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Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/22 20:02:47


Post by: Azreal13


 Mentlegen324 wrote:
 A Town Called Malus wrote:
 Gert wrote:
I mean GW will have to let the law get in the way because the company isn't run by people who are utterly brainless.
There isn't a shred of evidence to suggest GW will go after satirical pieces of media.


GW claimed to own, in a lawsuit which they took all the way to court, trademarks on halberds, broadswords, wolf fur, snakes and plasma (among many other ludicrous claims).


Got a link to this stuff specifically? I'm assuming it's part of the chapterhouse thing, but those examples are baffling because that's not what trademarks cover. Surely there must be more to it?


That you think asking that is a reasonable question is telling in and of itself. People aren't making this gak up, it just sounds like they're making this gak up.

Fill your boots, hundreds and hundreds of pages worth..

https://www.dakkadakka.com/dakkaforum/posts/list/355433.page


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/22 20:17:42


Post by: Polonius


 BaronIveagh wrote:
On Dark Reign our reviews of FFG's Role play material contained 'images of GW IP'. I'm fairly sure a copy of the GW C&D we received was shared here on Dakka, but as this thread goes on, it's increasingly obvious that most of the posters are newer players that don't remember this gak.


I'll acknowledge that C&Ds for stuff like that is really on the outskirts of the law, since as a review you would have a strong fair use argument.

So, here's where things get... tricky. There's a ton of grey area in all of this stuff. Basically, the law can sent some rough guidelines for what is and isn't fair use, but at the end of the day, it comes down to the court to make a call. GW either had terrible legal advice (doubtful) or sought lawyers that would perform hyper strict actions. Eventually a firm will take the money to issue the C&D, since there is at least a colorable claim.

Give that the management team of the time has been replaced, and GW has significantly shifted gears when it comes to previews and reviews, I think they realized that bullying small sites, forums, and individuals wasn't actually helping. It was also costing money, because lawyers bill by the hours.

The actions of the prior management aside, these current guidelines hew pretty closely to generally accepted definitions of fair use.


Automatically Appended Next Post:
 Tyran wrote:
The Chapterhouse was an example of GW's legal team being overzealous. Had they limited themselves to the actual violations of copyright Chapterhouse was guilty of, they would had gotten a legal victory.

The error wasn't in suing Chapterhouse, the error was trying to bite far more than what the law dictated they could chew.


they did achieve a legal victory, and Chapterhouse went out of business.

it was a pyrrhic victory, in that they spent a fortune and lost on the one thing everybody seemed to think they would (shoulderpad shapes), but they protected a lot more of their stuff than I would have guessed.



Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/22 20:23:32


Post by: warboss


 Tyran wrote:
The Chapterhouse was an example of GW's legal team being overzealous. Had they limited themselves to the actual violations of copyright Chapterhouse was guilty of, they would had gotten a legal victory.

The error wasn't in suing Chapterhouse, the error was trying to bite far more than what the law dictated they could chew.


You take that back right now! GW invented Roman numerals in the 1980s!


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/22 20:23:37


Post by: BaronIveagh


Since someone asked about it, here's a link to the very old thread on the last time GW lost their minds and started sending C&D letters to fansites.

https://www.dakkadakka.com/dakkaforum/posts/list/0/264704.page


For those wishing to read a GW Cease and Desist. Took me a while to find it.




Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/22 20:34:05


Post by: Azreal13


Give that the management team of the time has been replaced, and GW has significantly shifted gears when it comes to previews and reviews, I think they realized that bullying small sites, forums, and individuals wasn't actually helping. It was also costing money, because lawyers bill by the hours.

The actions of the prior management aside, these current guidelines hew pretty closely to generally accepted definitions of fair use.


A change in CEO is not a replacement of management. Rountree was CFO through all of this. Kirby may not be as directly involved anymore, but he isn't gone by any means. The current CFO was the Company Secretary back when CHS was current, and the current Company Secretary is a solicitor who joined in 2010.

I'll happily concede that's enough changes for different thinking to win out, but there's still a critical number of the same people with likely similar thinking by the same measure.


Automatically Appended Next Post:
Plus they have salaried legal people, they're spending the cash on salaries, not invoices.


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/22 21:00:23


Post by: Mentlegen324


 Azreal13 wrote:
 Mentlegen324 wrote:
 A Town Called Malus wrote:
 Gert wrote:
I mean GW will have to let the law get in the way because the company isn't run by people who are utterly brainless.
There isn't a shred of evidence to suggest GW will go after satirical pieces of media.


GW claimed to own, in a lawsuit which they took all the way to court, trademarks on halberds, broadswords, wolf fur, snakes and plasma (among many other ludicrous claims).


Got a link to this stuff specifically? I'm assuming it's part of the chapterhouse thing, but those examples are baffling because that's not what trademarks cover. Surely there must be more to it?


That you think asking that is a reasonable question is telling in and of itself. People aren't making this gak up, it just sounds like they're making this gak up.

Fill your boots, hundreds and hundreds of pages worth..

https://www.dakkadakka.com/dakkaforum/posts/list/355433.page


How is that not a reasonable question? Having only seem summaries of the whole thing I hadn't actually seen those examples said or quoted before. I didn't really follow the lawsuit at the time so have missed quite a lot of the specifics of it, it seems.

Reading one of the actual documents from the time, GW even seems to say they aren't outright claiming those things as their own thing, but rather they're elements associated with their work that help identify them. So it seems more a case of "Our miniatures heavily feature roman numerals and stylized wings as part of their identity, so you doing so is trying to evoke ours" sort of thing, which still seems quite absurd but I suppose it's slightly more understandable than "You created a miniature with roman numerals, we own roman numerals and no one can use them".


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/22 21:11:00


Post by: Azreal13


Its only appears to be a reasonable question if you aren't aware of the utterly flying rodent gak stuff that went on. If you were better informed, you wouldn't be asking.

Certain details may be filtered through years of internet hyperbole, but not as much nor as far as you'd think. Somewhere in that stack of documents is a list of terms they were asserting impinged, up to and including, IIRC, halberd.


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/22 21:21:06


Post by: Mentlegen324


 Azreal13 wrote:
Its only appears to be a reasonable question if you aren't aware of the utterly flying rodent gak stuff that went on. If you were better informed, you wouldn't be asking.

Certain details may be filtered through years of internet hyperbole, but not as much nor as far as you'd think. Somewhere in that stack of documents is a list of terms they were asserting impinged, up to and including, IIRC, halberd.


And also within those documents is them saying that they haven't tried to claim they own those terms outright and no one can use them, but rather in the context they're something associated with the look and identity of their products:



Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/22 21:26:12


Post by: Mentlegen324




Yes, that is what I'm referring to. The section on the bottom half of page 28 states they haven't tried to claim they have those as unique trademarks they own outright in themselves but rather they have an association of them with their products, with the document saying that GW "has never argued (and cannot credibly do so) that any reference to wings, eagle wings, or even angel wings qualifies as protected under the Lanham Act." followed by a quote from GW saying they aren't claiming those, but rather the "unique association" of them.


