- cross-posted to:
- books@lemmy.ml
- cross-posted to:
- books@lemmy.ml
Etsy sellers are turning free fanfiction into printed and bound physical books, and listing them for sale on online marketplaces for more than $100 per book. It’s a problem that’s rattling the authors of those fanfics, as well as their fans and readers.
Several sellers, easily found on Etsy and very popular, each with hundreds of five-star reviews, are selling copies of fanfiction taken from sites like Archive of Our Own (Ao3) and reselling them as bound books. The average price of these bound copies is around $149. Some sellers claim that they’re simply covering the cost of materials, while others just sell the books, usually with the fanfiction writers’ Ao3 username on the cover.
Then everything is fair-use because everything is based on another person’s copyrighted material.
Also not true. Copyright protects form, not content. If you publish content in another medium(for example oroginal was cartoon and you publish book), then no sane country’s court will rule against you because another medium is good proof that work is not even just modified form.
Of course not. There is a large amount of works in public domain.
And fictional characters, those that fan fiction typically uses, come about with the understanding that characters can be separated from the original works they were embodied in.
It protects the fictional characters themselves. If you make an oil painting of Harry Potter, it’s still a copyright violation.
Lol
This is about fanfiction. There’s a HUGE difference between fanfiction and using tropes or cliches common in other media.
Obviously no countries’ courts are sane then, because you have literally described protected “derivative works.” See here for definition in the US Code: https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/17/101 and see here for the copyright owner owning rights to derivative works (17 U.S. Code § 106 (2): https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/17/106
US is not sane country
I mean, you’re not wrong, though even the US has rather lax copyright compared to some other countries.