AStewartR11 t1_j27nqvn wrote
Reply to comment by xdarkskylordx in Does copyright protect characters from being used as a parody? by Hexxegone
This is the right answer. Parody is absolutely protected speech under the 1st amendment (assuming you are in the US), and what you are making is obviously parody.
However, you only have the rights you can pay to defend in the US.
A close friend wrote and produced a lot of the major porn parodies (including Star Wars XXX) and even though they knew what they were doing was parody, if they got a C&D, they pulled the plug. It's not worth it to defend.
SBBurzmali t1_j2aj29a wrote
Parody is protected speech under the 1st amendment in the same sense that you won't get tossed in jail for drawing a picture of Mario and hanging it on your wall. If you want to make Star Wars porn parodies, go right ahead, no one is going to stop you, until you start distributing copies, at which point Disney might have some disagreement as to your uses of the copyrights and/or trademarks. The copyright issue you can fight under the fair use doctrine, not the 1st amendment, and on the trademark issue you can expect to open your wallet and pay because there's no defense there, especially if you name your product Star Wars XXX.
AStewartR11 t1_j2bc7zc wrote
I am talking about a product that was made and released. If you are an IP lawyer, you aren't a good one. First amendment rights trump copyright in the case of parody
I would encourage you to look up the lawsuit history surrounding The Wind Done Gone.
SBBurzmali t1_j2bd7ky wrote
You don't need to be an IP lawyer to know that the 1st amendment doesn't protect breaking IP law.
AStewartR11 t1_j2bdbdr wrote
In the case of parody, it absolutely does. It is true that the fair use doctrine comes into play as a way of deflecting copyright infringement, but it is based upon parody protections in the first amendment.
SBBurzmali t1_j2bfipo wrote
Nothing in the 1st amendment mentions or protects parody. Fair use is from common law and predates the constitution. In the US, it is part of copyright law.
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