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/22 21:32:55


Post by: Azreal13


Look, there's hundreds of documents, hours of testimony, pages and pages of discussion. I really wouldn't get hung up one thing that I'm not even confident is what you think it is.



Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/22 21:37:14


Post by: BaronIveagh


 Mentlegen324 wrote:


Yes, that is what I'm referring to. The section on the bottom half of page 28 states they haven't tried to claim they have those as unique trademarks they own outright in themselves but rather they have an association of them with their products, with the document saying that GW "has never argued (and cannot credibly do so) that any reference to wings, eagle wings, or even angel wings qualifies as protected under the Lanham Act." followed by a quote from GW saying they aren't claiming those, but rather the "unique association" of them.


The 'Unique Association' in question being 28mm heroic scale, it turned out, when the judge wanted them to clarify. BTW: this went down in flames, IIRC.


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/22 22:03:57


Post by: Tyran



 Polonius wrote:

they did achieve a legal victory, and Chapterhouse went out of business.

it was a pyrrhic victory, in that they spent a fortune and lost on the one thing everybody seemed to think they would (shoulderpad shapes), but they protected a lot more of their stuff than I would have guessed.


They both achieved phyrric victories, and Chapterhouse did won most of the lawsuit.


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/22 22:26:53


Post by: Elmir


Warhammer+ is such an amazing deal, AMIRITE GAIZ?!

This is nothing more than a pre-emptive strike at any content creator that isn't directly involved in GWs Disney+ scheme.

They bullied mum and pop wargaming stores out of this world... and now they are going to be doing the same thing with individual fan content creators (who probably helped to grow GW to their current size, just like the small brick and mortar independant shops did)... This should be very transparent, but you will still find people meatshielding for the big corporation regardless.


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/23 04:40:41


Post by: KingmanHighborn


Daedalus81 wrote:
 KingmanHighborn wrote:
It's not about net loss or gain. It's about control. Fan made videos make GW money.
3d printed parts and 3rd party pieces make GW money.
TTS, Battlescribe, even ye ole fashioned internet piracy (even if it truely is a victimless crime) make GW money in the long run. But they have no control over it. Like I said. They don't WANT people to have space marine armies that they don't make themselves. They don't WANT the customer to buy a box of marines, then go to Etsy or someplace and buy a pack of custom shoulder plates with an insignia of a chapter they don't make.


GW has no issue with custom pauldrons.


Except they do. They take issue with that, alternate legs, heads, etc.

Tyran wrote:
 Daedalus81 wrote:

GW has no issue with custom pauldrons.

GW cannot go after custom pauldrons, third party bits are not a violation of copyright (although things get murkier with full models).


Not legally but they can and do ban people from their stores for having them, and go after people that make custom parts. In the example, of the Charcharadons, if you show up with a space marine army with shark chapter pads, backpacks, other pieces, etc. that GW doesn't make, they will boot you from store or tournaments they run. So they only way to play your army would be at a non GW store and non-GW ran events.


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/23 08:43:44


Post by: Slipspace


 BaronIveagh wrote:
Slipspace wrote:

Correct, parody/satire is protected under IP law, but let's not allow the facts to get in the way of a good anti-GW rant.


Much as GW don't let actual law get in the way of their threats of legal action?


Sure, and that's a major problem with the legal system that I've already mentioned way back at the start of this thread. Sadly, the way copyright law works massively favours the people with the deep pockets and lawyers on retainer versus the members of the general public who often don't even have a passing familiarity with copyright law.




 BaronIveagh wrote:

 Polonius wrote:

Okay, but what were the specifics? I can’t comment on a C&D I know nothing about.


On Dark Reign our reviews of FFG's Role play material contained 'images of GW IP'. I'm fairly sure a copy of the GW C&D we received was shared here on Dakka, but as this thread goes on, it's increasingly obvious that most of the posters are newer players that don't remember this gak.


This is a case in point. Theoretically a review is covered by fair use. However, there are limits on how much copyright material can be shown in a review before it strays over the line from fair use into infringement. IIRC (and I may not because it was a long time ago) this is what Beasts of War fell foul of and I can sort of understand that given their reviews tended to involve reading almost every Codex entry verbatim. You also have to prove the alleged infringing content is actually a review. The legal system is supposed to provide a mechanism for determining where the line between fair use and copyright infringement lies, because it's extremely difficult to write hard and fast rules for all eventualities. Unfortunately, access to the legal system is often predicated on financial resources and not whether a given party is in the right. That lack of equal access is the biggest problem with copyright law, not the existence of those laws in the first place. Chapterhouse is a good example here. A lot (though by no means all) of GW's case was demonstrably stupid but without pro bono representation Chapterhouse would likely never have even made it to court. The fact they did seems to have caused a change in how GW approaches the legal realm, possibly because by actually going to court it demonstrated to upper management that those expensive lawyers they were paying had no idea what they were doing. If going to court was more common I think we'd see fewer corporations trying to weaponise the IP laws.

As many people have pointed out, nothing in the guidelines GW has set out is different to what the vast majority of corporations do and I would argue adding in the various examples and extra detail beyond the basic bullet points is more helpful than GW need to be. Also, I've been playing GW games since Rogue Trader so I'm well aware of how GW has operated in the past. They have not exactly been a beacon of common sense and proportionate response in the past but their recent actions towards animators seems to be a change in direction. Old GW would have slapped down the C&D and gone straight to court whether they had a case or not.


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/23 10:26:29


Post by: Pacific


 Ghaz wrote:
beast_gts wrote:
 Theophony wrote:
yukishiro1 wrote:
 Daedalus81 wrote:

GW has no issue with custom pauldrons.


Well, aside from purporting to ban them at its own events (though reports are mixed on whether it actually does).


Once again that is probably due to whoever is running the event being worried that THEY will get into trouble and err on the side of stupid.


Link to GW's event pack. It does state "all miniatures in your collection must be Games Workshop or Forge World miniatures (excluding basing or scratchbuilt components)", but it's very much 'don't ask, don't tell'.

Note that events at Warhammer World states the following in regards to 3D printed parts:

Are 3D printed parts I’ve designed allowed?

Much like hand sculpted detail, if you’ve gone to the effort of designing and printing your own bespoke parts for your army, then these parts are indeed permitted at our events. Commercially available, third party 3D printed parts aren’t permitted though. Please bear in mind that if we do spot cast/printed parts on miniatures at our events, we will ask you to prove where they’re from, and may ask for them to be removed if there’s any doubt as to their origins.

