Difference between revisions of "Fan fiction"

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=== Kindle Worlds ===
 
=== Kindle Worlds ===
Kindle Worlds is a fan fiction platform created by Amazon, with two distinct features from other fan fiction archives. There aren’t any legal issues, because all works on the site are derived from licensed media properties. Each licensed media work has their own rules for creating fan fiction works. Also, fan fiction authors can make money from what they write. The works are published through Amazon Publishing as e-books and are fully-available through the Kindle store.
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Kindle Worlds is a fan fiction platform created by the company Amazon. It has two features which differentiate it from other fan fiction archives.
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# There's no legal grey area. All works on the site are derived from licensed media properties and each media property has explicit rules from it's creator from which fan fiction writers can adhere to when creating fan works.
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# Fan fiction authors can make money from what they write. Usually, fan fiction writers write as a hobby and don't expect any compensation aside from feedback on their writing quality. With Kindle Worlds, the works are published through Amazon Publishing like any other written work and are fully-available for purchase through the Amazon Kindle store.
  
 
== Legality ==
 
== Legality ==

Revision as of 06:08, 16 March 2018

Fan fiction is a general term that can be used to describe a variety written works about characters from fictional mediums such as movies, video games, books, comic books, etc. It can detail fictional musings about public characters, persona, and people. It is often written by fans of these mediums of works to create their own long-form entry or story based off a work; it’s done for free. These works are then read by other fans of the work and has, over time, has cultivated several online communities devoted to its creation. What is now recognized as modern fan fiction was popularized in the 1960s with ‘fanzines’ made by fans of the popular TV series Star Trek[1]. The work is rarely professionally published or monetized and is usually done as a hobby. As fan fiction gains popularity, several services have allowed fans to publish, and even sell their works. Owners of the original works have varying attitudes about this practice, there are cases in which they have responded with legal action or disapproval of the content.

Notable Examples

Fanfiction.net

Fanfiction.net (or FFN) is the world’s largest source for fan fiction on the web, and accounts for more than 33% of all content about books online[2]. It has the most extensive collection of fan works, both based on popular and obscure works. This includes books, comics, manga, webcomics, television, plays, etc. The site allows users to follow serialized stories, publish their own works, review other's works, and create their own communities and story collections. Notably, Fan Fiction doesn’t let authors publish NC-17 rated content through user-moderation, and enforces restrictions on the types of stories you can submit (i.e. songfic, Choose-Your-Own-Adventure, self-insertion, and non-fiction). Also, certain authors have requested that fan fiction won’t be generated for their works.

Archive of Our Own

Archive of Our Owen (or AO3) is a project derived from the fan-run and fan-created non-profit organization called Organization for Transformative Works. This organization created projects related to defending and promoting a future in which all "fannish works are recognized as legal and transformative, and accepted as legitimate creative activity[3].' It differs from Fanfiction.net in that it allows any kind of fiction, excluding explicitly illegal content such as child pornogrpahy or trade secrets. It doesn't adhere to the legal pressures that other sites have, and advocates for fan fiction to be recognized under 'fair use' in United States law. Additionally, they believe that fan fiction in American law doesn't fall under copyright; therefore, fans should be free to create transformative works as they please.

Kindle Worlds

Kindle Worlds is a fan fiction platform created by the company Amazon. It has two features which differentiate it from other fan fiction archives.

  1. There's no legal grey area. All works on the site are derived from licensed media properties and each media property has explicit rules from it's creator from which fan fiction writers can adhere to when creating fan works.
  2. Fan fiction authors can make money from what they write. Usually, fan fiction writers write as a hobby and don't expect any compensation aside from feedback on their writing quality. With Kindle Worlds, the works are published through Amazon Publishing like any other written work and are fully-available for purchase through the Amazon Kindle store.

Legality

Copyright

In the United States, fan fiction is considered a ‘derivative work’, meaning that it is a work based upon one or more creative works. This includes works like translations, musical arrangements, art reproductions, etc. This falls mostly under United States copyright law; this law states that the owners of the original work have ownership and the exclusive right to “prepare derivative works based upon [their] copyrighted work. The author has exclusive rights and can sue for copyright infringement at any moment they wish.

Fair Use

Fan fiction is not infringing on copyright if it falls under the guise of fair use. Many advocates of fan fiction believe that it falls under this category. This would mean that fan works can be created and are legal under the law. However, this is only determined on a case-by-case basis. If a fan work falls under parody or criticism and are “transformative” in nature, then it is more likely to be seen as fair use.

Controversy

Censorship

fan sites censoring fiction to better comply with the law and author's personal wishes. Others websites ignoring it under 'fair use' or other excuses.

"Real-person fiction"

Is it wrong? Or violating privacy? Or have celebrities given us permission by being a public persona? How do these fictions affect these celebrities in real life?

Sexually Deviant/Explicit Works

Is it morally wrong? Some websites censor? is this ok? what about the positive effects a way for people to express sexuality and sexual feelings? is it ok to do this without authors permission?

Plagiarism

Plagiarism of other fan works. Is it legal? Does it matter since they're technically both derivative works?

References:

  1. Ball, Caroline. (2007). "Who Owns What in Fanfiction: Perceptions of Ownership and Problems of Law."
  2. https://ebookfriendly.com/fan-fiction-websites/
  3. www.transformativeworks.org/faq/