Slashdot Log In
Fuji TV Shuts Down Iron Chef Fansites
from the isn't-even-news-anymore dept.
The Ass, The Dog And Their Master
A Dog and his Master's Ass, having grown acquainted over the years, had become great friends, though the Ass spent many long hours ploughing the fields, and the Dog mainly lay about with little to do. One day the Dog decided that the work of his friend the Ass was quite remarkable and under-appreciated. Taking a bushel of grain from the year's harvest, he proclaimed to all passers-by: "O, just look upon the work of my friend the Ass! Is it not remarkable!" Some onlookers did make comment on the quality of the grain, whereupon the Ass brayed in delight. Yet upon returning home, the Master found two handfuls of grain missing, and thereupon beat the Dog soundly, chained him up, and warned the Ass never again to countenance thievery.
Moral...
Re:What are they THINKING??? (Score:2)
Practically, it also may serve to block negative web sites as well.
Ban them all and let slashdot sort them out.
Re:this is a trademark issue (Score:3)
Conscience is the inner voice which warns us that someone may be looking.
Re:Licensing ... (Score:2)
Oh, and to the idiot moderators who modded the Troll up... wake up!!! This moron has been posting for months as an AC and he always starts his post with... "I used to work for a..." He's just trying to put a cat among the canaries, and it is really sad when Slashdot has sunk so low that moderators are falling for this!
Trust me, the guy never worked for a licensing company.
Still cached copies around (Score:3)
www.ironchef.com [google.com]
and some sites not (yet) down:
http://www.geocities.com/TelevisionCi ty/1365/ [geocities.com] /html/iron_chef.html [pacbell.net]
http://home.pacbell.net/ogytork
--
Trademarks, copyrights, patents (Score:2)
This does not, however, explain why Fuju would want to be such jerks about copyrights, especially since many of the clips involved were well within the domain of the "fair use" clause (i.e., they did not duplicate the entirity or majority of the copyrighted material, they were presented for review and critical purposes, etc.). Remember, copyrights and patents don't need to be defended in order to remain valid -- though, in the case of patents, you must pursue the violation within x years (I forget the x) or you lose the right to pursue THAT PARTICULAR INFRINGEMENT (but not all other infringements).
After all, it's not like Napster, where entire copyrighted songs have been placed online. I guess folks like Fuji have these law critters on staff that gotta justify their hefty retainers, and a minor trademark issue wasn't enough for them to justify the hefty sum they charged Fuji (shrug).
-E
Copyright law SUCKS, Iron Chef rules. (Score:2)
I'm not defending Fuji TV, just stating what seems to be a fact.
Now I *LOVE* this show too. Can't get enough of it. And I think Morimoto San is gonna KICK BOBBY FLAY'S ASS.
For the record, in the Irof Chef poll you guys did the other month, you got 2 of their names backwards.
Also, it looks like they have a new Iron Chef Chinese. Chen Kinichi seems to have been replaced by some new guy with a Blue Suit. At least that's the way it looks from the promos I see for the Iron Chef NY City upcoming showdown.
Fuji TV and American fans (Score:3)
JMC
Iron Chef IP?!? (Score:3)
Anomalous: inconsistent with or deviating from what is usual, normal, or expected
Re:VERY Counter-productive (Score:2)
Now I will be certain to never watch it, irrespective of how good it might have been. Some priciples are worth standing up for, and copright abuse (legal or otherwise), which this clearly is, is most certainly one.
Nice PR move, idiots.
Re:The right and wrong (Score:2)
//rdj
Unusual Move for Japanese Production (Score:2)
This looks like the standard Spelling Entertainment type move. (Read Squashing 90210 and Buffy Sites 101) One has to wonder if Fuji is behind it, or if Food Network is acting on behalf of Fuji.
Precursor to "Official" Fansite (Score:2)
Re:The right and wrong (Score:2)
Yup. I haven't gone to see what these sites, that are allegedly in violation of this show's copyright, look like but assuming, for the moment, that they are really just fan sites then there should be a legal provision provided for these types of sites to exist without having to jump through all sorts of legal hoops. Otherwise fan sites are going to end up being just grey sites as envisioned by the digital divas [greyday.org].
