Oui mais non, le principe d'une fanfic c'est que tu es, de base, hors les clous et ne peux réclamer quoi que ce soit devant la justice. C'est juste toléré (et pas par tous comme on le voit) mais ça n'est pas vraiment légal à partir du moment où tu partages au monde entier ta création. Du point de vue moral, éventuellement, sachant que le principe même d'une fanfic est d'utiliser la création d'autrui et que donc il faut garder en tête qu'on peut se faire taper sur les doigts à n'importe quel moment.
Et j'avais entendu dire que c'était légal de les publier tant qu'il n'y a pas d'argent fait dessus
Il n'y a pas aussi une histoire d'importance des gains ?
Why does the OTW believe that transformative works are legal?Copyright is intended to protect the creator’s right to profit from her work for a period of time to encourage creative endeavor and the widespread sharing of knowledge. But this does not preclude the right of others to respond to the original work, either with critical commentary, parody, or, we believe, transformative works.In the United States, copyright is limited by the fair use doctrine. The legal case of Campbell v. Acuff-Rose held that transformative uses receive special consideration in fair use analysis. For those interested in reading in-depth legal analysis, more information can be found on the Fanlore Legal Analysis page.
As mentioned in a previous post, US copyright law gives the right to create derivative works exclusively to the authors who created that original work. On the surface, this would seem to make fanfiction a clear violation of the law. However, according to many lawyers, such as those associated with the Organization for Transformative Works, the nonprofit organization that runs the AO3 website and offers legal advice and assistance to fanfiction authors, fanfiction is absolutely legal under the fair use doctrine. Fanfiction is fair use as long as the work is “transformative,” meaning that the new author added content with new meaning and value to the original work. The derivative work must also be “noncommercial” in nature, meaning the author does not make any money from their fanfiction. These two ideas line up with two of the four previously mentioned principles of fair use, which look at the “nature” of the work and its effect on the market for the original work.
Personne n'a passé le message aux avocats qui bosse pour AO3 dans ce cas. https://www.transformativeworks.org/faq/https://library.jefferson.edu/librarynews/index.php/2022/02/23/fair-use-and-fanfiction-3-of-4/#:~:text=However%2C%20according%20to%20many%20lawyers,under%20the%20fair%20use%20doctrine.Si le serveur qui héberge la fanfic est aux US c'est safe.
Mais ça rend ton jamais faux.
Dans la mesure où certains auteurs et ayant droits autorisent voire encouragent les fanwork dire que c'est toujours 100% illégal est un peu excessif.
tu te demandes quelles conneries vont encore circuler indéfiniment.
Ah ben ça y est. Il était plus que temps. Ils vont lutter et faire chier de toutes leurs forces mais l'étreinte commence à se desserrer.https://actualitte.com/article/115018/edito/disney-a-fini-par-se-faire-mickey