Gimme More! That's What I Want!
Jurisprudence: The law, lawyers, and the court.
Why J.K. Rowling should lose her copyright lawsuit against the Harry Potter Lexicon.
By Tim Wu
Posted Thursday, Jan. 10, 2008, at 7:59 AM ET
http://www.slate.com/id/2181776?GT1=10837
As I wrote in October, over the last few years, the relationship between fan-written Web sites and the copyright owners of the content they draw on, if legally murky, has at least been peaceful. Once it dawned on media companies that fan sites are the kind of marketing that they usually pay hard cash for, they generally left the fans alone. But things turned sour in the fall, when the Harry Potter Lexicon Web site announced plans to publish a book version of its fan-written guide to the Potter world. Author J.K. Rowling and publisher Warner Brothers have sued the Lexicon for copyright infringement, exposing the big unanswered question: Are fan guides actually illegal?
As sympathetic as I am to Rowling and her rights as an author, the answer is no. There is a necessary and healthy line between what the initial author owns and what follow-on, or "secondary," authors get to do, and Rowling is running over that line like the Hogwarts Express. The creators of H.P. Lexicon may not be as creative as Rowling, but they are authors, too, and deserve a little respect from the law.
At issue are the giant fan-written guides like the H.P. Lexicon or the Lostpedia (for the show Lost) that try to collect all known information on topics like Harry's pet owl or the Dharma Initiative. Rowling takes the position that she, as the original author, has the right to block the publication of any such guide. In her words: "However much an individual claims to love somebody else's work, it does not become theirs to sell."
But Rowling is overstepping her bounds. She has confused the adaptations of a work, which she does own, with discussion of her work, which she doesn't. Rowling owns both the original works themselves and any effort to adapt her book or characters to other media—films, computer games, and so on. Textually, the law gives her sway over any form in which her work may be "recast, transformed, or adapted." But she does not own discussion of her work—book reviews, literary criticism, or the fan guides that she's suing. The law has never allowed authors to exercise that much control over public discussion of their creations.
Unlike a Potter film or computer game, the authors of the Lexicon encyclopedia are not simply moving Potter to another medium. Their purpose, rather, is providing a reference guide with description and discussion, rather like a very long and detailed book review. Such guides have been around forever—centuries if you count the Bible, and more recently for complex works like the writings of Jorge Borges or The Lord of the Rings.
As long as a guide does not copy the original work verbatim, it falls outside the category of "adaptation." And that's why it is largely unnecessary to discuss the more complex copyright doctrine of "fair use." Rowling's rights over the guide don't exist to begin with, so we don't need to go there.
This can be made clear by looking at a typical Lexicon entry, like this one for the "house elf," the character who does the scut work in the Potter universe. "House-elves," says the encyclopedia, "are small humanoid creatures who inhabit large houses belonging to wealthy Wizarding families."
For a fan to write this kind of entry, Rowling says, is to "take the author's hard work, re-organize their characters and plots, and sell them for their own commercial gain." But that's ridiculous. This and other entries aren't, as Rowling seems to suggest, anything like an abridgment of the originals. No one would read the Lexicon as a substitute for the Potter books; it is useless unless you've read the original, and that makes all the difference.
By Tim Wu
Posted Thursday, Jan. 10, 2008, at 7:59 AM ET
(Continued from page 1)
The closest relevant legal precedent is the 2002 Beanie Baby decision by Judge Richard Posner (who has a taste for cases involving stuffed animals). Ty, the producer of Beanie Babies, doesn't like unauthorized guides to the Beanie Baby universe and their unflattering tendency to criticize the company, so it sued. Ruling against the company, Judge Posner used the same analogy that I have, comparing the guides to book reviews: "Both," he said, "are critical and evaluative as well as purely informational; and ownership of a copyright does not confer a legal right to control public evaluation of the copyrighted work." That's logic that should control the Potter case as well.
Even if the Beanie Baby case isn't directly controlling, the economics suggest the same result. How, exactly, are we hurt by the existence of competing guides to the Potter universe, one written by fans, the other by Rowling? It would be strange to say that since Fodor has written a perfectly good guide to London, we don't need the Lonely Planet or, for that matter, Wikitravel. Giving Rowling what she wants would be like giving Egypt the power to control guides to the pyramids.
Bizarrely, Rowling says that the fan guide would prevent her from writing her own guide to the Potter world. "I cannot," she said in a statement "approve of 'companion books' or 'encyclopedias' that seek to preempt my definitive Potter reference book. ..." To begin with, Rowling sounds entirely too much like a Death Eater* in this quote. More generally, two products in the same market isn't called pre-emption—the word is competition. Why not let consumers decide which guide they like better? Rowling might object that the fan's guide will be strewn with errors or poorly written; but it is hardly the job of copyright to protect us from bad execution. And the fan's guide might actually be better, or at least different.
There are more ethereal reasons that Rowling ought not win. For reasons anthropologists will someday understand, volunteer encyclopedias have become the place to find what passes for our collective wisdom. Wikipedia is the clearest example: It may be wrong sometimes, but it is nonetheless a statement as to what we know.
[”...well, that all depends on an individual's perception of things, and Oh YES, Wiki IS indeed wrong sometimes! And we all know on what subject, don’t we?” - rhiannon]
To her credit, Rowling accepts this and tolerates the online version of the H.P. Lexicon. But a general rule of the kind she is asking for isn't so generous: It would, by necessity, give copyright owners power over the content of Wikipedia and other online encyclopedias that discuss their works.
Not the end of the world, but certainly a subtle form of thought control.
In the end, this dispute is about the current meaning of authorship. Rowling is the initial author and deserves the bulk of the credit, respect, and financial reward.
But she has all of that.
What she wants is a level of control over the Potter world that just isn't healthy. The authors of fan guides, like house elves, rarely get famous or rich. They deserve legal credit for their modest contributions, not the Wizengamot**.
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I have read in a few articles that JK Rowling is great friends with Alan Greenspan. Perhaps he has been whispering sweet "lawsuit nothings" in her ear? Just my assumption, of course.
To JK Rowling, here's another “sweet nothing” endearment, in light of my waning respect for you as a person.
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Terminology for the Potter series:
*Death Eater is actually an evil/sick witch or wizard. - bent on greed and power - - Accurately comparable to "israel" and the British/American NeoCon Zionist/Khazar tribe.
**The Wizengamot is the high court of wizarding law in Britain . The head of the Wizengamot is called the Chief Warlock.
1/13/08




