Show & Tell: Legal questions for designers with Bryan Wasetis from Aspect Law Group
ALG attorney Bryan Wasetis will be giving a talk at Portland State University School of Art + Design about legal issues that designers and artists face. If you're in Portland on Thursday, May 5th, come by to check it out!
Missed the talk? Check out the video and download the slides.
Aspect Law Group attorney Bryan Wasetis will be giving a talk at Portland State University School of Art + Design about legal issues that designers and artists face. If you're in Portland on Thursday, May 5th, come by to check it out!
Logos: to Inc. or not to Inc.
Learn how trademark law and business law affects you and your client when designing logos.
Aspect Law Group is collaborating with Design Week Portland for a column called "Creatives Ask a Lawyer". Head over here to find out more. Q: "Do logos need to display ‘Inc’ or ‘LLC’? I have a client that has been told by his lawyer that his logo has to have ‘Inc’ somewhere in it. I have run into this many times, as well as clients insisting that they have to have the ‘LLC’ in the logo. All the information on the web says that it is not needed on the actual logo, but must be on trademark and corporate filings."
You can read the full post and answer to this question on the Design Week Portland tumblr.
In the post, I cover trademark law basics, business law, and general business practices issues. The short answer is that logos do not need to have the business designation but certainly can, and business should use their full legal name when conducting business.
Thanks for the question!
Notice: This post is for informational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional advice based on a review of individual circumstances. Please contact an attorney regarding your particular legal issues.
Creatives Ask a Lawyer
Aspect Law Group is working with Design Week Portland to bring you “Creatives Ask a Lawyer”!
Aspect Law Group is working with Design Week Portland to bring you "Creatives Ask a Lawyer"! From DWP:
Do you know when you need a contract? Or how to register a trademark? Bryan Wasetis from Aspect Law Group works primarily with artists, designers, and makers on issues we face, like licensing and protecting intellectual property.
He's here to answer all of your burning legal questions and will be working a few responses into a column on our blog.
You can send us questions through Twitter or email.
Keep an eye out for our answers!
Copyright in Characters: What Can I Use?
Learn how copyright law affects video game characters, and ways to avoid copyright infringement. This is the first part in a three-part series.
Q&A: “How do [some video games] get away with using so many famous franchise movie characters? We got DMCA'd for making a robot graphic that ‘resembled R2D2’.” Good question! The answer is actually more complicated than it might seem. Let’s dive into this:
Copyright Law:
For a work to qualify for copyright protection under current US copyright law, it must be an original work of authorship, fixed in a tangible medium of expression. “Original work of authorship” means it must be independently created by the author and possess some minimal degree of creativity. The creativity bar is pretty low, and most things will pass as being creative.
“Fixed in a tangible medium of expression” means that it has to exist somewhere somehow, i.e. writing something down, recording a song, or drawing a picture. Consequently, copyright law does not protect ideas; only the original, fixed expression of that idea by the author is protected.
The distinction here is expression of the idea. Actual copying of the expression of the idea is likely copyright infringement, especially in the commercial context, however copying only the basic idea behind the work is copying unprotected ideas and isn't copyright infringement.
Copyright in Characters:
For characters, the character only becomes protected under copyright law once it becomes a unique expression, i.e. drawing your own rendition of something or adding certain attributes. Concepts like robots, men in black, beefy army dudes with guns, samurai, etc., are called “stock” characters, and don't rise to the standard of creative until the author adds something more or expresses that concept.
This line can get pretty blurry, especially in the context of written stories since there often isn’t a visual element and the author must describe the character with sufficient originality. For video games though, the unique expression is the actual visual character created by the artist.
Famous Characters and Copyright Law:
Famous franchise movie characters, like Rambo, Snake Plisskin, and RoboCop, are protected by copyright law because of the copyright in the film and script, but only to the extent of the creative expression by the author. As I said earlier, copyright law does not protect stock characters. Consequently, any use of a gun-toting cyborg won’t be considered copyright infringement of RoboCop until that cyborg looks and acts like RoboCop.
Also, names alone do not have copyright protection. So just mentioning the name of a character won’t be copyright infringement without more.
The creators of some video games use stock characters and scenery that resemble famous movie franchises. This alone likely doesn’t infringe the copyright of someone else’s work if the game’s character art and scenery are original creations developed by the game company.
Do they bring to mind other notable characters in pop culture because of the context? Totally! But copyright law isn't concerned about that here. That's the area of trademark law, and there may certainly be trademark law issues going on there, as well as rights of publicity.
R2-D2:
So how about using a picture of a robot that looks very similar to R2-D2? Like I said earlier, the idea of robots is not protected. But the expression of a robot with three legs, half-sphere for a head, cylindrical, with blue and white ornamentation? Definitely protected - it's Lucas's expression of a robot.
The other thing about Lucasfilm though, is that they have many of their works trademarked as well. Trademarks are source indicators and trademark law is concerned with likelihood of confusion. So even making a robot that brings to mind R2-D2 could be trademark infringement. Lucasfilm also vigilantly polices its trademarks and copyrights, so I recommend steering clear of that territory.
The Take Away:
Characters can be protected by several theories of law, including copyright law, trademark law, and rights of publicity.
You can’t stop someone from suing you (even if you’re right), and using a famous character may not be worth the risk of a lawsuit, so think about getting a license or using your own original character before attempting to use a famous character.
- Bryan and James
Note: this Q&A was modified to remove the name of the video game referenced in the original question.
Read "Copyright in Characters: What Can I Use? Part II"
Notice: This post is for informational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional advice based on a review of individual circumstances. Please contact an attorney regarding your particular legal issues.
Video Painting and Copyright
Video painting is an intriguing art form that utilizes technology, photography, video, and performance art, while also being a fascinating study in copyright law.
Video painting is an intriguing art form that utilizes technology, photography, video, and performance art. I have always been a fan of works like these due to their transient nature and surrealist elements. Beyond the shear beauty that comes out of it, the copyright implications are also fascinating. On the one hand there is the copyright in the performance art itself as it is being recorded, but there are also the rights to the pictures, videos, accompanying music, art and design elements, and possibly the code written for the software. Just another good reason to make sure you know who owns what, and which elements you may need to license.
Check out this excellent recent installation by SWEATSHOPPE:
From the creators of the work:
"Video painting is a technology the duo developed that allows them to create the illusion that they are painting videos onto walls with electronic paint rollers they built. It works through custom software that they wrote that tracks the position of the paint rollers and projects video wherever they choose to paint, allowing them to explore the relationship between video, mark making and architecture and create live video collages in real time."