Legal / Copyright

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  • Mark
    Adept
    • Oct 2007
    • 130

    Legal / Copyright

    Has the Angband community ever had (or feared) a letter from the Tolkien estate, claiming we are using their intellectual property without permission?

    A few times I've had this thought, and it was sparked again by reading a question on the development forums about why no iOS port?

    I figured one of the reasons for no iOS port is that Apple would review the game (unlike Google Play who more or less allow anything) and find we are using copyrighted names, and if it drew too much attention could be the start of having to remove references to Tolkien's characters.
  • Nick
    Vanilla maintainer
    • Apr 2007
    • 9637

    #2
    It can't be ruled out (Anne McCaffrey's people came after PernAngband), but I think it's really unlikely.

    Here is a quote from the Tolkien estate FAQ (about the tales of the Fall of Gondolin, and Beren and Luthien):
    Can I / someone else write / complete / develop my / their own version of one of these unfinished tales ? (or any others)

    The simple answer is NO.
    You are of course free to do whatever you like for your own private enjoyment, but there is no question of any commercial exploitation of this form of "fan-fiction".
    Also, in these days of the Internet, and privately produced collectors’ items for sale on eBay, we must make it as clear as possible that the Tolkien Estate never has, and never will authorize the commercialisation or distribution of any works of this type.
    The Estate exists to defend the integrity of J.R.R. Tolkien’s writings. Christopher Tolkien's work as his father’s literary executor has always been to publish as faithfully and honestly as possible his father's completed and uncompleted works, without adaptation or embellishment.
    So my guess is that we are inoffensive and amateur enough for them not to care. The only times I am aware of them suing people are for things that they feel are destructive to the legacy (eg slot machines) or in the case of the movies and associated merchandise where there was the prospect of losing control (and also lots of money involved).

    Opinions on Christopher Tolkien vary; I tend to think that the last sentence of that quote expresses his attitude pretty well.

    I think Warner Brothers are a bigger danger, but still essentially no danger.
    One for the Dark Lord on his dark throne
    In the Land of Mordor where the Shadows lie.

    Comment

    • Estie
      Veteran
      • Apr 2008
      • 2347

      #3
      Im very unversed in these matters, but curious. The estate quote clearly draws the line at commercial exploitation, which vanilla is obviously not, so I wonder why (and with what legal argument) they shut down Pern. Was there an attempt to sell it ? Or is the license viewed as something akin to commercial ?

      Comment

      • Nick
        Vanilla maintainer
        • Apr 2007
        • 9637

        #4
        Originally posted by Estie
        Im very unversed in these matters, but curious. The estate quote clearly draws the line at commercial exploitation, which vanilla is obviously not, so I wonder why (and with what legal argument) they shut down Pern. Was there an attempt to sell it ? Or is the license viewed as something akin to commercial ?
        The Tolkien estate had nothing to do with PernAngband. The story is here, but essentially it was because Ubisoft had the rights to make Pern games and did not want any competition. So PernAngband was changed to the (then) Tolkien-themed ToME, which was highly successful for several years in that form with no interference from anyone.

        EDIT: BTW, loved Leon Marrick's response to the proposition that doing something against the author's will is disrespectful:
        And, if at any time J.R.R. Tolkien should rise from the dead and
        make his will known, I will obey him. Until then, I shall believe
        that we are part of the process of making him the greatest modern myth-
        maker of the English-speaking world, a goal that Tolkien himself deliberately
        set out to accomplish.
        Last edited by Nick; January 27, 2014, 13:42. Reason: Obligatory Leon quote
        One for the Dark Lord on his dark throne
        In the Land of Mordor where the Shadows lie.

        Comment

        • Estie
          Veteran
          • Apr 2008
          • 2347

          #5
          Thanks for the link - it was an educating read.

          Comment

          • nppangband
            NPPAngband Maintainer
            • Dec 2008
            • 926

            #6
            Originally posted by Nick


            So my guess is that we are inoffensive and amateur enough for them not to care. The only times I am aware of them suing people are for things that they feel are destructive to the legacy (eg slot machines) or in the case of the movies and associated merchandise where there was the prospect of losing control (and also lots of money involved).

            Opinions on Christopher Tolkien vary; I tend to think that the last sentence of that quote expresses his attitude pretty well.

            I think Warner Brothers are a bigger danger, but still essentially no danger.
            I think Angband probably qualifies as harmless fan fiction that they tolerate. We are prominently listed on Wikipedia as "unofficial Middle-Earth videogames". So I am sure Angband has been given a good look over by a fleet of lawyers on behalf of the Tolkien estate, and has been judged "harmless".




            I will admit, I did not think about this in my efforts to make a QT port that can be played on Ipads. Apple will probably never allow me to distribute it for free from their app store. I would have to redo all of the Tolkien based elements in the game, which, outside of the names and descriptions of some ego items, artifacts, and monsters, isn't very much.