Their basic rule for conversions is that "... conversions should be checked in advance with the events team, to ensure they are appropriate for organised play".


As someone who has played at WHW in events (and this was probably leading up to one of the gakkiest periods of GW legal artillery fire) I would say there were a lot more armies than not that had custom made or converted components. One guy had his awesome-looking army (which was probably about 25% maxmini or other bits) commented on by one of the staffers there and actually put on display in the cabinets for a while!

Of course they are going to write an 'official' rule banning those components as they don't want to encourage it and have to be seen to take that approach. But in practice the hobbyists that work for GW won't mind and most of them probably do it themselves. The only time I have ever heard of someone having to pack up models was when they made a massive show of the fact they were using non-GW stuff, mouthing off to everyone within 25 yards, and forced the staff there into a corner so that they had to take action.


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/23 10:59:36


Post by: BaronIveagh


Slipspace wrote:

As many people have pointed out, nothing in the guidelines GW has set out is different to what the vast majority of corporations do and I would argue adding in the various examples and extra detail beyond the basic bullet points is more helpful than GW need to be.


Most of the companies that had policies as draconian as this have since abandoned them as unworkable, however, or having generated too much fan backlash. Disney, you might recall, started backing off on this when they were pushing for an extension of the Copyright act to prevent Marvel and Disney characters from entering the public domain.

 Pacific wrote:
The only time I have ever heard of someone having to pack up models was when they made a massive show of the fact they were using non-GW stuff, mouthing off to everyone within 25 yards, and forced the staff there into a corner so that they had to take action.


A bit off topic, I had a GW judge 'remove' the offending bits from my minis, many years ago, at the last event I ever attended with my IG army. My response to his actions was not positive.


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/23 11:23:02


Post by: kirotheavenger


I also know GW requires 100% GW parts in an army if it is to be shown in any of their affiliated tournament streams and such.

There's a disconnect/flexibility between what GW policy requires (100% GW) and individual stores though, which are generally left to their own devices. As such most come to a reasonable understanding, I think 75% GW crops up a lot as a guideline which seems fair and accurate enough to me.

Many stores even treat Forgeworld as "non-GW" though, as it's not something they sell.

Some stores are more draconian though. My little brother went to a store that said if you're modelling in store it needs to be with 100% GW products, and when you're in store you can only discuss 100% GW products. He was asked to leave when he advised another player he used Revell plastic glue!


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/23 12:22:39


Post by: Irbis


 Elmir wrote:
They bullied mum and pop wargaming stores out of this world...

Yeah, they don't sell half of what they produce to mum and pop wargaming stores at a huge discount, letting them massively undercut GW's own store-- Oh wait, they do, making them really gak at 'bullying'. How is weather on your planet because it surely isn't Earth?

 KingmanHighborn wrote:
Except they do. They take issue with that, alternate legs, heads, etc.

They don't. They have issue with stolen 1:1 copy paste designs GW made. They never went after someone making pauldrons/heads/etc with their own design. Funnily enough most knockoff makers aren't interesting in making these and prefer to steal GW images. Gee, how dare GW take issue with that, eh?

 Azreal13 wrote:
Certain details may be filtered through years of internet hyperbole, but not as much nor as far as you'd think. Somewhere in that stack of documents is a list of terms they were asserting impinged, up to and including, IIRC, halberd.

More like all of it was filtered by hyperbole and basher screaming 50 times, to the point it bears no semblance to reality. See screeching about rOmAn NuMeRaLs, a consistent design language evoking 'gothic roman in space' is absolutely defensible and - spoiler alert - GW won. This should give you a clue how 'silly' the lawsuit was.

Also, let me give you two other examples from real world - Mercedes claims they InVeNtEd HeAdLiGhTs (to use juvenile language from this thread) - no, they invented their figure eight headlights, and, like GW with their gothic roman image, went to court defending them multiple times (because when you see them, you think Mercedes), which is why knockoff brands tried to imitate them, same as with GW minis.

Then there is Apple, who went to court over 'rounded corners square tablet' - aka shape invented in Mesopotamia 8000 years ago - and won. Granted, mostly due to idiot jury, and I have no idea why people insist on keeping this stupid stone age system, but the fact is, they pretty much built their image on rounded squares and if that is defensible, then whining about rOmAn NuMeRaLs just shows you have zero clue how law functions. And if there is a problem with law, it's a problem with the whole system, not GW, and in any case GW had much better claim to their design language than far more vague claims of the two companies above.

---

Also, I find it funny wearing knockoff chinese clothes imitating famous Western brands make you look lame (to not mention using an imitation car or laptop badly pretending to be Ferrari or Macbook, which is complete laughing stock fodder) but using knockoff minis using stolen designs produced by criminals from toxic resin seems to be somehow badge of pride of people stupid enough to not realize they pay vastly bigger profit margins to these thieves (who don't pay taxes, obey customer safety regulations, or employ any creative people) than they would pay to GW so all the utter nonsense about 'greedy GW' evaporates like smoke and ceases to be an excuse to bash them when you willingly feed vastly greedier parasite group without complains. Hypocrite much?


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/23 12:38:24


Post by: Albertorius


 Irbis wrote:
Yeah, they don't sell half of what they produce to mum and pop wargaming stores at a huge discount, letting them massively undercut GW's own store-- Oh wait, they do, making them really gak at 'bullying'. How is weather on your planet because it surely isn't Earth?

...They absolutely don't, what the hell are you even talking about?

GW, which is the producer, sells to those "mom and pop stores", at the retail standard of 30% off the retail price, as a general fact. That is not a huge discount, that is standard practices, and a price which allows GW to get a tidy net benefit from each sell. Also, It allows them to get that same benefit without extra costs like additional storefronts or, you know, employees.

That is standard retail economics, it's not something specific of GW.

Also, I would expect they sell more than half their production to other retailers, not just half. Even though they have their own store chain and webstore and everything, they're still mainly a producer.


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/23 12:42:48


Post by: deano2099


 Elmir wrote:
Warhammer+ is such an amazing deal, AMIRITE GAIZ?!

This is nothing more than a pre-emptive strike at any content creator that isn't directly involved in GWs Disney+ scheme.

They bullied mum and pop wargaming stores out of this world... and now they are going to be doing the same thing with individual fan content creators (who probably helped to grow GW to their current size, just like the small brick and mortar independant shops did)... This should be very transparent, but you will still find people meatshielding for the big corporation regardless.


That's a legit criticism if they actually start doing it - and I'm sure if they do people will still defend them - but they haven't yet. Some people just don't want to trudge down the shed and get their pitchforks just because someone thought they saw something that might have been a werewolf.


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/23 12:44:28


Post by: Daedalus81


 Elmir wrote:
Warhammer+ is such an amazing deal, AMIRITE GAIZ?!

