Forum Moderators: not2easy
Can I sell this summary to people too lazy to read the original? Do I need the author's consent to sell a summary of their work? Can I actually copyright the summary I have written? I think this falls under what people call derivative works- but how exactly does that apply to this example?
Any help/opinions much appreciated.
I reviewed the material from the business I mentioned above and even downloaded a summary. They do assert their own copyright on the summary, and make no reference to the author's copyright (as, say, an audio recording of a book would).
They also have a FAQ item that said that authors love to have their books summarized as it help publicize them. To me, this implied that the summaries were performed without explicit permission or royalties.
Big publishers have good lawyers, though, so I'd recommend an attorney vetting your final approach.
Still be nice to get a legal opinion on it, though- as in: if you write a review you don't need permission, but a summary you do- where is the line? Or, do they only need (seek) permission because they do use actual language from the books in their summaries, and not doing this would be a different story?
Still be nice to get a legal opinion on it
Lawyers are a good source for those! ;) NOT a legal opinion, but I'd guess a key detemining factor is how much of the content is yours (commentary, analysis, etc.) and also how much you extract directly from the source document (quotes & paraphrases).
Once you get into the slightly murky fair use waters, be aware that even if the law seems to be on your side a deep-pockets company can still decide to sue you if they don't like what you are doing. They probably have lots more to spend on lawyers than you do. Hence, it's good to be absolutely sure before proceeding and to seek permission if in doubt.
In the case of summaries of movies or television programs or books or so on in guides, publications etc: the essential difference is that these summaries are not substantial enough to replace the original work (i.e. they don't "compete" with the work), and generally they act as sign posts or references to the work, they are not substitutes for the work. In your case, the summaries are substitutes. This would be a key matter of fact in the argument: just how far does your summary go from being a signpost to being a replacement.
I think that you would need to come to some arrangement with the owners of the works to do this kind of thing, but such an arrangement could still be profitable for both of you and make a good business (as evidenced by the fact that there are other businesses doing this).