How is this guy Warner's "customer?" He ain't giving them a cent in business.Nicolaus99 said:DC is within its rights here, but this is also another instance of where the pirates aren't crooks so much as they are poorly served customers.
How is this guy Warner's "customer?" He ain't giving them a cent in business.Nicolaus99 said:DC is within its rights here, but this is also another instance of where the pirates aren't crooks so much as they are poorly served customers.
Do they have any experience making and selling automobiles and boats? Why would they want to own and operate a business that has nothing to do with their core business operations? It's Time Warner. Not General Motors.LogicNProportion said:...And they simply didn't just buy him and his store, thus, keeping an awesome idea which would probably help line their pockets a bit more?
/sigh
DC...y u so dum?
Right, because it's not like they don't sell merchandise on the many, MANY franchises they own. True, this would be a specialized kind of thing, and they would probably have to strike a promotional deal with a company that actually works on cars, but I still think it would be a good idea to keep around.JDKJ said:Do they have any experience making and selling automobiles and boats? Why would they want to own and operate a business that has nothing to do with their core business operations? It's Time Warner. Not General Motors.LogicNProportion said:...And they simply didn't just buy him and his store, thus, keeping an awesome idea which would probably help line their pockets a bit more?
/sigh
DC...y u so dum?
They don't actually make and sell that merchandise themselves. They license others to do so and take a cut in the form of licensing fees. And that's what this guy is fucking with: their ability to license their products.LogicNProportion said:Right, because it's not like they don't sell merchandise on the many, MANY franchises they own. True, this would be a specialized kind of thing, and they would probably have to strike a promotional deal with a company that actually works on cars, but I still think it would be a good idea to keep around.JDKJ said:Do they have any experience making and selling automobiles and boats? Why would they want to own and operate a business that has nothing to do with their core business operations? It's Time Warner. Not General Motors.LogicNProportion said:...And they simply didn't just buy him and his store, thus, keeping an awesome idea which would probably help line their pockets a bit more?
/sigh
DC...y u so dum?
This is just the thing rich people (often nerds/closet-nerds with a disgusting amount of disposable income) would (and have for many things like it) pay out the nose for.
It doesn't have to be "exact." As long as Warner has a trademark on the distinctive shape of the Batmobile and the Batboat (which I assume they have), any product that's sufficiently similar in appearance to cause confusion in the minds of consumers that the product is in fact an official Batmobile or Batboat is enough to constitute trademark infringement.Sean951 said:Unless he made exact copies, I would think the cars, other than the obviously trademarked logo, should be fine. They are of his design and based around another, but without the plans there is almost no way he could do it exact. That said, I am not a lawyer so I don't actually know.
So? If I'm a record label and I decide that I'm no longer going to print and sell copies of a song in my catalog despite there still being strong demand for the song among the record-buying public, does that give someone the right to bootleg my record? It's my record. I can do with it whatever I like.Nicolaus99 said:Some peeps want Batmobiles. If whatever measures DC made to make the product available were adequate, they'd have gotten them there rather than from this guy.
Wouldn't that make a lot of cosplay costumes illegal?JDKJ said:It doesn't have to be "exact." As long as Warner has a trademark on the distinctive shape of the Batmobile and the Batboat (which I assume they have), any product that's sufficiently similar in appearance to cause confusion in the minds of consumers that the product is in fact an official Batmobile or Batboat is enough to constitute trademark infringement.Sean951 said:Unless he made exact copies, I would think the cars, other than the obviously trademarked logo, should be fine. They are of his design and based around another, but without the plans there is almost no way he could do it exact. That said, I am not a lawyer so I don't actually know.
Nope. Trademark infringement isn't trademark infringement unless the product is placed in commerce (i.e., offered for sale). If you make your own Batman costume to wear to Comic-Con, then fine (you may be "weird" but you aren't an infringer). But if you make a Batman costume and offer it for sale to someone else who wants to wear it to Comic-Con and you don't have a license to do so, then you're infringing Warner's trademark.Sean951 said:Wouldn't that make a lot of cosplay costumes illegal?JDKJ said:It doesn't have to be "exact." As long as Warner has a trademark on the distinctive shape of the Batmobile and the Batboat (which I assume they have), any product that's sufficiently similar in appearance to cause confusion in the minds of consumers that the product is in fact an official Batmobile or Batboat is enough to constitute trademark infringement.Sean951 said:Unless he made exact copies, I would think the cars, other than the obviously trademarked logo, should be fine. They are of his design and based around another, but without the plans there is almost no way he could do it exact. That said, I am not a lawyer so I don't actually know.
