to viral market Serenity, the studio has started legal action against fans"

      I hate what the Internet has done to basic language skills.
      As bad as that is, how about the gem of a sentence that precedes it.

      "Fans of Joss Whedon's Firefly, and the movie by Universal Studios -- Serenity -- are not amused."
  60. Its good to see scifi but firefly isn't that good. by ion-cannon · · Score: 0, Redundant

    I mean its better than star trek next G crap, better than 95% movies out there, but wasn't THAT great a story. Bravo that someone likes ti tho. Long live science fiction.

  61. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  62. Re:Offtopic, (intentionally) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    It's due to a universal (pun not intened) misconception...

    Unintended puns are typically realized after the fact and disavowed as intentional in hindsight. Since you had the time to realize the pun before posting and even add text indicating it was a pun before you consciously (sp?) hit the submit button, would not this pun be intentional?

  63. This is IDIOTIC... by eno2001 · · Score: 1

    ...on both sides. The companies have no right to screw the fans this way. But, that's what people like me have been trying to tell people like these fans for years. On the other hand, the fans are being idiots in thinking they can win against a big corporation. This will have about as much effect as the liberal boycotts of various company's products and services over the past few decades. As one scientist put it when that asteroid hit Jupiter back in the 90s and everyone was predicting the end of the world, this will have as mush effect as "...a grape hitting a bowling ball". Sorry, but the idealists in the fanbase of Firefly will NOT get a decent result from these actions. If anything, they'll have to settle for something, and if I know the type well enough, they'll still tell themselves they won, when in fact they didn't. I sincerely hope that this totally fails because it will show you just how excessively powerful corporations are in this society. Then maybe you'll come around. You CAN'T win.

    --
    -"...bad old ideas look confusingly fresh when they are packaged as technology" - Jaron Lanier (Digital Maoism on Edge.o
  64. Serenity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Serenity Now!!!"

  65. All lawsuits in the world... by mcguyver · · Score: 1

    ...will not fix the fact that serentity sucked in the box office. Why would Universal push a movie that's not going to make money? /captain obvious

  66. Text of message from Prospero board by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    [[The Prospero message boards require people to log-in in order to access this message. Here is the text of the message that started that thread so people can read it without creating an account and logging in.]]

    From: 11th Hour (11thHour) Oct-24 2:38 pm
    To: ALL (1 of 500)


    Here's an email intro sure to startle the heart of any Browncoat:

    "This firm represents Universal Studios Licensing, LLLP ("Universal"). As you presumably are aware, Universal owns the valuable copyrights and intellectual property in and to an assortment the theatrical motion picture "Serenity" and all images contained therein ("the Universal Property"). [See, e.g., Walt Disney Productions v. Filmation Associates, 628 F.Supp. 871, 876, 878, 879-80 (C.D. Cal. 1986) (defendant's use of plaintiff's protected images in defendant's promotional trailer, brochures and other materials found infringing)]."

    [edit]

    "11th Hour Art's offering for sale and sale of unauthorized "Serenity" shirts may give rise to multiple violations of law, giving rise to various causes of action for copyright infringement, counterfeiting, and unfair competition, among other claims. Recovery on one or more of these claims may include attorney's fees, treble damages, statutory damages, and punitive damages."

    The Demand continues, and includes such stipulations that within 72 hours I must agree to: pay a retroactive $8,750 licensing fee; the permanent closing of my shop; turn over any merchandise referring to the Universal Property; and provide the last 12 months complete sales records... there's more, but that's the gist... oh, except for the threat of federal court and the statutory damages thingy of $150,000 per infringed work... don't want to go leaving that part out.

    The questionable image in my shop were, for the most part, already pulled down by Cafe Press after the first email notice I got last week. I was then already going through my shop and revising the wording in some descriptions as needed to fully comply with the notification. At present, the only instances where the word "serenity" is mentioned is to explain the translation of the Chinese characters, but without any references to the movie of that name.

    I can confidently state that my Cafe Press shop is totally free of any associations with "Serenity" the movie... unless of course Universal now claims ownership of the actual word "serenity", no matter how it is used, both in English and Chinese. In that case, there's a certain adult diaper manufacturer who's in deep doo doo now... pun is like, totally intended...