This is nothing more than a pre-emptive strike at any content creator that isn't directly involved in GWs Disney+ scheme.

They bullied mum and pop wargaming stores out of this world... and now they are going to be doing the same thing with individual fan content creators (who probably helped to grow GW to their current size, just like the small brick and mortar independant shops did)... This should be very transparent, but you will still find people meatshielding for the big corporation regardless.


Bullied mom and pop stores...which are 60% of their business?


Automatically Appended Next Post:
 KingmanHighborn wrote:

Not legally but they can and do ban people from their stores for having them, and go after people that make custom parts. In the example, of the Charcharadons, if you show up with a space marine army with shark chapter pads, backpacks, other pieces, etc. that GW doesn't make, they will boot you from store or tournaments they run. So they only way to play your army would be at a non GW store and non-GW ran events.


In the US there's tons of ways to avoid GW. I have no idea what it is like in other places though.


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/23 12:51:13


Post by: Gert


The UK has loads of places that aren't GW games and I'd even say that in most of these places GW games aren't what's played the most, rather games like X-Wing or Flames of War are.
The shop I frequented to play Bolt Action with a friend had multiple X-Wing and FoW leagues as well as some others and the only GW influence was a cardboard Necromunda ganger and a small selection of boxes to buy. Indeed we got quite a cold reception when we did play 40k there one time and went back to the local GW for GW games after that, using the Indie store for Bolt Action only.


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/23 12:52:47


Post by: Albertorius


 Daedalus81 wrote:
Bullied mom and pop stores...which are 60% of their business?

Indeed. There is something GW likes to do (or liked to do, at least) which is opening new GW stores where those "mom and pop" stores are getting very good numbers, with the consequent revenue splits.

As to playing in a GW store, last time I did that I was still working there, and it's been... about 15 years since then.


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/23 15:20:56


Post by: BaronIveagh


 Irbis wrote:

They don't. They have issue with stolen 1:1 copy paste designs GW made. They never went after someone making pauldrons/heads/etc with their own design. Funnily enough most knockoff makers aren't interesting in making these and prefer to steal GW images. Gee, how dare GW take issue with that, eh?


I underlined the incorrect part. They, in fact, have done exactly that on at least one occasion that I can think of. In fact, IIRC, it's one of the reasons they lost most of the Chapterhouse case, as many of the shoulder pads they claimed were copies, it turned out they weren't.


Automatically Appended Next Post:
 Daedalus81 wrote:

Bullied mom and pop stores...which are 60% of their business?


My local FLGS got told that they had to hand back over the stock they already had or GW wouldn't cut them any further deals on future stock when they switched over from metal to plastic. I'd say that threatening their bottom line would qualify as 'bullying'.


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/23 15:57:54


Post by: AduroT


Wasn’t the basic shape of the shoulder pad, even separate from what was on it, something they included in the Chapterhouse suit?


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/23 16:13:37


Post by: Ketara


 AduroT wrote:
Wasn’t the basic shape of the shoulder pad, even separate from what was on it, something they included in the Chapterhouse suit?


It was in the first batch of claims, but it got removed pretty quickly after some passing law student told Games Workshop's legal team that geometric shapes weren't copyrightable (along with grenade launchers, halberds, and roman numerals).


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/23 16:14:35


Post by: yukishiro1


Yeah, GW definitely tried to go after people for making custom shoulder pads, it was a significant part of the chapterhouse suit, and their record re: FLGS is very problematic too in terms of opening stores right nearby to try to cannibalize sales.

That doesn't mean one has to think they're the devil or that every claim about them is true, but it makes one look rather foolish to insist GW has "never done" things that they, well, actually did.


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/23 16:23:45


Post by: Grimtuff


 BaronIveagh wrote:
 Irbis wrote:

They don't. They have issue with stolen 1:1 copy paste designs GW made. They never went after someone making pauldrons/heads/etc with their own design. Funnily enough most knockoff makers aren't interesting in making these and prefer to steal GW images. Gee, how dare GW take issue with that, eh?


I underlined the incorrect part. They, in fact, have done exactly that on at least one occasion that I can think of. In fact, IIRC, it's one of the reasons they lost most of the Chapterhouse case, as many of the shoulder pads they claimed were copies, it turned out they weren't.


Here's a thread from this very site of GW (by proxy) going after a 3d printer custom shoulder pad store.


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/23 16:28:11


Post by: Ghaz


 Grimtuff wrote:
 BaronIveagh wrote:
 Irbis wrote:

They don't. They have issue with stolen 1:1 copy paste designs GW made. They never went after someone making pauldrons/heads/etc with their own design. Funnily enough most knockoff makers aren't interesting in making these and prefer to steal GW images. Gee, how dare GW take issue with that, eh?


I underlined the incorrect part. They, in fact, have done exactly that on at least one occasion that I can think of. In fact, IIRC, it's one of the reasons they lost most of the Chapterhouse case, as many of the shoulder pads they claimed were copies, it turned out they weren't.


Here's a thread from this very site of GW (by proxy) going after a 3d printer custom shoulder pad store.

Your link shows that there may have been other circumstances that brought GW Legal down on him.


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/23 16:54:15


Post by: Azreal13


You mean the Dick Dasterdly thing?


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/23 17:00:51


Post by: Daedalus81


 Grimtuff wrote:
 BaronIveagh wrote:
 Irbis wrote:

They don't. They have issue with stolen 1:1 copy paste designs GW made. They never went after someone making pauldrons/heads/etc with their own design. Funnily enough most knockoff makers aren't interesting in making these and prefer to steal GW images. Gee, how dare GW take issue with that, eh?


I underlined the incorrect part. They, in fact, have done exactly that on at least one occasion that I can think of. In fact, IIRC, it's one of the reasons they lost most of the Chapterhouse case, as many of the shoulder pads they claimed were copies, it turned out they weren't.


Here's a thread from this very site of GW (by proxy) going after a 3d printer custom shoulder pad store.


Four years later there's still shoulder pads on that store page among other things.



Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/23 17:08:27


Post by: yukishiro1


That GW wasn't successful in completely getting his store removed doesn't mean they didn't go after him.

The statement was that GW has never gone after someone for custom shoulder pads. That statement is verifiably wrong. It was also a claim in the original chapterhouse suit - IIRC one they had to drop because it was making them look totally foolish, but it was in there to begin with.

GW has gone after people for custom shoulder pads. The statement to the contrary was objectively false.


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/23 17:12:37


Post by: queen_annes_revenge


My main question for stuff like this is, why? Why clamp down on fan films? Surely that's just free advertising? It's not like those fan film creators are stealing their customers in any way. Just seems so petty.


