Ral
Well-known member
- Joined
- Oct 15, 2019
- Messages
- 604
- Points
- 133
That is why they would investigate. Don't think that they will take the statements, yours and your opponent's, on face value?I've never said that I would win in the court, but it also may occure that I fight any statement of someone owning the property that I actually own, and what if I tell the court I've been hacked and robbed and I'm just a little poor boy in need of justice?.. (not mentioning that I can also make some papers look like my own drafts of the novel, or make some Word versions of them, or ask my friends to lie that I've been dreaming of writing that novel since I was a kid, and so on and so on).
And are you really going to take the effort to write hundreds of thousands of words on paper? Not to mention, it would become obvious that you wrote those 'drafts' at the same time which is kinda almost impossible, if you know what I mean. Most writers writes many drafts and versions of their story, not to mention, there are notes, scribbles, shortcuts and other oddities that a typical writers do. Your own 'draft' would not pass even the minimum scrutiny.
And the Word version? Same thing. The original creators would probably have multiple versions and backup of their work along with notes, sketches, outlines, etc.
To quoque. Doesn't matter if they are hypocritical. Just because a thief says that you are stealing doesn't make what they say false (and that you aren't stealing).I just imagined a situation in which a random guy from Deviantart starts yelling at me after seeing his artwork on my banner because I've violated his rights and now am obliged to pay him for the harm I've done.
Sounds like a hypocrite. And looks like this, too, probably![]()
Though, most of the time, people just don't bother. It just takes too much effort with little rewards to target something small like this. I mean, you aren't really making much money so they can't really get much from you. And in many cases like many avatar pictures, there is zero money to be found there.
In Shakespeare's (and earlier) time, there is no copyright. Anything you create is instantly in Public Domain.Copyright is a strange thing. Once you loose a grip of your rightness, you can end up without it at all. Maybe I'm wrong when I think that anything that isn't supported by a document means literally nothing in the world of jurisprudence. But if someone started publishing my novel and making money on it, I wouldn't even be surprised or angry, simply because it's what I've never taken precautions against, so why would I be upset? It's my fault, and of course I would do my best to prove the opposite, but both me and a thief would know that it's true.
The purpose of the copyright is to give ample time for the creators (or copyright holders if you sell them) to profit. After that, the work becomes Public Domain and everybody can do whatever they want with it. In earlier years, the copyright lasted only for 14 years. Now it takes as long as 90 years.
It is a government implemented rights but it is really up to you if you would take action or not since it is your rights. If you don't want to bother with copyrights, you can waive them.
Bad things happen, nothing is perfect. That doesn't mean that you have to be one to do them.On the other hand, a person claiming their rights for a work could also be a thief, even if their brand is famous world-wide. They say, "It's my work, my copyright, and my brand", and everyone loves them and claps their hands in their approval, but somewhere in the world's deepest hole, in the darkness of a wet, poor hut sits a student whose only joy was drawing or writing or making music, and he watches all his stuff being owned by a random guy who was too clever for the student to fight for the copyright against, and weeps quietly into his cat.
Anyway, I know precisely that if someone asked me not to use their artwork, I would agree politely and use another artwork, but only because I'm too bloody well-mannered.
But if I wasn't, I'd think if I'm really obliged to do it.
But, in this hypothetical case you offered, you consciously did it.We may be harmful to someone without even noticing it, so... yeah...
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