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Judge Avoids Klingon Language Copyright Issue

Despite a clever, headline-grabbing effort by the Language Creation Society to draw attention to the copyright ability of constructed languages like Klingon, a federal judge turned aside an effort to attach the issue to the Axanar copyright infringement case.

Moot Issue

In an order issued January 5, 2017, federal Judge R. Gary Klausner said the issue of whether Klingon, or any other language, is entitled to copyright protection was rendered moot by his order earlier that week denying Axanar a fair use defense for copyright infringement:

[The] Language Creation Society … argues, in support of Defendants’ position in the cross motions for summary judgment, that the Klingon language should not be entitled to copyright protection. … The Court did not reach the issue of whether a language, and specifically the Klingon language, is copyrightable in the order.
The Language Creation Society promotes the art and craft of language creation.

Copyrighting a Language

In April 2016, Language Creation Society filed an amicus brief, partly written in Klingon, opposing Paramount’s claim of owning the copyright for the Klingon language, developed for the studio by linguist Marc Okrand for the film, Star III: The Search for Spock.

Language Creation Society

The mission of the Language Creation Society (LCS) is to promote the art and craft of language creation — free expression that would be stifled by allowing any language to be copyrighted:

Allowing copyright claims to a language would create a monopoly on use extending far beyond what is needed to protect the original work or to claim credit for the language’s creation. The potential threat of a lawsuit for merely using a conlang [constructed language], or creating new works to make it more accessible, has a chilling effect.1)
HEADLINES The Language Creation Society’s effort to get the court to rule on whether Klingon can be copyrighted attracted a hundred headlines.

Not Affiliated with Axanar

While the LCS filed a brief alongside the defendants, the society emphasized it was taking no sides in the larger copyright dispute between CBS, Paramount and Axanar.

Substantial Similarity

The issue of whether a language can be copyrighted was first dealt with by Klausner in his May 9, 2016, order rejected Axanar’s motion to dismiss the case. The LCS had attached an amicus curiae (“friend of the court”) brief to that motion.

Klausner ruled the language issue was beside the point; Paramount’s claim that Axanar was using Klingon was only part of a larger test to determine whether Axanar’s use of many Star Trek elements, some of which might individually not qualify for copyright protection, was substantially similar in total to Star Trek.

The same reasoning appeared to be behind Klausner’s January 5 order, after having determined Axanar indeed qualified under an extrinsic, objective test to have infringed on Star Trek.


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