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/23 17:15:38


Post by: kodos


 Daedalus81 wrote:
In the US there's tons of ways to avoid GW. I have no idea what it is like in other places though.

here it usually starts with GW supporting a FLGS, building up a multi game community, than killing the FLGS with high demands (need to order a specific high amount of "core products" while not allow him to get other stuff if he does not do it and increase that amount on a regular bases until the shop closes because he cannot afford to remove GW products but also not do not sell the good stuff) and opening a GW store next to the location of the FLGS shortly before it closes


Automatically Appended Next Post:
 queen_annes_revenge wrote:
My main question for stuff like this is, why? Why clamp down on fan films? Surely that's just free advertising? It's not like those fan film creators are stealing their customers in any way. Just seems so petty.

because if 5 minute animations are available for free on Youtube, why should anyone pay GW to watch 5 minute animations


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/23 17:16:51


Post by: beast_gts


yukishiro1 wrote:
GW has gone after people for custom shoulder pads. The statement to the contrary was objectively false.
GW went after them for selling exact copies of FW shoulder pads.


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/23 17:17:44


Post by: H.B.M.C.


 queen_annes_revenge wrote:
My main question for stuff like this is, why? Why clamp down on fan films?
Warhammer+.


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/23 17:35:29


Post by: yukishiro1


beast_gts wrote:
yukishiro1 wrote:
GW has gone after people for custom shoulder pads. The statement to the contrary was objectively false.
GW went after them for selling exact copies of FW shoulder pads.


Who is "they" here? Chapterhouse? POP?

The original claim made in Chapterhouse was that the shape of the shoulderpads , no matter what was on them, was covered by GW's copyright and that anybody making similar-looking shoulder pads that fit on GW models was infringing GW's copyright. That claim got dropped before the final judgment because it was so ridiculous that even GW realized it was hurting its overall claim to keep making it, so they abandoned it. But it was in their initial claim papers. Just like the stuff about halberds etc.


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/23 17:37:16


Post by: ph34r


I know GW said in their IP rules about custom parts something about basing being a free for all, but it still strikes me as hypocritical that today on Warhammer-community they featured a lovely gigantic blood angels army chock full of 3d printed nameplates in the bases of all the characters.


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/23 17:39:33


Post by: beast_gts


yukishiro1 wrote:
Who is "they" here? Chapterhouse? POP?
POP. Sorry for not being clearer.


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/23 17:55:54


Post by: yukishiro1


 ph34r wrote:
I know GW said in their IP rules about custom parts something about basing being a free for all, but it still strikes me as hypocritical that today on Warhammer-community they featured a lovely gigantic blood angels army chock full of 3d printed nameplates in the bases of all the characters.


I dunno, to be fair to GW they have said that self-3D printed stuff is fine, and that it's ok to use third-party bases. So either way, that bit seems fine to me.

If you really want to nitpick that article, the custodes telemon dread is really not converted enough to be a BW leviathan dread and would technically fall afoul of their "proxying" rules if used in a game in the sense that it's really just one model standing in for another. It's just a custodes dread painted in BW colors with the weapons swapped, the body is totally unchanged.

I think the more interesting thing is that by showcasing all these "converted" armies that are just GW bits from different kits stuck together, they're subtly reinforcing a message that "conversions" can still only use GW bits. This seems to be the new corporate line - "conversion" means any model that has GW bits other than those that come in its kit, anything else other than scratch-made components are totally prohibited.


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/23 18:17:58


Post by: jojo_monkey_boy


yukishiro1 wrote:
I think the more interesting thing is that by showcasing all these "converted" armies that are just GW bits from different kits stuck together, they're subtly reinforcing a message that "conversions" can still only use GW bits. This seems to be the new corporate line - "conversion" means any model that has GW bits other than those that come in its kit, anything else other than scratch-made components are totally prohibited.


This jives with the rest of their marketing which seems to restrict The Hobby™ exclusively to activities that involve only products you can buy from them.

No more articles about building terrain out of cereal boxes when you need to push sales of your Adeptus Mechanicus Pyrobastion™.


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/23 18:22:40


Post by: Daedalus81


yukishiro1 wrote:
beast_gts wrote:
yukishiro1 wrote:
GW has gone after people for custom shoulder pads. The statement to the contrary was objectively false.
GW went after them for selling exact copies of FW shoulder pads.


Who is "they" here? Chapterhouse? POP?

The original claim made in Chapterhouse was that the shape of the shoulderpads , no matter what was on them, was covered by GW's copyright and that anybody making similar-looking shoulder pads that fit on GW models was infringing GW's copyright. That claim got dropped before the final judgment because it was so ridiculous that even GW realized it was hurting its overall claim to keep making it, so they abandoned it. But it was in their initial claim papers. Just like the stuff about halberds etc.


There's two phases of GW at play. The Chapterhouse one from a decade ago and whatever they were doing with POP. It's unclear to me as to exactly what was removed from the POP store based on the old thread, but it sounds like replicas got removed and not custom work.



Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/23 18:47:09


Post by: Mentlegen324


 Grimtuff wrote:
 BaronIveagh wrote:
 Irbis wrote:

They don't. They have issue with stolen 1:1 copy paste designs GW made. They never went after someone making pauldrons/heads/etc with their own design. Funnily enough most knockoff makers aren't interesting in making these and prefer to steal GW images. Gee, how dare GW take issue with that, eh?


I underlined the incorrect part. They, in fact, have done exactly that on at least one occasion that I can think of. In fact, IIRC, it's one of the reasons they lost most of the Chapterhouse case, as many of the shoulder pads they claimed were copies, it turned out they weren't.


Here's a thread from this very site of GW (by proxy) going after a 3d printer custom shoulder pad store.


Having a quick look at that thread it shows just how hyperbolic some of the posts here are. While they're copyright and not trademarks, GW won several claims involving things such as "Roman Numerals" and" Banded armour" and the Halberd.

3. Chapterhouse has been found to infringe Games Workshop’s copyrights with respect to the following forty-nine products (product numbers refer to numbering in Plaintiff’s Trial Exhibits 1020 and 1021):


Selected Shoulder pads:
“Terminator pad for Exorcist Space Marine,”
“Power Armour Pad for Exorcist,”
one of the “Sawblade Shoulder Pad & Jewel” pads,
“Shoulder Pad for Serpent or Iron Snakes – Terminator,”
“Shoulder Pad for Serpent or Iron Snakes – Tactical,”
“Shoulder Pad w/ skull and flames - tactical”,
“Shoulder Pad w/ Studs and Skull for 28mm marine - Tactical”,
“Shoulder Pads for Chalice or Soul Drinker – Tactical,”
“Shoulder Pads for Chalice or Soul Drinker – Terminator,”
“Hammer of Dorn Power Armor Pad,”
“Hammer of Dorn Terminator Pad,”
“Power Armor Shoulder Pad for Scythes of the Emperor,”
“Scythes of the Emperor Terminator Shoulder Pad” (Products 10, 11, 12, 17, 18, 19, 20, 23, 24, 149, 150, 153, 154);
Assault Shoulder pad with number VII and VIII, Devastator marine shoulder pad with IX and X, Tactical shoulder pad with I, II, III, IV, IV, and VI (Products 46, 47, 51, 52, 57, 58, 59, 60, 61, 62);
Crested shoulder pad (Product 49);
“Generic Power Armour Shoulder Pad” and “Smooth Shoulder Pad for 28mm tactical – marine” (Products 54, 55);
“Banded Tech Pad” and “Banded Armor Pad” compatible with power armor and terminator armor (Products 68, 73, 74);
Studded rimmed shoulder pad MKV, MK I Heresy Era for 28 mm Marines “Thunder Armor” shoulder pad,
studded power armor pad for MK 5 (Products 75, 78, 80); Tervigon conversion kit (Product 37);

