J
Jiarn
Agreed.
<--- this conversation
Don't you mean that they copyright the story they told and trademark the visual design of the character?They trademark the story they told and the character they designed.
and the point of that post?Don't you mean that they copyright the story they told and trademark the visual design of the character?
As Tin mentioned, copyright and trademark aren't the same thing. I don't think you can trademark a story, as stories can't be used as representations of your brand or products, as opposed to a character or design of that character.and the point of that post?
I made a very common mistake, but it does not belittle what I was telling him how Disney can copyright the image they created, and protect the story they told.As Tin mentioned, copyright and trademark aren't the same thing. I don't think you can trademark a story, as stories can't be used as representations of your brand or products, as opposed to a character or design of that character.
So what's their really doing is claiming ownership of Disney Presents Snow White, not the entire myth. So basically, the only thing you can't do is name the dwarves.I made a very common mistake, but it does not belittle what I was telling him how Disney can copyright the image they created, and protect the story they told.
It is a rather pointless road to go down. Just distracts, not adds to the conversation.
Then you could have just said this. Words matter when you're trying to convey information.I made a very common mistake, but it does not belittle what I was telling him how Disney can copyright the image they created, and protect the story they told.
Hey, you could have just taken the correction with good grace and moved on.It is a rather pointless road to go down. Just distracts, not adds to the conversation.
That's why i made sure to say the hammer was a copy of the design for sale... devil's in the detail you know.That's an incredibly terrible analogy. You're not making anything when you pirate software. You're taking the intellectual property of someone else without permission or payment. A better analogy would be, why write your own paper for a class, when you can just turn in someone else's.
Thing is, in the eyes of the law (in most places anyway) there's no difference, besides that when you do it for personal use it's harder for anyone to find out about it.Notice how I said for your own use.
And yet there's no connecting your brain to cyberspace yet... should have known they would only be right about the bad stuff (to be fair, the bad stuff is 99% of what cyberpunk is about)...They trademark the story they re-told with some changes