Once Again, You Cannot Copyright The Idea Of Sneaking Veggies Into Kids Food
from the and-what's-the-deal-with-that? dept
Last fall, we wrote about a court ruling that found that Jerry Seinfeld's wife, Jessica Seinfeld, did not infringe on the copyrights of another cookbook author, when she published her cookbook, Deceptively Delicious: Simple Secrets to Get Your Kids Eating Good Food -- all about ways to sneak healthy foods to your kids. She was sued by the woman who had written a similar cookbook, though with a very different style. For some reason, many people just can't get it through their heads that copyright covers the expression, not the idea. Hell, it doesn't even cover recipes (which are just lists of ingredients) unless there's great literary expression in the directions.Seinfeld's book was apparently totally unlike the other book, and the court made this point clear. So what did the other cookbook author do? She appealed. Thankfully, Dan points us to the news that the appeals court quickly upheld the lower court's ruling, pointing out that there was no copyright infringement in just having a similar idea:
Stockpiling vegetable purees for covert use in children's food is an idea that cannot be copyrighted
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Filed Under: cookbooks, copyright, jessica seinfeld
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There's no prior art in that case (at least in the US.)
Although, once you acknowledge software in patents, what the hell is there to stop you?
Aaaaaand Patents take another nose-dive in terms of credibility. Not that they care, they have the courts.
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copyright, no...but...
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the beginnings of streisand effect...
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What about her lawyer?
She should attack the lawyer for malpractice :)
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Re: What about her lawyer?
She should attack the lawyer for malpractice :)
Either that or she figured that the lawsuit would get her book a lot of publicity, and assumed this was part of its marketing costs....
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Re: What about her lawyer?
More people should sue their lawyers.
Hell, we should start a fund that's exclusively dedicated to financing people suing their lawyers.
Not that it'd help, but it'd be fun to watch.
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Learn to cook...
Nice interpretation from someone who clearly has never read a recipe in thier life.
So if I said
Sugar
Milk
Flour
Eggs
Salt
Oil
Butter
that to you is a recipe ??? and your supposed to be someone we are to take as knowing what they are talking about. HA...
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Re: Learn to cook...
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Re: Learn to cook...
No, that's a list of ingredients.
I don't think you quite understand what a recipe is.
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@Michael
Frogs.
Snails.
And no, I'm not a racist, my best friend is French.
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copyright
Maybe you could cover yourself by speaking a Latin disclaimer to your child, indicating you're placing vegetables in their food that may not be immediately visible.
Or, have the child sign a disclaimer stating they are aware of the presence of vegetables in their food, even though they can't see them. Who reads those things anyway?
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back in the late 60's I remember my Mom bought a product called "I hate Carrots" & "I hate Peas". The products were essentially French Fries impregnated with the puree of one of the aforementioned veggies. Needless to say they sucked but it goes to show the idea has been around for quite awhile.
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Re: You CAN copyright a recipe
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re
In baseball, when you're down a run in the ninth, you send the runner from third.
Even on a shallow fly ball.
Because you just never know what might happen.
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Recipe same as software (or hardware)
"A recipe is just a list of ingredients".
Well, then, by youre logic a computer program would be "just a list of computer instructions".
How you put them instructions together should be obvious to you ???
So if you get a list of computer instructions, (or CPU instruction set) from that you would be able to work out the combination and arraingement of those instructions to create youre meal... wrong..
A recipe is just the food industries name for a 'design blueprint', a computer program is a recipe of computer instructions to achieve a specific result.
Steel industry use recipes to manufacture the different kinds and grades of steel.
Coke have a recipe for that refreshing black fuzzy drink, that would be worth billions.
Intel and AMD (and others) all have recipes to manufacture integrated circuites like CPU's. They are certainly not 'just lists of ingredience'.
They are highly prized IP, and can and often do contain patents and copyright.
A patent is a recipe or method explaining how to achieve a specific result.
Why should some people have laws protecting their invention from theft and some have not simply based on the industry you work in ?
Thats why fighting patents and copyright is a losing fight.
(big easy target to score easy cred points for you fans I guess)..
But the law's are not going to change to make it ok for you to determine who has specific rights and who does not (thankfully)...
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Re: Recipe same as software (or hardware)
Followed up by a long rant by Darryl about how we're wrong to claim a recipe cannot be copyrighted. Perhaps Darryl should follow the link that was included in the post on "recipes." It's to the US Copyright Office:
http://www.copyright.gov/fls/fl122.html
Which says:
"Mere listings of ingredients as in recipes, formulas, compounds, or prescriptions are not subject to copyright protection."
You can apologize now. Or will you disappear?
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Re: Recipe same as software (or hardware)
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No, I wont apoligize, no reason to
That makes no difference, I was just commenting on youre spin on the subject and youre use of 'selective reporting'.
Youre constant making of claims that are clearly wrong and misleading to allow you to try to get your own unique brand of FUD.
Trouble is I assume most of the people you are posting too here, have an IQ somewhat higher that 15 as you seem to assume.
So I wont disappear or apologize, I have no need too, how about you apoligize for posting clearly misleading posts.
Which even a child can see for what it is, an attempt of FUD.
And yes, a recipe is just a name, it could be called a method, project plan, instruction list, computer program.
And I dont see why you would not be able to copyright a recipe book, just like any other book.
Again, with trying to find loopholes to support your somewhat weak arguments.
Thanks,
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