Ripped Off By The BBC?

Thirteen or 13?

The Science of Silly Words

Status
Not open for further replies.
Haven't listened to it yet, but the blurb suggests an outrageous story. It adds to my already egregious levels of paranoia. There should be some kind of collective fund set aside to cover authors' costs in cases like this. For example, if there were an authors' union, the membership subs could go into a pot to allow authors to pay for legal advice and action where appropriate. But in any case, for the BBC to behave like this is just so disappointing, to put it mildly.

Heads should roll. Has anyone shared this with other arms of the media -- Private Eye, etc?
 
Hubby and I were talking about screenplays last evening, coincidentally. He asked me if production companies for movies or TV are allowed to use a book or other written material as the source for a show or movie, and I said not without the author's permission unless for some reason the book or story isn't copyrighted, or is so old it's now in the public domain. I hope the author pursues this. Horrible behavior on the part of the BBC if this is true. Simply inexcusable.
 
This is like my worst nightmare..although I am unfortunately one of those 'naive' people who wouldn't know what to do if this happened to them.

All I know is that the quicker you are in the public domain with your brand, the more established and known you are the more likely that you can legitimately claim rights to owning the concept. This is in reference to the 'passing off' argument.

Many times I'm given an NDA (when I was publishing games) by teachers who were too scared to share their ideas. But I realised that it's actually better protected once you get the idea worked on and 'out there'. The more work you put into it..i.e writing, designing whatever time value you add the more original and the less danger you have of someone copying.

Officially I always register my trademarks with the Intellectual Property Office in the areas that I plan on publishing i.e if you search 'Elemons' and 'Top Careers' they show the areas that no one else can use these terms in. This is a valuable property to me and I have already sold one brand to someone else because they knew that they wanted to use it globally but couldn't use it whilst I owned the trademark to it. Respectfully he asked if he could buy it and I, coincidentally, was selling it anyway a few weeks before they contacted me from Hong Kong. Look up 'Loop'...the guy just launched a completely unrelated brand to mine but he is now launching it on Kickstarter.

I highly recommend the investment of about £300 in trademarking your brand officially with the IPO. If you want support with your IP and further advice go to the British Library IP Centre who offer so much advice and free workshops. They have advisors you can call who specialise in IP. It's all there for free. Valuing our work and copyright at the start will minimise or at best help towards defending it should the worse case scenario take place. Although this issue with the BBC is troubling indeed.
 
Even if you can prove timelines, brands etc, and we all could, once it's logged on a computer, it might come down to 'so sue us' and then, who has got the deepest pockets. This author is a well established writer, and they dared.

I would use social media to drum up support. Putting pressure on the BBC and threatening their reputation. Especially the writers who used this authors material allegedly. Putting off future writers..
 
The link quoted in the OP doesn't load up on my iPad. It just comes up as 'page not found'.
What's Aunty done now?
 
Last edited by a moderator:
It's getting a few RT's from other quarters, I see. The Litopia episode, and a piece about what has happened, in Private Eye.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Thirteen or 13?

The Science of Silly Words

Back
Top