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by belorn
3066 days ago
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While it would be nice if the legal system clarified the issue, I would lean towards that copyright can not be expanded to cover self recording. Record of that kind will naturally include the environment, and as such, the legal system need to ask what the intention is and what conflict of interests may exist rather than a black or white view. If someone record themselves eating at a restaurant then the music in the background and the painting on the walls should not dictate the legal status of the recording. Same should hold true for any recording where the intent is not to record the works of others but rather the person doing the recording. There is a similar legal uncertainty revolving cosplay, and the details are very similar. The content of movies and games is the inspiration of the costumes, but the intent is not to compete on the same market that the games and movies operate on and there really should not exist any reasonable claim of conflict between creators. |
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You can go on YouTube and have multi hour long recordings of single player games that turn the game into a movie for story focused games I can definitely understand why some publishers would like to put an end to this as I have watched a few of those instead of buying the game and I know quite a few other people that would.
In other cases the streamer is the focus of the video either as an “athlete” or a “skilled professional” and you watch how they play or as an an entertainer where the game in the background doesn’t serve any purpose other than a filler or a tie in.
As for cosplay the legality while not formalized is pretty well established if you commercialize by for example selling kits, molds etc. without licensing you’ll get sued if you just cosplay at conventions no one would care. “Professional Cosplayers” are currently the problem because they blur the line between the comercial and amateur/ hobbyists as many of them well the really pretty ones are paid to attend events and do promotions basically as boothbabes in costumes this the biggest thorn as those events are often not sancationed by the owners of the IP or and could go counter to their principles or at least the public face they try to maintain. Yes there are outliers like Nintendo and in some cases companies that didn’t like what was portrayed on stream but the former is getting better and the latter doesn’t just apply to games you can still be sued in civil court for damages caused even if the content was under fair use.