If you are so sure they're illegal, why aren't you asking Activision to speak out on the illegality of it?
The rest of your argument is half strawman, half ignorance.
You want to know how he did it, etc., etc? Go read the customs thread on this very forum. He pretty much details the process of making the figure.
So, instead of actually going to Activision yourself and defending him against those you might lost against, you'd rather have me go up to Activision, basically "tattle", and then when he's facing a lawsuit and anything else he's brought upon himself, be ousted from the group for "tattling". Right. I've dealt with bully culture, and I can see where this is going. I understand that you find this community easier to talk down to, but I don't think that's right. And I find it curious that you can say you "admittedly, are not an expert and do not purport to be" and "thus wouldn't be on here accusing people I don't know of crimes based off of a complete lack of legal understanding", yet talk like you know these things, and even accused the creater of this site on more than one occasion of illegal and/or deceptive action with regard to this site, all in order to make your point. I don't talk down to people (or at least don't intend to) unless they do so to me. I don't like people calling anyone on here nasty names to make their points either. I will call someone out on their actions.
I noticed he mentioned his process on here. I do wonder, if he finds it so good to do so, why he didn't do so on the Skylanders facebook page. Then he could show off and find out Activision's take on this. The gauntlet is still on the floor, if he chooses to pick it up. Or you could.
Even making a chase varient Boomer and resealing it in a package is wrong! It's made to look the same and can't be distinguished! In this case, he made a mold of the original chop chop figure, cast a resin fig, and then resealed it the original box for sale. Doing things with your legally purchased item for personal use is fine, but if you tried to make a mold of your xbox controller, cast a replica with it and sold it online, even as a listed "custom" it would still be illegal.
Quote: UncleBob
To once again correct some misinformation - *if* making a custom figure (to whatever extent) were to be illegal due to copyright, then no, you cannot give them as gifts to friends. That would be distribution. It doesn't matter if you do it for free or you charge for it, distribution is distribution.
I'd also like to point out that Matteomax, the moderator that keeps getting slammed in this thread is NOT a moderator on the Skylanders forum and, therefore, cannot delete or edit posts here.
Making a custom of any sort isn't the issue here. It's making "customs" that look like the real thing, whether using a mold or repainting them, then resealing them into the original box (one you'd expect the real thing to BE in) to sell. If you have an articulated Skylander from Jin, it won't look like a varient, because there isn't an official articulated varient! Most of the customs done by the person in question here are fine, it's just certain ones that are the problem! Also, customs made by fans are often commission work for personal collections and not ebay sale!
I'm not getting into the debate over which mod is responsible for what...all I know is this thread has been killed mutiple times, which shouldn't have happened. So no Matteomax bashing from me.
Quote: UncleBob
C&D means nothing if there's no legal teeth behind it.
Many folks seem to be hung up on the idea that he's repackaged the figure and that someone else could resell it as an authentic variant later. If he sold the figure outside of a package, couldn't someone buy it, buy a new one off the shelf, then swap 'em? What would the difference be?
The difference is the intent. He knew it looked like the real thing, even made it that way! He knew selling it in this manner would help him get more money, and that it could be mistaken for the original. He'd still be on the hook for the casting it from a mold made from the original Skylander. The buyer would be in trouble too for obviously scamming!
Quote: UncleBob
You're dealing with two completely separate legal issues here.
First, Copyright Infringement. This would be up to the copyright holder (Activision) to enforce. There are three possible situations here:
- Creating a custom figure of a character using parts of an existing version of that character.
- Creating a custom figure of a character that *looks* like another existing version of that character using parts of another existing version of that character.
- Resealing a modified figure into the original packaging.
Now, I'm not familiar with any court cases in the US based off of any of these three situations... but I'd be surprised. Personally, I don't think the courts would see much of a difference between the first and the second - it would just come down to the fact it was a custom figure in and of itself. As far as the third one, I think it's a reach to say putting a modified figure into a package would be considered illegal. To what extent would the modifications be okay? What if I opened the figure, played with it in the game, leveling it up, then resealed it? I still modified the original figure. I would be surprised if the courts would rule against someone on this (and, again, encourage anyone to cite existing US cases where this has come up).
It is my (admittedly, I am no expert and do not purport to be, thus wouldn't be on here accusing people I don't know of crimes based off of a complete lack of legal understanding) opinion that each of these three things would be okay. Many folks here, who are against this particular case, seem to agree with one or more of these same points, but seem to reach a different conclusion about this particular case.
*Now* - the thing that I question is the *process* by which the custom figure was created, as you *are* creating a second figure... although, only partially. Since it uses significant parts of the original figure in the final product, I feel that this could go either way. And, as I said, I'd be interested in seeing a court case on this.
The second legal issue would be Intent to Defraud - if the seller was trying to pass off the figure as a legitimate variant (regardless if there was an existing version of this or not), then the seller would run into issues. However, the descriptions of the auction, along with the claims that the seller is contacting bidders to make sure they're aware of what they're bidding on, I believe he is doing due diligence in communicating that the figure is a custom figure, and this is not defrauding anyone.
All this aside, there are several possible "moral" issues surrounding this. That's a whole different ball of wax.
I think it's clear that this is illegal. He made molds from the original figures in order to make replicas of rare varients for sale. He placed them into original packaging, clearly knowing they looked more authentic that way, and then sold them on ebay. Whether he said custom in the auction or not, there's nothing that indicates it is fake on the item itself or the packaging. I can see this only going bad for him. I don't think there's any legal loophole he can use to get out of a lawsuit and having to pay fines, if not actual jailtime. This is not simply a moral problem, but a very growing legal one.