This strikes me as being mean spirited and morally bankrupt. I feel that I should have a right to comment on shows that are in the public domain. Corporations must be given less constitutional protection in the ew-ess. How about zero constitional protection. The lawyers, the corporate variety at least, should be summarily ... well it would be nice for a little while but no doubt there'd be lots to fill their shoes.
Looks like we've been Iron Fisted (Score:2)
Once upon a time, not very long ago, we were about to cancel everything except basic cable having, well, nothing beyond very basic needs in this age of high-speed internet access.
Then, while clicking through one Friday evening of TV Wasteland, I stumbled upon this really bizarre cooking show. The name of it was Iron Something (I mean, am I allowed to use the trademarked name?). It was on the Food Network, which frankly wasn't a channel we ever watched much.
But the show was awesome. Seriously, my wife and I were stunned; there was finally a decent reason to get cable! An actual reason to bother to watch TV. Something easily worth the $18 per month difference between basic and expanded whatever that we were getting. And we spread the good word to everybody we knew. My sister-in-law got a satellite dish just so she could watch the show.
Despite my fairly dim view of television, the medium, I've always had the opinion that there were only two countries on earth where people had any idea about what to do with the medium. The first was the U.S., and the other, to my surprise, actually, was Japan. (I found this out while I was homesick for a week at a conference in Japan.) Of course, most Japanese programming is unknown in the U.S., so it was hard to tell people about it.
But this cooking show was something you could point them to. Really, it was the first thing I could point at and say, "See? The Japanese have really done something excellent and new with TV."
Almost everybody I preached to ended up loving the show. To one unlucky soul in a non-cable-possible household, I even made weekly tapes of the shows (commericals included, of course). We live in a small Midwestern university town, and we don't really get out very much. But I didn't care that much, as long as I could stretch out on the couch with the family on Friday and Saturday nights and watch the Theme Ingredient be revealed. My four year-old son can name all four chefs. He thinks that peanut butter "matches well" with chocolate milk.
At some point early on in the craze, we did turn to the net for more info. And I did try out the food network site on the show. Alas, nothing much to see there (at that time). So I fired up the Good Old Search Engine and found the URL to ironchef.com. [ironchef.com] Like, wow. What a truly amazing site; what an awesome labor of love. Of course there isn't much to see there now; Ironstef (really, that's what she calls herself) has had to shut the thing down.
I actually understand trademarks. I have sympathy for intellectual property laws, even if I don't always seek the same level of protection for my work. Intellectually, I completely understand why Fuji set their lawyers against the show's most enthusiastic fans. Some day, I might even be able to explain this to the four-year-old.
More emotionally, of course, I wish I could tell Fuji to take their Iron-Fisted lawyers and put them in a tight warm smelly place. This new technique matches well with greediness. It probably won't kill the fishy smell. It really has killed any interest I had in the show.
As it was with Microchannel.. (Score:2)
A better approach than giving up outright... (Score:2)
Rather than whining and giving up mearly write the attorneys a letter requesting permission to use files soley in a non-profit capacity for a fan web-site.
If they refuse you after that, then they're being stupid, and losing on the free advertising opportunities you've given them.
Personally the few mentions I have seen of this show on slashdot has made me want to see it, and the few times I clicked on the ironchef.com website was also encouraging.. but we don't get that in Canada..
Anyway the moral of the story is, don't cave immediately to a cease and desist order, always ask if there is a better solution first. Then if they don't want to talk, give up. Or get your own lawyer whichever you feel more strongly about.
Legal, but stupid (Score:2)
Get Legal Permission Before Evangelizing (Score:2)
So, by telling people on the Internet about the show, the Food Network gained viewers and so did the show. (I certainly wouldn't have ever watched it if I hadn't seen information about it on the Internet.) Now, I'm not going to watch the show anymore, and I'll be sending letters to Fuji and the Food Network explaining that. However, enough people know about the show now that it doesn't matter if they trample all over their hard-core fans. It's too late, I told my brother (for example) and when I tell him I'm boycotting he might stop watching... but then again he might not (my DVD boycott has had no effect whatever on his voracious appetite for those accurséd consumer goods.)