Skull or Chaplain Head or Bit for Power Armor (product 3);
Heresy Era Jump Pack (Product 76);
Spikey heresy heads (Product 79);
Wolf Rhino Conversion Kit #1 and Wolf Rhino Conversion Kit #2 (Products 82, 104);
Iron Snake conversion kit for Rhino (Product 106);
Doomseer Iyanar Duanna (Product 108);
Gun Halberd (Product 112);
Conversion Beamer Servo Harness (Product 113);
Armana'serq Scorpion Warrior Princess (Product 123);
Open- Fisted power claws and Closed-Fisted power claws (Products 132, 133);
TRU Scale Knights Praetorius “Order of the Empress’s Tears” Conversion Kit and TRU-Scale Knight Praetorius Conversion Kit (Products 142, 143);
“Shrike Conversion Kit” (Product 159); Dark Elf Arch Torturess (Product 160).


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/23 19:01:33


Post by: Ketara


 Mentlegen324 wrote:

Having a quick look at that thread it shows just how hyperbolic some of the posts here are. While they're copyright and not trademarks, GW won several claims involving things such as "Roman Numerals" and" Banded armour" and the Halberd.

3. Chapterhouse has been found to infringe Games Workshop’s copyrights with respect to the following forty-nine products (product numbers refer to numbering in Plaintiff’s Trial Exhibits 1020 and 1021):
Selected Shoulder pads:
“Terminator pad for Exorcist Space Marine,”
“Power Armour Pad for Exorcist,”
one of the “Sawblade Shoulder Pad & Jewel” pads,
“Shoulder Pad for Serpent or Iron Snakes – Terminator,”
“Shoulder Pad for Serpent or Iron Snakes – Tactical,”
“Shoulder Pad w/ skull and flames - tactical”,
“Shoulder Pad w/ Studs and Skull for 28mm marine - Tactical”,
“Shoulder Pads for Chalice or Soul Drinker – Tactical,”
“Shoulder Pads for Chalice or Soul Drinker – Terminator,”
“Hammer of Dorn Power Armor Pad,”
“Hammer of Dorn Terminator Pad,”
“Power Armor Shoulder Pad for Scythes of the Emperor,”
“Scythes of the Emperor Terminator Shoulder Pad” (Products 10, 11, 12, 17, 18, 19, 20, 23, 24, 149, 150, 153, 154);
Assault Shoulder pad with number VII and VIII, Devastator marine shoulder pad with IX and X, Tactical shoulder pad with I, II, III, IV, IV, and VI (Products 46, 47, 51, 52, 57, 58, 59, 60, 61, 62);
Crested shoulder pad (Product 49);
“Generic Power Armour Shoulder Pad” and “Smooth Shoulder Pad for 28mm tactical – marine” (Products 54, 55);
“Banded Tech Pad” and “Banded Armor Pad” compatible with power armor and terminator armor (Products 68, 73, 74);
Studded rimmed shoulder pad MKV, MK I Heresy Era for 28 mm Marines “Thunder Armor” shoulder pad,
studded power armor pad for MK 5 (Products 75, 78, 80); Tervigon conversion kit (Product 37);

Skull or Chaplain Head or Bit for Power Armor (product 3);
Heresy Era Jump Pack (Product 76);
Spikey heresy heads (Product 79);
Wolf Rhino Conversion Kit #1 and Wolf Rhino Conversion Kit #2 (Products 82, 104);
Iron Snake conversion kit for Rhino (Product 106);
Doomseer Iyanar Duanna (Product 108);
Gun Halberd (Product 112);
Conversion Beamer Servo Harness (Product 113);
Armana'serq Scorpion Warrior Princess (Product 123);
Open- Fisted power claws and Closed-Fisted power claws (Products 132, 133);
TRU Scale Knights Praetorius “Order of the Empress’s Tears” Conversion Kit and TRU-Scale Knight Praetorius Conversion Kit (Products 142, 143);
“Shrike Conversion Kit” (Product 159); Dark Elf Arch Torturess (Product 160).


Correct me if I'm wrong, but IIRC, most of those surviving counts were awarded due to their using certain GW phrases (MK V armour, 28mm Tactical Marine, Dorn, Soul Drinker) or putting them underneath GW trademarks on the webstore menu ('Space Marine Accessories') and so on. Chapterhouse themselves explicitly conflated and marketed their product with Games Workshop lore terminology. In the minds of the jury, even though the phrases weren't trademarked, this consequently associated the two and therefore the jury ruled that Games Workshop's IP had been infringed upon. It wasn't so much the physical product appearance that was being ruled illegal, but rather the conflated naming/description combined with the product by association.

Also IIRC just about every vaguely legit legal opinion I saw at the time (including at least one US IP lawyer, and several non-specialist lawyers) was that the jury had therefore not correctly applied the law as written - as this vague sense of conflation was not the basis for an actual legal infringement. They consequently thought that any further appeal would see these preliminary jury rulings thrown in the rubbish. Which is not unusual in and of itself - juries are extremely notorious for not understanding complex areas of law, not caring, applying a rough sense of 'fairness' instead, or even flat out disagreeing that the law should say what it does and ruling differently. Higher courts with more specialism exist for a reason.

The CH case was consequently winding up for its second round on that very basis when GW's lawyers managed to find a way to put the owner's house on the line; causing him to bail and come to a NDA agreement with GW.
The lesson which all the third party makers took away from the trial was 'Whether it's legal or not, using GW terminology may lead to you being at risk - so stay safe and market your shoulder pads in generic terms'. As opposed to 'Oh no, I must never make a shoulder pad again'. This is why even though the exact the same case contradictively ruled that you could loosely use GW phrases in aftermarket terms ('compatible with Tactical Marines', etc), virtually nobody does so. It's just 'Lion Shoulder Pad' or 'Roman Numeral Shoulder Pad'. Even the most sympathetic court GW could have hoped for didn't bother chasing stuff like that, so they know it's okay.



Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/23 20:44:07


Post by: Polonius


The bottom line is that even if you push things to the utter limit, when you start playing around with derivative works you have to be able to convince a jury of six people that you didn't steal the stuff. Juries get stuff wrong all the time, but this is why legal advice tends to run quite conservative.


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/25 09:51:12


Post by: DarkerBlue


I can't even use a company's IP to make money for myself? What is this corporate dystopian future we have sleepwalked into?!?

Joke's on them, I spent £20,000 on a 3d printer and for only £20 in resin I can cast as many of these bad boys as I like -



Keep drinking the GW cool-aid, suckers!


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/25 10:23:30


Post by: H.B.M.C.


I can't tell if you're joking or you honestly don't know how much a 3D printer costs, or the stuff that's out there for 3D printing.


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/25 10:31:26


Post by: kodos


I guess he is joking by talking about Resin printer and showing a picture of a bad PLA print


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/25 11:35:47


Post by: DarkerBlue


 H.B.M.C. wrote:
I can't tell if you're joking or you honestly don't know how much a 3D printer costs, or the stuff that's out there for 3D printing.

It's called sarcasm. It's a bit like joking but there's elements of truth in there as well.

Was there anything else you needed help with?


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/25 11:52:39


Post by: Wha-Mu-077


DarkerBlue wrote:
I can't even use a company's IP to make money for myself? What is this corporate dystopian future we have sleepwalked into?!?

Joke's on them, I spent £20,000 on a 3d printer and for only £20 in resin I can cast as many of these bad boys as I like -



Keep drinking the GW cool-aid, suckers!


Joke's, in fact, on you, a 3D printer capable of achieving Forgeworld level of quality costs ~230$ nowadays. And Forgeworld would know, afterall, they 3D print their own masters. Usually forget to clean the print lines too, so it's not like you're missing out on that.

[Thumb - mph2zicmt1971.jpg]


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/25 12:11:20


Post by: Albertorius


DarkerBlue wrote:
 H.B.M.C. wrote:
I can't tell if you're joking or you honestly don't know how much a 3D printer costs, or the stuff that's out there for 3D printing.

It's called sarcasm. It's a bit like joking but there's elements of truth in there as well.

Was there anything else you needed help with?

So, what are you being sarcastic about? The idea that you can't use a company's IP to make money? The idea that 3d prints can be as good/better than official ones? The cost of 3d printing?

I feel like there's mixed signals, there ^^


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/25 12:13:28


Post by: Grimtuff


DarkerBlue wrote:
 H.B.M.C. wrote:
I can't tell if you're joking or you honestly don't know how much a 3D printer costs, or the stuff that's out there for 3D printing.

It's called sarcasm. It's a bit like joking but there's elements of truth in there as well.

Was there anything else you needed help with?


It's called the medium of text, where sarcasm is not easily conveyed. Poe's Law exists for a reason, ya know...

As a result, most people put "/s" at the end of something intended as sarcasm. Was there anything else you needed help with?


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/25 12:29:52


Post by: DarkerBlue


Bloody hell you're a sensitive bunch aren't you?


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/25 12:36:02


Post by: Wha-Mu-077


DarkerBlue wrote:
Bloody hell you're a sensitive bunch aren't you?

You're the one throwing a hissy fit because people refuse to bend the knee to your favourite multi-billion dollar corporation.


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/25 12:46:37


Post by: Gimgamgoo


DarkerBlue wrote:
I can't even use a company's IP to make money for myself? What is this corporate dystopian future we have sleepwalked into?!?

Joke's on them, I spent £20,000 on a 3d printer and for only £20 in resin I can cast as many of these bad boys as I like -



Keep drinking the GW cool-aid, suckers!


It made me chuckle.
Seems I was the only one that saw the humour in it.

Ah well. I guess some people are having a grumpy sunday.


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/25 13:21:12


Post by: Theophony


 Gimgamgoo wrote:
DarkerBlue wrote:
I can't even use a company's IP to make money for myself? What is this corporate dystopian future we have sleepwalked into?!?

Joke's on them, I spent £20,000 on a 3d printer and for only £20 in resin I can cast as many of these bad boys as I like -



Keep drinking the GW cool-aid, suckers!


It made me chuckle.
Seems I was the only one that saw the humour in it.

Ah well. I guess some people are having a grumpy sunday.

The Sarcasm didn’t match the image.put a nice print up there and accurate pricing and it would have been a good joke.


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/25 13:44:13


Post by: H.B.M.C.


DarkerBlue wrote:
It's called sarcasm.
Yeah I don't think that word means what you think it means...



Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/25 14:30:49


Post by: Aash


 H.B.M.C. wrote:
DarkerBlue wrote:
It's called sarcasm.
Yeah I don't think that word means what you think it means...



Inconceivable


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/25 14:44:38


Post by: Inquisitor Kallus


 H.B.M.C. wrote:
DarkerBlue wrote:
It's called sarcasm.
Yeah I don't think that word means what you think it means...



Yeah it's sarcasm, it's a British pastime. I find it funny that so many people here can't see it for what it is and are all up in arms about it.

On the whole fan animation IP thing, that changed up pretty quickly. 'You must not.......'


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/25 14:49:54


Post by: warboss


DarkerBlue wrote:
I can't even use a company's IP to make money for myself? What is this corporate dystopian future we have sleepwalked into?!?

Joke's on them, I spent £20,000 on a 3d printer and for only £20 in resin I can cast as many of these bad boys as I like -



Keep drinking the GW cool-aid, suckers!


2012 called and wants its extremely outdated examples back. You should have used the Lego 40k builds since they're timeless.


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/25 14:59:11


Post by: DarkerBlue


 warboss wrote:
DarkerBlue wrote:
I can't even use a company's IP to make money for myself? What is this corporate dystopian future we have sleepwalked into?!?

Joke's on them, I spent £20,000 on a 3d printer and for only £20 in resin I can cast as many of these bad boys as I like -



Keep drinking the GW cool-aid, suckers!


2012 called and wants its extremely outdated examples back. You should have used the Lego 40k builds since they're timeless.

I would never mock this absolute bad-ass-



Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/25 15:23:27


Post by: Albertorius


Well, I have to admit he's right... most of the "knockoff" stuff I've printed is a full order of magnitude less impressive than the official GW miniatures.

I mean, it's just self evident:

Spoiler:




They're maybe even two full orders of magnitude more imposing.

And so very expensive! At that scale I can only print a paltry three, maybe four full armies with a single bottle!


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/25 16:00:05


Post by: BaronIveagh


DarkerBlue wrote:

It's called sarcasm. It's a bit like joking but there's elements of truth in there as well.



