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The Organization For Transformative Works (OTW) is a non-profit, fan activist organization that advocates for the transformative and legitimate nature of fan labor activities, including fan fiction, fan vids, anime music videos, and real person fiction. It is an organization advocating for the legality of fan works, and its primary focus is protecting fan fiction, fan art, fan videos, and other transformative works from legal snafus and commercial exploitation. The Organization for Transformative Works offers the following services to fans in fandoms: * An open-source, non-commercial, non-profit archive for fan fiction and other transformative fanac ("Archive of Our Own"), built by fans (many without previous coding experience) * A wiki for preserving fandom oral history (Fanlore) * Legal assistance to the fandom community, addressing the legal issues with fan fiction and other fan works * Preservation of fannish historical artifacts, such as zines and Geocities websites ("Open Doors") * A peer-reviewed academic journal, ''Transformative Works and Cultures'', for scholarship on fanworks and practices * A series of short documentaries on vidding, in combination with participatory culture academic Henry Jenkins and the New Media Literacies project at Massachusetts Institute of Technology ==Legal activism== The OTW provides legal assistance to the fandom community, addressing the legal issues with fan fiction and other fan works. Rebecca Tushnet, a noted legal scholar on fanfiction and fair use in copyright and trademark law, works with the OTW's legal project. In 2008, the OTW (in coordination with the Electronic Frontier Foundation) successfully submitted requests to the Library of Congress for further exceptions to the Digital Millennium Copyright Act to allow the fair use of video clips for certain noncommercial uses such as video remixes, commentary, and education, as well as to protect technology used for such purposes. The exceptions were also successfully renewed in 2012. The OTW has also submitted several amicus briefs to the courts in several cases involving intellectual property law: * In Fox vs. Dish, the OTW (in coalition with the Electronic Frontier Foundation and Public Knowledge) submitted an amicus brief which argued in defense of digital recording methods used by Dish Network, claiming that "The popular fanwork genre of noncommercial videos (“vids”) uses clips from television shows or film, reworking them in a way that comments on or critiques the original. The Copyright Office has held that substantial numbers of vids constitute fair uses. But the creation of fan vids requires intermediate digital copying and processing in order to produce the transformative final product. OTW thus believes that intermediate copying performed to facilitate fair use constitutes fair use."〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://transformativeworks.org/sites/default/files/EFF%20PK%20OTW%20Amicus%20in%20Fox%20v%20Dish-1.pdf )〕 * In the case of Ryan Hart vs. Electronic Arts, the OTW (in combination with the Digital Media Law Project and the International Documentary Association) submitted a brief arguing that Electronic Arts's use of factual information (such as the height, weight, and jersey number of football players) in creative works (in this case, video games) is protected by the First Amendment.〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://transformativeworks.org/sites/default/files/Hart%20v.%20EA%20-%20Amici%20Brief.pdf )〕 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Organization for Transformative Works」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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