Ok, thanks. I never really understood how all that stuff worked since it really hasn't ever effected me.JDKJ said:Nope. Trademark infringement isn't trademark infringement unless the product is placed in commerce (i.e., offered for sale). If you make your own Batman costume to wear to Comic-Con, then fine (you may be "weird" but you aren't an infringer). But if you make a Batman costume and offer it for sale to someone else who wants to wear it to Comic-Con and you don't have a license to do so, then you're infringing Warner's trademark.Sean951 said:Wouldn't that make a lot of cosplay costumes illegal?JDKJ said:It doesn't have to be "exact." As long as Warner has a trademark on the distinctive shape of the Batmobile and the Batboat (which I assume they have), any product that's sufficiently similar in appearance to cause confusion in the minds of consumers that the product is in fact an official Batmobile or Batboat is enough to constitute trademark infringement.Sean951 said:Unless he made exact copies, I would think the cars, other than the obviously trademarked logo, should be fine. They are of his design and based around another, but without the plans there is almost no way he could do it exact. That said, I am not a lawyer so I don't actually know.
You can go to Party City and I'll bet you can find a Batman costume to buy. But I'll also bet its properly licensed.
You've never had a girlfriend that wanted you to do the nasty with her while wearing a Superman costume? You have no idea what you're missing.Sean951 said:Ok, thanks. I never really understood how all that stuff worked since it really hasn't ever effected me.JDKJ said:Nope. Trademark infringement isn't trademark infringement unless the product is placed in commerce (i.e., offered for sale). If you make your own Batman costume to wear to Comic-Con, then fine (you may be "weird" but you aren't an infringer). But if you make a Batman costume and offer it for sale to someone else who wants to wear it to Comic-Con and you don't have a license to do so, then you're infringing Warner's trademark.Sean951 said:Wouldn't that make a lot of cosplay costumes illegal?JDKJ said:It doesn't have to be "exact." As long as Warner has a trademark on the distinctive shape of the Batmobile and the Batboat (which I assume they have), any product that's sufficiently similar in appearance to cause confusion in the minds of consumers that the product is in fact an official Batmobile or Batboat is enough to constitute trademark infringement.Sean951 said:Unless he made exact copies, I would think the cars, other than the obviously trademarked logo, should be fine. They are of his design and based around another, but without the plans there is almost no way he could do it exact. That said, I am not a lawyer so I don't actually know.
You can go to Party City and I'll bet you can find a Batman costume to buy. But I'll also bet its properly licensed.
No, can't say that I have, lol. I do have an ex who enjoyed cosplaying at the big Con event they have here.JDKJ said:You've never had a girlfriend that wanted you to do the nasty with her while wearing a Superman costume? You have no idea what you're missing.Sean951 said:Ok, thanks. I never really understood how all that stuff worked since it really hasn't ever effected me.JDKJ said:Nope. Trademark infringement isn't trademark infringement unless the product is placed in commerce (i.e., offered for sale). If you make your own Batman costume to wear to Comic-Con, then fine (you may be "weird" but you aren't an infringer). But if you make a Batman costume and offer it for sale to someone else who wants to wear it to Comic-Con and you don't have a license to do so, then you're infringing Warner's trademark.Sean951 said:Wouldn't that make a lot of cosplay costumes illegal?JDKJ said:It doesn't have to be "exact." As long as Warner has a trademark on the distinctive shape of the Batmobile and the Batboat (which I assume they have), any product that's sufficiently similar in appearance to cause confusion in the minds of consumers that the product is in fact an official Batmobile or Batboat is enough to constitute trademark infringement.Sean951 said:Unless he made exact copies, I would think the cars, other than the obviously trademarked logo, should be fine. They are of his design and based around another, but without the plans there is almost no way he could do it exact. That said, I am not a lawyer so I don't actually know.
You can go to Party City and I'll bet you can find a Batman costume to buy. But I'll also bet its properly licensed.
"Up, up, and awaaaaaay!!"
