cthia wrote:You're going to want to skewer me for this, but I can accept even that. Here's the thing. I'd be just as disappointed as you about all of the downsides of it that you laid out. But if you step into the shoes of the family who knows the intimate history of the characters, characters who may be patterned after famous people in the family, might have to endure their characters exploited, criminalized, lacking morals and every other thing awful. Now, apply that to a Christian family, whose family had a tradition of using the same name for new births. A name that is now synonymous with evil.
What if David's daughter's daughter's daughter's daughters had to read about an Honor that is a harlot of the galaxy and worse than Lady Young?
Would that be David's great great great granddaughters? Hating their great great great grandfather for ever having created that character, who is on Holovid doing hideous things in the future. Dominating the Holovid. Primetime. The longest running Holovid ever.
I am trying to understand your argument. You say the author's family needs to have copyright control, because a precious family name might be applied to a vile character. Is this because the author did not like that person? Do you expect the family will use control to suppress the publication? What if the author hated the name and bequeathed the rights to a third party, so the family could not suppress the story? What do you do about an unrelated author that creates an evil character with that name?
This all seems so weak and farfetched. Names can fall out of favor for all sorts of reasons, the Arnold family is not likely to name a child Benedict. Adolf and Lucretia need to be retired from use. John Cleland's novel about
Fanny Hill gave a whole new use of a word to the British public, too bad for any English family that had a custom of naming their daughters Frances.