Pretty much this.Whatever wrote:Fan fiction is an unauthorized derivative work. The fan authors have no rights. Zero, zip, nada. If it was authorized, and they had a contract, they'd have the right to whatever they added (but still no rights to the underlying characters). But it's not authorized, so the law specifically excludes them from having any copyright protection at all.
GRRM could take someone's Daenerys fan fiction straight from a website, slap his name on it, and publish it for the lulz, and almost certainly win in court (this happens in Hollywood approximately "all the time").
Now, certain fan fiction groups are working to fight this and get some rights as transformative works, so going to court means you might suddenly be their test case and have to face down a few dozen attorneys who are really passionate about reading and writing unauthorized fanfiction sex scenes. That's a deterrent for any author, so I can understand the impulse to avoid reading/taking from fan fiction. But not letting people "guess" your plot is super dumb.
I mean, JK Rowling got all weird and crazy about FanFiction authors writing stories in which Harry has sex with Ron or whatever because she thinks that is somehow people raping characters that she owns. She even wrote an incredibly bad "canonical ending" to show exactly who ends up marrying who and how many kids they have and what their names were and all that shit. And she tried to put an end to Harry Potter slashfics with legal challenges that slashfic authors obviously lacked the funds to go to court over.
But even she doesn't think that Harry Potter slashfic authors can sue her for making Dumbledore gay. That doesn't even make sense.
-Username17