Did she wanna do the nasty in cosplay? If she was in Wonder Woman cosplay, that'd be so cool. Wonder Woman's a hottie.Sean951 said:No, can't say that I have, lol. I do have an ex who enjoyed cosplaying at the big Con event they have here.JDKJ said:You've never had a girlfriend that wanted you to do the nasty with her while wearing a Superman costume? You have no idea what you're missing.Sean951 said:Ok, thanks. I never really understood how all that stuff worked since it really hasn't ever effected me.JDKJ said:Nope. Trademark infringement isn't trademark infringement unless the product is placed in commerce (i.e., offered for sale). If you make your own Batman costume to wear to Comic-Con, then fine (you may be "weird" but you aren't an infringer). But if you make a Batman costume and offer it for sale to someone else who wants to wear it to Comic-Con and you don't have a license to do so, then you're infringing Warner's trademark.Sean951 said:Wouldn't that make a lot of cosplay costumes illegal?JDKJ said:It doesn't have to be "exact." As long as Warner has a trademark on the distinctive shape of the Batmobile and the Batboat (which I assume they have), any product that's sufficiently similar in appearance to cause confusion in the minds of consumers that the product is in fact an official Batmobile or Batboat is enough to constitute trademark infringement.Sean951 said:Unless he made exact copies, I would think the cars, other than the obviously trademarked logo, should be fine. They are of his design and based around another, but without the plans there is almost no way he could do it exact. That said, I am not a lawyer so I don't actually know.
You can go to Party City and I'll bet you can find a Batman costume to buy. But I'll also bet its properly licensed.
"Up, up, and awaaaaaay!!"
That's what I figure happened.KeyMaster45 said:Hmm, well considering the Fiberglass people aren't making anything other than the 66' batmobile he's technically filling a void DC hadn't already. I assume they already approached him about getting an official license and he said no? The one from fiberglass look nice, but I think I want the burton batmobile; I say DC just settle with the guy for a licensing agreement so when I win the lottery I can pimp it down the highway in the burton batmobile.
The response to the length of my posts is mixed. I am capable of writing shorter messages, and even learned and used Eprime in college, but usually in doing so a lot of information is missed. I have a tendency to head off a lot of counterpoints that I know could be made, before they are made, and give backround on what I'm saying to justify it. Without doing so, there might occasionally be concern over trolling. What's more, I've had people occasionally respond to commentary like your making by saying they don't want me to reduce the size of my posts as well, due to the amount of information.AsurasFinest said:This is going off topic, but have you ever considered not writing a wall of text?Therumancer said:DrNobody18 said:And he didn't think that DC might take exception to him making a fortune off their designs and logo's why, exactly? Seriously, how out of it do you have to be to think that you can get away with this, a full-size counterfeit bat-car selling business with website and all isn't exactly subtle.
Well, we're making a big assumption that he didn't ask to be honest. In a lot of cases where something this flagrent is going on, you have someone who DOES ask to do something like this, gets permission verbally, goes ahead and does it, but then becomes profitable enough to sue and winds up in a position without any paperwork or witnesses to a "verbal contract".
This is a big deal in Hollywood in paticular where there is a long history of business being done literally on a handshake. Contract law can be a mess, and I tend to think back to one case a while back where Kim Basinger wound up in court over her alleged agreement to appear in the movie "Boxing Helena", which she denied. She wound up losing the case and suffering millions in losses (well potentially) but then overturned it in an appeal. It's not all that famous a case right now, but it gets down to how messed up contract law is, and how dubious things like this can be.
Speaking entirely for myself, unless I missed something in the article where the guy said he didn't have permission, I'd tend to believe this is going to get complicated. Especially seeing as if the guy has a brain, even if it's a lie, he can probably give DC enough of a headache to give up on financial compensation (and just get him to agree to stop) by claiming he had a verbal contract gained by asking if it was okay to do.
See, verbal contract is a mess with a good lawyer, because while it can be argued that someone who says someone said something was okay didn't have the authority to make a deal like that, a lot also depends on whether the other party knew they didn't have that authority. I probably wouldn't win if I was trying to get something out of someone, but with a decent lawyer if I had three buddies agree to lie on my behalf about someone I "really believed was in a position of authority to make this desician" telling me something was okay, I could probably get a lawsuit to back off since when a jury is involved in a civil case it comes down to a preponderance of evidence, and clear and convincing testimony, the same standards to presenting evidence don't exist that are in a criminal trial.
Simply put, I doubt this guy is going to really have more happen to him than having to close down his business. If he has an intimidating enough lawyer, I doubt he'll even have to hand over the money he made so far... unless of course he already SAID he knew he didn't have permission... assuming of course that he DIDN'T ask DC to begin with, and that's always possible because he's operating so publically. It's not some kind of shady, backroom business run by a guy who was apparently afraid of prosecution. He also apparently operated long enough where it also raises some questions.
Most of it is meaningless and could be summed up in one paragraph but you insist on writing 3-4 all of which say nothing and is useless to anyone trying to read it.
Be to the point and concise, not make everyone read a huge wall of text just to find the points you might make, if any.