..friends with GREENSPAN?? she's no 'white_wicca' witch! she's one of voldemort's freakin' shaitanic propaganda whores!

The devil's dividends say crime does pay!
do not pass God, forfeit_soul in eternal damnation.
It didn't take long for Rowling to morph from a single mum on state benefits to the obnoxious ultra rich queen of darkness she is now.
She can have control of her sub-standard excuse for literature. She is welcome to it. Her greed and that of her publishers will ultimately alienate those misguided people who consider themselves her "fans". Her desire to prevent the preempting of what she perceives to be her crowning glory, her definitive guide to the Harry Potter dross she has churned out up to now, will backfire badly.
this underscores how utterly unworkable any approach to administering copyright ultimately will be.
that's because in principle copyright is abominable.
it's based on supremacism and greed and allows the limitless extortion of the landless masses at the hands of a moneyed few.
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"Money" has no value - people do.
Ya know what?
Never, did I know that copyright was such a negative thing. The way you have talked about it has made me understand things about copyright laws that I would never have understood before...
The copyright truly is a stifling prison all its own...
It seems as if the copyright ushers in the new elite [young budding talented artists, musicians, authors, keeps them there, transforms them, and jades them.
The way I see it...when one reaches those upper echelons of fame and fortune, one gets a different taste of the zionist world - not so subtle. And depending on one's view, it's a great taste, just so long is it is agreed that NOTHING negative can be said about "israel".
One of the bad wizards is named Grindenwald - a German.
This wizard is only mentioned in the 7th book.
Rowling had lots of time to rub shoulders with her new crowd of "friends and acquaintences".
Was she influenced? Has her thinking been shaped by these people?
I believe so.
it is mostly they who want this 'copy-right'.
We all have the right to copy and distribute ANY information for FREE. God_given_FREEDOM.
the corpo=reich wants you bend over and pay! but know that they don't lose money from 'piracy', the only potential for them to lose is by people getting their music out on the internet file sharing_for_free, taking away their second biggest bargaining chip; advertising. (money is #1 for them)
it should be called "seller's-right", be much more limited time than this 'copy-right', and leave us free to copy.
© is for cocksucking zoopremites
© is for communism (Moscow?)
© is for corpo=reich_fascism
© is for crapitalism
© is for corruption
© is for collusion
© is for chutzpah
Thanks.
I like your copyright definitions. Very good, quite accurate, eh?
BTW Grim, I have been meaning to tell you that you are the one that inspired my Anna Aquash post:
http://www.wakeupfromyourslumber.com/node/5155
I will tell you how later...
I have to run an errand at the moment.
You put a whole bunch of pictures on your blog - pictures of holograms. I thought of a book I read about maybe 10 years ago, called Ember Of The Sun. And near the end of this book, a couple of pages are about holograms and their spiritual meaning pertaining to the brain/mind assembly. A really fascinating read.
I wanted to do a post about holograms, but I never got around it. This book is about Native American Indians.
And so then I was reminded of Wounded Knee, the movie Thunderheart: its story about visions [of which holographic memory is based on], the Indigo Girls video Bury My Heart, and Anna Aquash.
Everything just fell into place.
So I did a post about that.
Thanks Grim [although I am late saying so]....because if you hadn't put up your hologram pics, I wouldn't have been inspired to do that post.
Those kirilian pictures of energy are pretty neat huh?
One of them is of gold.
I almost put the Roman aureus of YeHoshua up there, but that fate was not meant to be! lol
You have a very good spirit Rhiannon, we are surely in the company of saints!

"I am not just native aboriginal, southeast-asian, i'm HiNDiAN" =P