No, it's called a blatant attempt to get the mods to shut the thread down by making references to recasting, since the longer it goes on, the worse GW looks. Making fan film and putting it up for to be viewed for free is hardly the same as recasting or 3d printing minis. (And I really want to mock the quality of whoever printed that dread since they clearly had no fething idea how to do it, even at an early point. I made better minis on a 3d printer than that in the 1990s)

On the 'truth' content of your statment, there really isn't any, since GW steals most of it's 'intellectual property' from others. Remember, folks, no matter what fancy new name they put on it, the Dark Eldar remain Moorcock's Melnibonéans in SPAAACE.




Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/25 16:08:25


Post by: Grimtuff


 BaronIveagh wrote:

On the 'truth' content of your statment, there really isn't any, since GW steals most of it's 'intellectual property' from others. Remember, folks, no matter what fancy new name they put on it, the Dark Eldar remain Moorcock's Melnibonéans in SPAAACE.





Surely you mean GW Melnibonéans. Look, they're just reusing their old designs.









Spoiler:
And that is how you do sarcasm.


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/25 16:18:13


Post by: warboss


 Albertorius wrote:
Well, I have to admit he's right... most of the "knockoff" stuff I've printed is a full order of magnitude less impressive than the official GW miniatures.

I mean, it's just self evident:

Spoiler:


They're maybe even two full orders of magnitude more imposing.

And so very expensive! At that scale I can only print a paltry three, maybe four full armies with a single bottle!


That's some pretty severe scale creep too.


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/25 20:53:10


Post by: BrianDavion


 Inquisitor Kallus wrote:
 H.B.M.C. wrote:
DarkerBlue wrote:
It's called sarcasm.
Yeah I don't think that word means what you think it means...



Yeah it's sarcasm, it's a British pastime. I find it funny that so many people here can't see it for what it is and are all up in arms about it.

On the whole fan animation IP thing, that changed up pretty quickly. 'You must not.......'


admitting the humor of it though would mean they can't be engaged in the internet's favorite passtime of being outraged


Automatically Appended Next Post:
 Wha-Mu-077 wrote:
DarkerBlue wrote:
Bloody hell you're a sensitive bunch aren't you?

You're the one throwing a hissy fit because people refuse to bend the knee to your favourite multi-billion dollar corporation.


bend the knee? LOL jesus

Look if you like 40k the IP owner deserves your money, if you don't like it eneugh to give the IP owner your moey then stop.


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/25 23:19:34


Post by: H.B.M.C.


BrianDavion wrote:
admitting the humor of it though would mean they can't be engaged in the internet's favorite passtime of being outraged
Who's "outraged"?


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/26 00:41:13


Post by: Racerguy180


Theophony wrote:
 Gimgamgoo wrote:
DarkerBlue wrote:
I can't even use a company's IP to make money for myself? What is this corporate dystopian future we have sleepwalked into?!?

Joke's on them, I spent £20,000 on a 3d printer and for only £20 in resin I can cast as many of these bad boys as I like -



Keep drinking the GW cool-aid, suckers!


It made me chuckle.
Seems I was the only one that saw the humour in it.

Ah well. I guess some people are having a grumpy sunday.

The Sarcasm didn’t match the image.put a nice print up there and accurate pricing and it would have been a good joke.

You immediately thought the red one was printed, yes a crappy one. But I've seen what excellent 3d printers can do and I immediately thought the ultras one was printed....ya know cuz it's a joke.


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/26 00:49:43


Post by: Polonius


 Theophony wrote:
The Sarcasm didn’t match the image.put a nice print up there and accurate pricing and it would have been a good joke.


I... I'm not sure you understand what makes a good joke. Exaggeration to the point of hyperbole is often part of a good job.

Since I guarantee stuff like that is shared amongst 3D printing hobbyist (because it is, after all, a funny joke), I"m baffled by the responses.


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/26 01:03:54


Post by: BaronIveagh


BrianDavion wrote:

Look if you like 40k the IP owner deserves your money, if you don't like it enough to give the IP owner your money then stop.


Good, we'll give our money to Moorcock, Herbert, O'Bannon, Heinlein, and Roger Dean (or their estates). You know, all the people that GW stole everything from.


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/26 01:16:17


Post by: Polonius


 BaronIveagh wrote:
BrianDavion wrote:

Look if you like 40k the IP owner deserves your money, if you don't like it enough to give the IP owner your money then stop.


Good, we'll give our money to Moorcock, Herbert, O'Bannon, Heinlein, and Roger Dean (or their estates). You know, all the people that GW stole everything from.


Stuff like this really shows a complete lack of understanding of how IP works. By definition, you cannot copyright an idea, only the expression of that idea. With the exception of the Chaos star (which appears in a wide range of games), GW took inspiration and ideas from these other works. Just like those works took ideas and inspiration from other works.


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/26 01:50:41


Post by: BrianDavion


 Polonius wrote:
 BaronIveagh wrote:
BrianDavion wrote:

Look if you like 40k the IP owner deserves your money, if you don't like it enough to give the IP owner your money then stop.


Good, we'll give our money to Moorcock, Herbert, O'Bannon, Heinlein, and Roger Dean (or their estates). You know, all the people that GW stole everything from.


Stuff like this really shows a complete lack of understanding of how IP works. By definition, you cannot copyright an idea, only the expression of that idea. With the exception of the Chaos star (which appears in a wide range of games), GW took inspiration and ideas from these other works. Just like those works took ideas and inspiration from other works.



It also shows a complete lack of understanding of how the creative process works.


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/26 05:10:11


Post by: Theophony


 Polonius wrote:
 Theophony wrote:
The Sarcasm didn’t match the image.put a nice print up there and accurate pricing and it would have been a good joke.


I... I'm not sure you understand what makes a good joke. Exaggeration to the point of hyperbole is often part of a good job.

Since I guarantee stuff like that is shared amongst 3D printing hobbyist (because it is, after all, a funny joke), I"m baffled by the responses.


I laugh quite frequently and do understand humor.

I also own two printers, a Ender3 for terrain and a Photon Mono for models. I know what is available out there .

I guess humor is like the difference between pornography and art, you know it when you see it.


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/26 05:32:59


Post by: kodos


 Theophony wrote:
I guess humor is like the difference between pornography and art, you know it when you see it.

by how afraid the USA is regarding female nipples, this would not work either


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/26 06:46:03


Post by: a_typical_hero


BrianDavion wrote:
 Wha-Mu-077 wrote:
You're the one throwing a hissy fit because people refuse to bend the knee to your favourite multi-billion dollar corporation.
bend the knee? LOL jesus

Look if you like 40k the IP owner deserves your money, if you don't like it eneugh to give the IP owner your moey then stop.

And you are the white knight if you point out these ridicolous analogies.


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/26 07:07:23


Post by: MonkeyBallistic


I smell a thread about to be locked.


Games Workshop has updated their IP rules... @ 2021/07/26 08:48:01


Post by: BrookM


Yeah, we're done here.