The only solution to this is for people who want to start fan sites to have lawyer-letters saying they are allowed to do so before they do it. That way, if the companies say, "No, lowly wretch, you can't put up your pathetic fan page," you won't be in the even more degrading position you get later, which is, "Lowly wretch, how dare you praise our show!! Grovel before us and take down your miserable page," after you were one of the ones who propelled the show to popularity.
Unlikely as it is, I hope people will consider joining my boycott of Iron Chef (which, coincidentally, I started watching after the Iron Chef poll here on Slashdot... has Slashdot recieved a "cease and desist" letter?). It's a great show, it is a pity creative people so often sell out their art to disgusting, depraved corporations.
Copyright and trademark infringement sure but... (Score:3)
"We further demand that the Sounds website and its employees and agents immediately remove from its website all materials copied from the Iron Chef program and place a notice on the Sounds website acknowledging and apologizing for infringing Fuji's intellectual property rights and providing a link to the Television Food Network site regarding "Iron Chef" at: www.foodtv.com/tvshows/ironchefindex."
Does this sound incredibly petty to anybody? Removing the infringing material is one thing but an apology and a required link? They have no right to demand that.
Re:this is a trademark issue (Score:2)
When all you ever have is a hammer, everything looks like a nail.
So? (Score:2)
The thing to remember here is that Fuji Television almost certainly *doesn't care* about the popularity of the Iron Chef series overseas. It's pretty much a dead horse here in Japan, and no matter what anyone might say Fuji makes enough money on the Japanese side of things to render any secondary income from redistribution overseas pretty much irrelevant.
An interesting problem (Score:2)
Is Iron Chef right to do this? No. Not in any stretch of the word, particularly not business-wise. As with almost all foreign (and even much domestic) media in the US, it is the fans who spread the word. To hand the fans this kind of slap in the face is simply the mark of an ingrate. These people did your marketing for you, for free, for no other reason than that they loved the show and wanted to see it succeed.
Now, generally marketers are entitled to compensation of some sort. Obviously a fansite isn't entitled to monetary compensation; that's volunteer work. But is it not fair compensation to simply allow such a site to continue to exist?
Certainly Fuji has a right to protect its trademarks. But do they really need protection from harmless fansites? Certainly not. Those fans are doing Fuji a favor, not the other way around. The letters Fuji TV wrote should have been thank-you notes, not cease-and-desist orders.
And as you can all see, the moral is... (Score:2)
Wow, I found that moral to be totally moving, didn't you?
-- Dr. Eldarion --
Time to lauch ironchef.com porn site (Score:3)
Actually, considering this contemptuous move on their part, I think they should never be allowed to have the domains. Put up a computer news or porn site there instead. Unless the Iron Chef TV show happens to be porn, an ironchef.com porn site would not really be a trademark violation, since no one could possibly confuse the two. (Just as you can have a copper mine or a computer consulting firm or a real estate company called "McDonalds" without infringing on the trademark of the company that sells tasteless lumps of grease under that name.)
That isn't to say they won't be able to hijack the domain anyway, but at least they wouldn't be able to use "trademark" argument without lying.
---
Re:And as you can all see, the moral is... (Score:2)
Moral...
< Scott Reents Holds Forth
Wow, I found that moral to be totally moving, didn't you?
-- Dr. Eldarion --
talk about a lose-lose situation (Score:2)
I had perused ironchef.com and it was a very cool fan site. I could see if they were upset that they didnt have the domain name, and wanted to buy/make an offer for it so they could create their own info site, but to blast down the very people who have, in a large part, been the reason that this show has taken off in the US is sad. I am not even sure how the copyright issue can be stated, since it seems to fall under fair use. Ironchef.com only had a few stills, no video that I was aware of, and focused on the content of the show. Trademark dilution.. maybe, but it seems it would be hard to prove it in court.
I am going to have to think long and hard about this one, I am really torn. I have written a letter of protest to both the Food Network and also to Fuji. I don't know what good it will do, but its worth a shot.
I tried licensing the material. It didn't work. (Score:4)
Once upon a time, I made a fansite [slashdot.org] about a different TV show [pbs.org]. The only copyrighted material I used was one picture of the main character (fair use 3) for non-commercial (fair use 1) purposes. I even linked to the official site (fair use 4).
The copyright owners sent me a cease and desist letter. I took the image down within half an hour of checking my mail. I would later study the issue in more depth and discover that fair use is not infringement [cornell.edu]; cease and desist letters against obvious fair use can constitute harassment [aolsucks.org].
