CBS Shuts Down Stage 9, a Fan-Made Recreation of the USS Enterprise (torrentfreak.com)
An anonymous reader writes: For those unfamiliar with the project, Stage 9 is a beautiful virtual recreation of the Enterprise ship from Star Trek: The Next Generation for Windows, Mac and Linux. More experience than game, Stage 9 was built by fans over two years in the Unreal Engine. "There were two things that we were always pretty careful with," says project leader 'Scragnog'. "We made it as clear as we possibly could that this was NOT an officially licensed project. We had no affiliation with CBS or Paramount and the IP we were trying our hardest to treat with respect was not our own. We were fans, just creating fan art."
In an announcement this week, Scragnog reminded fans that no one involved in the project was in it for any financial reason and everyone was well aware that throwing money into the mix could be a problem. However, the team says it has always known that they could be shut down at any time on the whim of a license holder because in this world, that's what can happen. Unfortunately, that day has come all too soon for the impressive project. Stage 9 was hit with an intellectual property complaint from CBS just over two weeks ago and has now been shut down.
"This letter was a cease-and-desist order," Scragnog explains. "Over the next 13 days we did everything we possibly could to open up a dialog with CBS. The member of the CBS legal team that issued the order went on holiday for a week immediately after sending the letter through, which slowed things down considerably."
In an announcement this week, Scragnog reminded fans that no one involved in the project was in it for any financial reason and everyone was well aware that throwing money into the mix could be a problem. However, the team says it has always known that they could be shut down at any time on the whim of a license holder because in this world, that's what can happen. Unfortunately, that day has come all too soon for the impressive project. Stage 9 was hit with an intellectual property complaint from CBS just over two weeks ago and has now been shut down.
"This letter was a cease-and-desist order," Scragnog explains. "Over the next 13 days we did everything we possibly could to open up a dialog with CBS. The member of the CBS legal team that issued the order went on holiday for a week immediately after sending the letter through, which slowed things down considerably."
They've also shut down my desire to continue to watch Star Trek. Maybe I'll see what Picard is up to via the bay, though.
"You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
Say what you want about Lucas, he was usually pretty cool with people doing Star Wars parodies and homages. He even voiced himself on the Robot Chicken Star Wars episode.
My Other Computer Is A Data General Nova III.
>"This letter was a cease-and-desist order,"
Most of these letters have ZERO legal weight, and get thrown-out when submitted to courts. While CBS owns the appearance of the TNG Enterprise, the law clearly allows derivative works (such as parodies and fan-inspired art).
Only a JUDGE has the power to shutdown this endeavor, not some Intern at CBS writing cut-and-paste form letters.
"I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
Interesting point - but it was a lot more involved. IBM was just out of a years long case with the US government about them being a monopoly. They were walking on glass from that perspective. The were the 1000 lb elephant in the room - think Amazon or MS of not that long ago. They also learned a lesson from Apple and published technical schematics and the BIOS for the system! Apple didn't do that for the Mac, but had for the Apple II. Apple II was an open bus architecture - Mac not so much. IBM PC followed the open bus architecture paradigm and created a whole new industry. The clones were enabled by the concept of a Clean-room version of the BIOS becoming available. The rest as they say was history.
Have you compiled your kernel today??
otherwise they lose it and "star trek" becomes generalized (such as band-aid, velcro, thermos, dumpster, aspirin, etc.
The trademark to "Aspirin" was not lost due to "generalization" in the US: it, along with the trademark to "Heroin", was lost in the Treaty of Versailles as punishment to Bayer for making chemical weapons for the Germans.
Band-Aid is still a trademark, and I wouln't bet on its lack of enforceability. Velcro is still a trademark, and they made this hilarious video as part of defending it, and they definitely sue over it.
Loss of trademark due to "genericide" is incredibly rare - I think "thermos" is the only one on your list that is true.
Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
I have, do, and will watch The Orville, it's a good show even from what little there's been of it so far, and I'm surprised it's on Fox.