    I'm exhausted, emotionally and physically. I've spent most of the past few days since the notification overhauling my shop. I've put aside all other projects, and haven't gotten that much sleep doing this. I'm actually starting to feel ill... this whole thing is just sickening...

    11th Hour

    P.S.
    I found this particuar excerpt from the Demand rather ironical:

    "That, no later than close of business on October 30, 2006, 11th Hour Art agree in writing to permanently cease and desist from the advertising, promoting, marketing, sale or distribution of any products bearing or referring to Universal Property" Guess that could be seen as Universal telling me to stop guerilla marketing too. Good job Universal, can't be having a loose cannon like me running around promoting Serenity. Think of the damage that could do.

    Good bye guerilla marketing posters too?

    Hello Serenity Valley.

    11th

    .
    .
    .
    Edited to say I can be contacted by clicking on my member name, and to add a link to my Cafe Press shop for reference:
    www.cafepress.com/11thhourart

  67. bullshit arguments by XdevXnull · · Score: 0, Troll

    I'm pretty sure you DON'T have to ask when the owner TELLS you it's ok:

    Man on the street to another guy: "Excuse me, but do you know what time it is?"
    Second guy: "It's three P.M."
    First guy: "Thank you... and I really really like your watch..."
    Second Guy: "Hey, I'm trying to promote these watches. You wanna help by creating blogs and other merch to get people interested?"
    First Guy: "Sure! I'll make a t-shirt with a picture of the fucking minute hand on it and sell it on my website!"
    Second guy: "Ohhhhh....well, I'm glad that I could spark your creativity. Good luck, and thanks for doing my job for free! (shakes second guy's hand, walks away, calls lawyer on cell phone) "Sydney! This is Dick Trickle, from Universal. He took the bait. Fire up the goon squad and start litigating the hell out of these shmucks.

    --
    "I'm a Laver, not a Phyto[plankton]"
  68. Like it matters? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Firefly (the show) and Serenity (the movie) both sucked. I should bill them both for waste of my time.

  69. Actually, it MADE money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    With world-wide gross and DVD sales, I believe the sales figures are over $60 million taken in. 60 > 40 the last time I checked, which means profit... Unless it's an exceptionally large value of 40 they had? Or were they using the same math to say it was a flop that Sony used to say they didn't need to pay Stan Lee because the Spiderman movies were a flop?

  70. IceMaggot by JumperCable · · Score: 1

    Your use of firefly is offensive. It's Icemaggot now.

  71. Serenity sucked by daverabbitz · · Score: 0

    I don't know if I'm missing something here, but why is there so many articles on /. about Serenity.

    It's not like the film was good, infact it sucked hard.

    --
    What could be better than a jet powered motorcycle? http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u8l6GTHLSWE
  72. Quantum meruit by mister_woods · · Score: 0

    If Universal knew about it beforehand and profitted, it can be considered a quasi-contract (quantum meruit, I believe is the latin term).

    You are correct in your belief: quantum meruit is a Latin phrase meaning "as much as he has deserved". In the context of contract law, it means something along the lines of "reasonable value of services". Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum_meruit

  73. This news is rather upsetting by ross.w · · Score: 2, Funny

    Serenity Now!
    Serenity Now!

    --
    If my call is important, why am I talking to a recording?
  74. Language Nazi by ShagratTheTitleless · · Score: 0
    It's better than (but very different to) Serenity.

    Today I shall be a Language Nazi*. I know it's not cool and please don't take it personally. I'll probably even make some silly mistake in my post that will get pointed out in replies.

    "Different to" - I have noticed this illogical construct being used lately by the British. Clearly what people mean to convery is the idea of "Different from". "To" at this juncture indicates a bringing together or nearing which is logically the opposite of differentiation. You may COMPARE things TO one another to discern whether they are DIFFERENT FROM one another.

    I can get over 'th' being pronounced as 'f' as in "Firsday comes before Friday". Speech impediments are charming sometimes, especially with an accent. But as an American, I expect superiority in the English language to remain in England, so please spread the word.

    * My karma is so bad nobody will read this anyway.

    --
    Sometimes at night I imagine the darkness is filled with horrible things with too many teeth, like Julia Roberts.
    1. Re:Language Nazi by Malfourmed · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the tip. I bow from your superior language skills. Heil!

    2. Re:Language Nazi by dylan_- · · Score: 1
      "Different to" - I have noticed this illogical construct being used lately by the British.