So I asked for a license. They refused to give me one, claiming a possibility of defamation aka libel. Then I just took the site down and put a rant [tripod.com] in its place.
Re:Fair Use (Score:2)
The Fair Use Doctrine is basically intended to prevent copyrights from interfering with education.
If so, it's not working. A fansite's purpose is to educate the public about a story cycle.
A fan website would be very unlikely to successsfully claim (and defend) a valid purpose of use to fall within the Fair Use Doctrine.
Only because the © owners are big bullies with money to burn on lawyers.
They can't get a license. (Score:2)
Rather than whining and giving up mearly write the attorneys a letter requesting permission to use files soley in a non-profit capacity for a fan web-site.
They'd be refused as I was refused. [slashdot.org]
Iron Chef (Score:3)
I'm at work, else I'd try to dig up a working link from my bookmarks...the FoodTV site [foodtv.com] is sucky and bland (of course) but at least it gives you an idea.
The deal is, you have this rich, foppish man (Chairman Kaga) who (so the story goes) spent his fortune to find amazing new cuisines. To do this, he built a giant kitchen, called Kitchen Stadium, and found four cooks who are the masters of their particular cuisines - one a Japanese chef, one a French chef, one a Italian chef, and one a Chinese chef.
The show itself consists of a challenger (usually top chefs from top hotels or restaurants), whose background is described in detail by Kaga before the show, coming to Kitchen Stadium and picking one of the Iron Chefs to "battle." There is a "theme ingredient" for each show - some of them are mundane (tofu) and some of them are relatively exotic (mangoes!), and both chefs have to create a meal (usually consisting of four to six dishes) that best utilize and showcase this theme ingredient within an hour. While they cook, the panel of four people (two people who are always on the show, then two celebrities, including one AMAZINGLY ditzy actress) make comments and talk about what's going on. Finally, the two celebrities and two other guests taste the food that the challenger and the Iron Chef have made in the hour, and judge accordingly.
It sounds so weird to describe it, and I know I have dissolved in laughter when I'm trying to tell someone about it more than once. The charm of it is that it's very serious, but it doesn't seem like it should be. Also, it's very exotic and just plain fun to watch. So check it out sometime!
I'm gonna lose karma for this.... (Score:2)
The theme ingredient for tonite is...........
.....steaming hot grits!
Another sad day (Score:2)
Fair Use (Score:2)
With that said, on with my opinion (which is worth as much as the electrons used to express it).
Sound clips: What is the difference between using footage for a news site and footage for a fan site? Do news sites always "ask permission"? Fan sites definately attribute the source of the sound clip. Provided the site is not rebroadcasting the show in its entirety without the express written consent of Major League Baseball, the UN, and Fuji, then why can't they use clips under the Copyright's Fair Use Doctrine?
Still photos: If sluggo simply took a picture of his TV while it was showing Iron Chef, then why does this constitute infringement? He's merely displaying what his TV displayed.
What next, am I no longer allowed to say, "Ha" in a Japanese accent? Am I no longer allowed to describe what happened on last night's show around the water cooler at work?
I know of only one way to fight corporate behavior like this: Write Fuji and tell them that you will no longer watch their show (although hopefully you have VCR tapes of the show which are legal under the "Time Shift" Copyright Fair Use Doctrine) and send a copy to your cable provider. Tell them you'll be reading a cook book anytime that a show airs and you're home. The only way to fight this bullshit is to hurt corporations where it hurts: The bottom line.
Cheers,
Slak
Licensing ... (Score:3)
If some schmo from Missouri decides to put Sn**py on his church's website and doesn't have to pay for it, MetLife will suddenly say to the licensing company, "Hey, why the frickin' crap am I paying for these Sn**py rights when this schmo from MO gets it for free?! I'm paying half from now on or I don't renew the contract and you get NOHTING!" The licensing company says, "WTF?! We didn't sell the rights to use Sn**py on some backwoods church's website, AND EVERYONE IN THE WORLD CAN ACCESS IT. Call the lawyers!"
If you videotape a baseball game and play it on a TV in the middle of a public park, even if for free, that is still a violation. Licensing rights is a business. Subverting that business is illegal, whether the perpetrator is doing it for-profit or not.