            Looks like in the ipad version the player will have to descend into the pits of Ingband to kill Norgoth at level 100.
            NPPAngband current home page: http://nppangband.bitshepherd.net/
            Source code repository:
            https://github.com/nppangband/NPPAngband_QT
            Downloads:
            https://app.box.com/s/1x7k65ghsmc31usmj329pb8415n1ux57

            Comment

            • ekolis
              Knight
              • Apr 2007
              • 921

              #7
              Originally posted by nppangband
              I will admit, I did not think about this in my efforts to make a QT port that can be played on Ipads. Apple will probably never allow me to distribute it for free from their app store. I would have to redo all of the Tolkien based elements in the game, which, outside of the names and descriptions of some ego items, artifacts, and monsters, isn't very much.
              ...thus implying that if you charged money for it, Apple would be A-OK with the game?
              You read the scroll labeled NOBIMUS UPSCOTI...
              You are surrounded by a stasis field!
              The tengu tries to teleport, but fails!

              Comment

              • Derakon
                Prophet
                • Dec 2009
                • 9022

                #8
                Originally posted by nppangband
                Looks like in the ipad version the player will have to descend into the pits of Ingband to kill Norgoth at level 100.
                Translate the names from whichever in-universe language is used into English. So you head into the Iron Prison to kill the Black Foe of the World and his lackey, The Abhorred Dread.

                Comment

                • nppangband
                  NPPAngband Maintainer
                  • Dec 2008
                  • 926

                  #9
                  Originally posted by ekolis
                  ...thus implying that if you charged money for it, Apple would be A-OK with the game?
                  I actually threw the "for free" in there so nobody in the Angband community would get the impression that I intended to charge for any version I manage to get up on the apple store. I just didn't word it as well as it should have been.

                  I don't think Apple would allow a work that uses so many Tolkien characters and names without permission. IMHO they would be at risk, even for allowing me to distribute a free game.
                  Last edited by nppangband; January 28, 2014, 05:07.
                  NPPAngband current home page: http://nppangband.bitshepherd.net/
                  Source code repository:
                  https://github.com/nppangband/NPPAngband_QT
                  Downloads:
                  https://app.box.com/s/1x7k65ghsmc31usmj329pb8415n1ux57

                  Comment

                  • nppangband
                    NPPAngband Maintainer
                    • Dec 2008
                    • 926

                    #10
                    Originally posted by Derakon
                    Translate the names from whichever in-universe language is used into English. So you head into the Iron Prison to kill the Black Foe of the World and his lackey, The Abhorred Dread.
                    That's a good idea! I was also thinking about just using the random name generator to scramble all the Tolkien character's names , places, and artifacts as well. The gameplay really has nothing to do with the actual works of fiction. It is not like the ultimate goal of the game is to drop the one ring into a volcano or anything like that.

                    To download and play the real game on a mac computer would be simple. The player could just download the game from the Apple App store that includes sanitized edit files, and then just replace them on the computer with the real NPPAngband and NPPMoria edit files. I don't think that could be done as easily on an Ipad, however.
                    NPPAngband current home page: http://nppangband.bitshepherd.net/
                    Source code repository:
                    https://github.com/nppangband/NPPAngband_QT
                    Downloads:
                    https://app.box.com/s/1x7k65ghsmc31usmj329pb8415n1ux57

                    Comment

                    • Mark
                      Adept
                      • Oct 2007
                      • 130

                      #11
                      Although if Apple realised it was a Tolkien-referencing game they would probably not approve the game, there is a good chance they won't realise - at least not on first review.

                      Apple spend very little time reviewing a game; especially if it is free and offers no IAP - there is less to test for and there is less scope for user or legal backlash against free apps.

                      They typically boot the app on their latest devices, latest iOS, and expect no crashes and for it not to be obviously offensive or patently useless.

                      How much playtime would you need to see it was Tolkien-ish? Obviously if the store description mentioned it that would be a giveaway - and *we* know that "Angband" is a Tolkien term, but the average Apple lackey won't. So...


                      ...Smeagol
                      ...Farmer Maggot
                      ...Bilbo the Friendly (is that right?)

                      You could probably just omit from the first 20 minutes of gameplay anything Tolkien-ish and you'd be fine - once approved you could update the store description text (but not search keywords). The Google Play app has been downloaded less than 1,000 times, if iOS were similar then it wouldn't get above the noise level to draw attention to itself.

                      Comment

                      • Nick
                        Vanilla maintainer
                        • Apr 2007
                        • 9637

                        #12
                        I think it's really not going to be a problem - we're way further under the radar than, say, this.
                        One for the Dark Lord on his dark throne
                        In the Land of Mordor where the Shadows lie.

                        Comment

                        • molybdenum
                          Apprentice
                          • May 2013
                          • 84

                          #13
                          Originally posted by Mark
                          Although if Apple realised it was a Tolkien-referencing game they would probably not approve the game, there is a good chance they won't realise - at least not on first review.
                          App review is really only for Apple to apply their guidelines on incoming apps. They don't look for copyright violations. However, if someone reports a potential violation to them, they will immediately pull the app. It then becomes the developer's responsibility to solve the infringement claim.

                          The same applies to GPL-bound apps; see the issues around VLC for iOS for an example.

                          Comment

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