Your metaphor breaks down somewhat when applied. You don’t see the guy who pimps his ride get slapped with a cease and desist order if he creates a “transformative work” with his Mustang.
Your metaphor breaks down somewhat when applied. You don’t see the guy who pimps his ride get slapped with a cease and desist order if he creates a “transformative work” with his Mustang.
They can seize your art yes. They can’t use it. That’s two different things.
That gives the company the right to put a stop to the derivative work. It does not give them the right to take the derivative work and use it as their own, any more than it would give them the right to not pay their employees.
At the same time, your logic would have the company not needing to pay its own artists since the company owns the copyright to the image they’ve created. Whether or not the artist owns the copyright would determine if the artist would be able to sell the image themselves, but doesn’t give the company the right to use…
I played it too. I am also old.
Have you been to the movies lately? This shouldn’t be news to you, since every company is that way.
So?
Actually The Magnificent Seven is a classic western movie from the 60’s but also a lackluster remake of Seven Samurai, a classic samurai movie from the 50’s.
The joke:
I think you missed the joke.
You don’t find anyone making fun of Lance Reddick...
I don’t know. I’m actually a little sad that Destiny is getting a Dinklectomy.
Or Whil Wheaton.
There’s a reason he gets a lot of work. He’s good, and has a lot of range. The funny thing is, he’s probably been in a bunch of things that you’ve never noticed because of it.
Oh my god, what have you done you bastard!
That’s probably for the best.
No, no it wasn’t.
Alone in the Dark on PC, the template from which Resident Evil was wrought.