BEIJING, Sept. 9 (Xinhuanet)-- A U.S. federal judge
ruled on Monday in favor of author J.K. Rowling in her copyright infringement
lawsuit against a fanatic, who was set to publish an encyclopedia to Harry
Potter series.
Judge Robert Patterson said in
his ruling that the encyclopedia would violate Rowling's copyright and
would cause her irreparable harm as a writer: "[The] Lexicon appropriates too
much of Rowling's creative work for its purposes as a reference guide."
Judge Patterson permanently blocked publication of
the reference guide and awarded the plaintiffs 6,750 U.S. dollars in
damages.
Rowling launched a lawsuit last year against Steven
Vander Ark and his publishers, RDR Books.
Vander Ark, 50, a former school librarian, runs a
popular Harry Potter Lexicon website, which is a guide to the seven Potter books
and includes detailed descriptions of characters, creatures, spells and
potions.
Vander Ark said he wrote the Harry Potter
encyclopedia in response to the demand of fans of his Web site.
During testimony in April, the
Edinburgh-based Rowling said the unauthorized book would simply be a
"rearrangement" of her work and constitute a "wholesale theft of 17 years of my
hard work."
"I believe that this book constitutes the wholesale
theft of 17 years of my hard work," she testified, going on to denounce the book
as plagiarism and a waste of money.
"I went to court to uphold the right of authors
everywhere to protect their own original work. The proposed book took an
enormous amount of my work and added virtually no original commentary of its
own."
The ruling was a victory for Rowling and Warner
Bros., the studio behind the Harry Potter films and owner of intellectual
property rights, to the Potter books and movies.
Rowling's seven Potter books have sold nearly 400
million copies worldwide and have been translated into 64
languages.
(Agencies)