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"Boldly Going Where No Copyright Claim Has Gone Before
One of the most notorious cases of copyright omission happened in connection with a little show called Star Trek— another NBC series, but this one a production of Desilu Studios. When originally telecast during the 1966-67 TV season, the entire first season’s voyages of the starship Enterprise aired without a single indication of copyright anywhere in the program.
It wasn’t until years later — and after Star Trek had metamorphosed from a short-lived cult TV show into a cultural phenomenon and highly prized commodity — that the copyright lapse even drew any attention. It was at the time of the advent of home video, when a number of small mom-and-pop outfits, believing that first year of Star Trekto be in the public domain, began selling copies of the episodes on videocassette.
Paramount, which had inherited the Star Trek franchise and produced the remaining two years of the series and all of its spin-offs after parent company Gulf + Western purchased Desilu in 1967, sought to regain exclusive rights to the first season by mounting a legal challenge to the little nickel-and-dime distributors that were circulating those first 26 episodes.
The upshot? Based on its existing copyrights on all subsequent Star Trek properties, Paramount won the right to retroactively copyright the entire first season of Star Trek, in the process, successfully suing all of those little companies — the ones that thought they were in the clear selling public domain shows — right out of business."
https://thegolddiggers.wordpress.com/2007/09/21/whose-show-is-it-anyway/
(no subject)
Date: 2016-04-03 07:50 pm (UTC)Now we're looking for the earlier case Paramount vs Thunderbird Films. Case citation mostly but any text welcomed. This is the one that held that Paramount did not own the first copyright to the first two seasons. The Rubinowitz case came 5 or so years later.
MD
(no subject)
Date: 2016-04-03 08:02 pm (UTC)Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corporation [and ten other movie production companies] vs Thomas W. Dunnahoo, dba Thunderbird Films
USCA 9th Cir. (2-2-1981) ¤ 637 F.2d 1338, 209 USPQ 19
Tom Dunnahoo’s company Thunderbird Films sold its reproductions of films believed to be in the public domain. Buyers would order 16mm and Super 8 reproductions.
(no subject)
Date: 2016-04-03 08:25 pm (UTC)No, not this one. It was in the 1970s. They were sued several times. This one was reported in 1975-1976 in fanzines and later in 1978 http://fanlore.org/wiki/Fan_Fiction:IsIt_Legal,OrMerely_Tolerated%3F
"Thunderbird Films was the company that was selling 16mm prints of first and second season Star Trek episodes. They won the suit filed by Paramount.
During that time, the first two seasons were effectively in public domain, since the copyrights were not properly transferred when Gulf & Western acquired both Desilu and Paramount and dissolved Desilu - merging both studio and assets into Paramount.
After losing the suit against Thunderbird Films, Paramount was later able to reacquire ownership and copyright of those episodes in 1978."
(no subject)
Date: 2016-04-03 09:26 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2016-04-03 09:29 pm (UTC)I'm not up to wading through it right now to find out if the mentions of the original lawsuit include the right bits to track it down.
(no subject)
Date: 2016-04-03 09:41 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2016-04-03 10:56 pm (UTC)