There is no free lunch. Most high school and college kids don't understand this because they don't have to support themselves. Yet. Many American adults don't understand this because America is stuffed full of morons who forget that everything manmade on this planet is the result of commerce! People do not give anything away for free unless it is to lure you to spend money on something else. Period.
In Napster's case, it is giving away someone else's stuff, without signing a contract or receiving permission, so they can make money off advertising and Napster merchandise. Nice, huh?
In this case, Iron Chef _could_ grant limited permission to the fansites, but they do not feel they would be able to make the same amount of money they would make from, say, Random House or Hallmark and they would not be able to exert full control over the use of the trademarks, which they feel they must be able to do. Remember, we're talking millions of dollars for rights, not 'Oh, I could pay you a hundred bucks to use Sn**py, right?' Millions. Each. Time.
That said, I think that Parker and Stone had the right idea when they pleaded with Comedy Central NOT to go after all the South Park sites, instead letting the 'net buzz help the property overall with the occasional 'no, you've gone too far now take that down please' but I'll bet the licensing people were livid about that. They lose money, and you know how people are when they feel like they are being robbed.
It passes, but the damage is done. (Score:3)
But the damage is done. Enthusiasms are punished. The work that people do to express their fondness for something gets reduced to naught. (How come so many defenders of the right of IP owners to 'make money from their work' never consider the value of the work of those 'downstream' from them?)
This, to me, is one of the most subtle, yet most festering injustices of current times. In the years after the second world war, European thinkers used to remark that "the Americans have colonized our subconscious." (I'm focusing on the phrase "colonizing the subconscious," not the word "American," oh ye pedant who is compelled to tell me that Fuji is a Japanese company). Now, the owners of cultural property are trying to consolidate their conquest and turn it into franchise. The works of pop culture are *part of my subconscious.* I have dreams with Bugs Bunny and Gilligan's Island and Star Trek in it. Compelling images from TV and cinema have been flash-burned into memory. I quote films I've seen to comment on quotidian events with the same fluid ease that, I imagine, the ancient Athenians used to refer to Olympean deities. But the tycoons of culture can and will keep me from expressing the ebb and flow of these cultural elements, just to protect their profits. All in all, it's a more egregious slight on the liberty of the human spirit than most people will care to admit. It has to be stopped.
this is a trademark issue (Score:3)
Seth
Fuji is not clueless, just power-hungry (Score:2)
Corporations such as Fuji are no longer selling a particular product (such as a series of shows about cooking). Instead, they are staking their claim to a piece of culture, and then attempting to charge for all participation in that piece of culture.
Their fear is that some significant amount of the Stuff in the quirkly little corner of idea-space named "Iron Chef" might some day be created and controlled by fans, instead of by Fuji. Perish the thought!
These days our only common culture centers around TV shows, commercials, and other corporate-owned stuff. Thus regular individuals are increasingly prohibited from being full participants in their own culture. And this situation is due in part to a legal regime that is supposed to *encourage* creativity?
Of course, copyright law does have safeguards built in; but we need to ensure that these safeguards are not forgotten. For that reason, we all need to understand the "fair use" exemptions and watch carefully to make sure that they are preserved and strengthened.
---Bruce Fields
Security by obscurity (Score:2)
What are they THINKING??? (Score:3)
Maybe I'm just old fashioned, but if someone were to tell other people what a nice guy I was, I wouldn't beat the hell out of him for talking about me without my express permission.
Babylon 5 - a different approach to fan sites (Score:2)
It was amusing to watch Paramount go after all the Star Trek fan sites and shut them down, even the ones who had approached it in the same way that B5 recommended. Disney, too. Now, it's Fuji over the Iron Chef.
I've seen it work. Set simple rules. Enforce them. Embrace your fans, and they will pay you back. Piss them off, and they'll burn you.
Logic before laywers. And I work for lawyers...
Re:this is a trademark issue (Score:2)
If that's all it was, they could probably protect their interests by periodic review of the sites for objectionable uses. Documentation of the checks along with copies of letters requesting certain uses be discontinued should provide more than enough hard evidence to prevent the profiteers from legally hijacking their trademarks.
carlos
A few pieces of information (Score:2)
First, yes, this is an "intellectual property issue." Fuji, in their infinite wisdom, sicced the lawyers on the fans to "protect" their property. This much I can dig.
