Jyrki21 Member
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#8 · Posted: 12 Jan 2005 06:27
Harrock:I'm no expert on Belgian law (or law in general!) but you'd think that in the case of the âœadultâ parodies they might have grounds for prosecution under some kind of obsenities act, especially with Tintin being a children's book character.
Well, in the common law system, it all comes down to "fair use." That means both the category of use is fair (private study, critique, etc.) and the way in which it was used was fair too. Parody is generally seen as an embodiment of criticism, but here in Canada, at least, courts have been slow to adopt it. If ever challenged, publications like "Breaking Free" would probably get slapped with an injunction. Less likely in the United States, unless the sheer amount of copying or disrespectful nature was deemed to render the use unfair for the purpose. Not sure about the UK, to be honest.
But as to the question of using the characters in lewd situations, while this is not a specific matter I've studied, there is a doctrine of "moral rights" in intellectual property law that basically says that an author should have a certain degree of control over his/her creation. Again, I know little about them, but I imagine a pornographic depiction of children's characters would be right up there.
Moulinsart could also have a very realistic common law action in passing off against writers of works like "Breaking Free." This is similar to trademark infringement (which they could also try, as presumably phrases like "The Adventures of Tintin" are trademarked), and basically means either that the authors of the parodies are suggesting (purposely or negligently) that their works are in fact the works of Hergé or Moulinsart, or else they are damaging Moulinsart's 'goodwill' by introducing doubt into the market of whether any given work is a real Tintin book or not.
Fans like us would say, "Well, no one would ever take 'Breaking Free' for a real Tintin adventure!" But you'd be surprised how little credit consumers are given in common law courts, especially in the UK.
Harrock: well-documented cases of fraud where eBay have been very slow to react.
Yeah, I think eBay just doesn't care enough yet. If Moulinsart starts threatening legal action, then we might see them wake up a little.
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