Subject: My method:
Author:
Posted on: 2011-07-30 14:30:00 UTC

My method depends on where it's published. If the story is published on a site such as fanfiction.net, it's pretty understood by all that it's fanfiction and the writer doesn't own the world or characters described in the work. The same goes with items in the 'fanfiction' section of Deviantart.

If the writer posts it on Livejournal or some other place, it is good form to at least include a note that it is fanfiction and the writer doesn't claim to own the characters or world depicted... if not for a lawyer's convenience, but for readers who may go to the journal for other things, not expecting fanfiction.

(Of course, if it is a fanfiction journal, you can get away with probably one 'disclaimer' for the whole journal, to remove confusion.)

Usually if I include a disclaimer, it is for multiple chapter stories (not one-shots) and is only on the first chapter of the work. And even then it's short, more like a thank-you to the creators of the original work than a 'ME NO OWN U NO SUE'

I do include disclaimers citing fair use for PPC missions, though, because I am borrowing multiple things (The PPC, the original work, the badfic, all at once), for use in parody... and if somebody finds the missions they have a real chance of being mad about them.

I mean, what ordinary reader would ever get mad enough at a fanfic in order to sue... and what creator would try and take down EVERY BIT OF FANFICTION of their stuff with a lawsuit?

Even more ludicrous are the numerous high school AU stories that have nothing to do with the plot OR real characters, yet are tagged with 'I DON'T OWN X I JUST USE IT!!!'

If they stripped and replaced the names, I am not sure anybody would notice or care that that kind of story was fanfiction at all. (I am sure they would care if it was bad, though...)

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