      1526 Pilgr. Perf. (W. de W. 1531) 125b, His lyght is moche different and vnlyke to the lyght of the holy goost.
      1588 R. PARKE tr. Mendoza's Hist. China 257 If..they could write any other language that were different vnto theirs. [Ibid. 271, 291.]
      1852 THACKERAY Esmond II. ii. (1869) 169 The party of prisoners lived..with comforts very different to those which were awarded to the poor wretches there.

      Please accept our sincere apologies for the recent lapse in our standards. Normal service should be resumed by 2500 AD at the very latest. We appreciate your patience in this matter.
      --
      Igor Presnyakov stole my hat
  75. It's Lawyers talking to Kids - never works by CtlAtlDelete · · Score: 0

    Because lawyers believe that everybody is down in the ethical cesspool with them so they don't understand how to accomplish what they want unless they're dealing with other lawyers. Sending letters to teens and young adults is not what they normally do and they don't know how to reach them. It would be really helpful if they enlisted a young person who understood more about his peers to help these idiots (Universal) resolve this more amicably.

  76. Welcome to Slashdot! by pigs,3different1s · · Score: 0

    This is the most cynical thing you have ever seen?

    Well, you must be new here. Welcome to Slashdot! You may want to regularly engage the services of a psychiatrist; because it only gets more cynical around here. :)

    --
    "Put your message in a modem, and throw it into the cyber-sea." - Rush
  77. this simply demonstrates by alizard · · Score: 1

    that there is no point by a fan community in trying to add value to a Hollywood content cartel corporate creation, no matter how good it is. The best that one can do with it is to use it to make connections with other people, but that's as far as it can go. All creating promotional materlals to help keep a show on the air accomplishes is. . . the chance to get sued.

    A Hollywood corporate interest isn't the friend of any consumer. Just an effort to create and package ideas as cheaply as possible and strip-mine all the value out of them ASAP, and at the strip-mining phase, fans with ideas interfere with the process more than anything else and are dispensible.

    If a fan base wants to buy a series that's dead due to inept marketing. . . try to keep organization of a fundraising quiet from Hollywood, create a dummy organization to buy the series for profit, and then do it before announcing anything to anybody. Or reverse engineer the basic series plot enough to build a new series with similar values and self-launch.

  78. Re:Offtopic, (intentionally) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Puns are supposed to be a joke, the wording specific to getting a laugh. The GP was trying to say that she/he wasn't trying to be humourous, that 'universal' was simply the best word for the sentence and idea being expressed.

  79. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  80. Control your own cultural destiny (was Re:Serenit by sowth · · Score: 1

    But if people create their own culture, then the rich, greedy and powerful won't have a basis in copyright to squash the fans. Question is: how to do it?

  81. my screensaver... by GentlemanRogue · · Score: 1

    is the standard Windows marquee, with the words "Define 'interesting'?" "Oh god, oh god, we're all gonna die?" scrolling across it. Universal can kiss my ass...

    --
    you really expect me to be able to express my opinion of what's so fucked up in this world in 120 characters or less?
  82. Re:Comment from an attorney - I'm Curious by BranMan · · Score: 1


          Sorry I missed this thread over the weekend, but I must say at first glance your post infuriated me (the word *clearly* especially). I've gotten over it and now I'm just curious - by what standards are you posing that the person in question is *clearly* making derivative works? Blacksun.com was already taken down, but what I saw when I checked out cafepress.com site was a T-shirt with the perfectly good, average vocabulary, word 'serenity' on it - in another LANGUAGE even. No tie in to Firefly, no characters, no trademarks, nothing from the series or movie at all. This seems tatamount to MicroSoft suing Anderson for selling 'Windows'. I hope you check follow ups to your posts as I would love to hear your response. If this is so, it seems to me (a layperson) that something is SERIOUSLY wrong in the copyright/trademark system.
          Looking forward to hearing back - thanks in advance.

  83. Sounds like the GPLv3 process... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    nothing like turning on those who brought you to where you are...

  84. Not all firefly designs are gone by chris2x · · Score: 1

    Joss's blog says that all Firefly designs are gone from Cafepress, but I think it is just those that use their copyright. It is possible to make designs that don't violate their copyright: Chris2x's Firefly/Serenity designs

    --
    http://chris2x.com