It was done badly. Telling your fans that everything they've been doing to support your entity is bad. If they're doing something you don't like, pull out the big legal stick, lay it across your lap, and then try to work out a decent arrangement that keeps everybody happy. Want to find out how bad it can get? Search the web for "The Asshole Formerly Known As Prince" and see what happenned with TAFKATAFKAP (The Artist Formerly Known As The Artist Formerly Known As Prince) when he had his lawyers pull the same stunt.
Third:
Jill Fairbrother
Morrison & Foerster LLP
425 Market Street
San Francisco, CA 94105-2482
tel: (415) 268-7000
fax: (415) 268-7522
email: fairbrother@mofo.com
url: www.mofo.com
I recommend a polite letter to Ms Fairbrother expressing the poor judgement of this action in polite terms. DO NOT harass the poor woman for doing her job, but do suggest that she offer her client options for allowing the fan sites to operate with approved material, and let the fans help the client like they want to.
and the secret ingredient is... (Score:2)
Pope
Freedom is Slavery! Ignorance is Strength! Monopolies offer Choice!
Re:Copyright and trademark infringement sure but.. (Score:2)
Well, actually, they can demand that you paint yourself blue, put on a tutu and go dance live on Fuji TV if they want to. If the sites have indeed violated Fuji's copyrights, Fuji could immediately start legal action based on what has already happened, instead of giving the violator an easy way out.
(Not that any of this makes Fuji's actions less stupid, but...)
Cheers,
-j.
The right and wrong (Score:5)
This one is a hard choice for me. On the one side, Iron Chef certainly has the copyrights to its logo, images, and sounds from its show. And it probably has the right to go after people who they feel have violated that copyright. After all, if they don't reign in people now, what's to stop someone else from making Iron Porn or something that comes back to bite them in the butt?
Now, that having been said, Fuji should take a careful look as to what site is doing what. If the site is positive and promotes traffic, I'd give them a letter saying "Hey, that's our stuff - but you can use it all if you sign this agreement saying that it's all ours, and that you won't claim its yours, and give us a link to our site on each page in a nice viewable manner." This way they maintain control of the copyright (by forcing people to have Fuji's permission, a perfectly reasonable request IMHO), and if a site doesn't agree, then they can slap them down. As always, that's just my $0.02. I could be wrong.
John "Dark Paladin" Hummel
We don't just like games, we love them!
And the secret ingredient! (Score:3)
......A cease and desist order!
Fuji clueless (Score:2)
I think perhaps schools should start tailoring marketing classes to the Internet generation. Corporations, for the most part, have no clue how to take advantage of the free publicity they can get from Internet fan sites. I think they should have the sites all sign contracts regarding the type of content allowed on sites which use copyrighted materials. That way, you pull the plug on access to those materials for someone who is publishing materials you find defamatory, but not for everyone in general. This is as stupid as the Viacom/Star Trek thing.
Re:this is a trademark issue (Score:2)
Why the need for sounds and pics? (Score:2)
Ok, first things first: Thanks to Zombie for getting it right! The announcer's name is Kenji Fukui. THE PHRASE IS: FUKUI-SAN! Not shueesan or whatever other vague mispronunciations us damn americans don't bother to check on.
--Rant off--
Second thing: Why do you have to use copyrighted images and such to promote the show anyway? IronChef.com had a LOT of content on it, other than the pics and sounds. All Fuji TV is saying in the Cease and Desist order (for those of you who never bothered to READ it...) is that they want the copyrighted material removed. For IronChef.com or any other fan site to shut down completely just because they can't post a few pics or sounds is a cop-out.
If you can't tell a story without pictures, you're not much of a storyteller.
Will the entertainment business ever learn? (Score:3)
So long as the fan sites aren't using the images, sound clips, etc. to blast the show then isn't this basically free advertising on the 'net for Iron Chefs? Why yes Bob, I believe that it is. So, instead of rejoicing that viewers thought so much of the show that they were willing to dedicate hours of work to honor it, Fuji TV decides that having loyal fans is a Bad Thing (TM). I think that their ratings are about to go South.
~CalibanDNS