I vaguely questioned them about what might provoke them to issue a C&D, and the guy (his name was Carl) was clearly reading from some prewritten answer about if a site contains copyrighted material, then it's against their policy and they will take appropriate action, blah blah blah.
Now that policy technically puts every "Chrono" thing you see on the Internet (fans sites, Compendium and all) as being against policy and legally worthy of getting a C&D order. I told him there are hundreds of Chrono fansites on the Internet, all using something at least as basic as the game's logo, a screenshot or a piece of Toriyama's concept art. Would even sites such as that be against policy and worthy of a C&D order? Carl responded by essentially repeating what he said earlier...damn robot. I didn't press any further, seeing how I was getting nowhere.
So I think it's just the more prominent Chrono stuff that centers around projects (CTR, CTRP) that get those things. Now the question is...the two examples I just cited were meant to be a game in and of themselves (even though CTRP was actually a giant mod for Unreal Tournament)... But would an ongoing project like this one get a C&D? We're not making a game, but this would be arguably more visible and well-known than your average random spoof... Meh...
I, for one, will not back down until such a letter arrives at my doorstep, but I suggest we might think about making access to the files (and even the site) password-protected. That way, from outside the passworded area, it looks like a basic, badly built, overambitious fansite. On the INSIDE...COOLNESS. ^_^
If we do that, we shouldn't just post the password on the forum or anything...it should be distributed in like, mass PMs to each other and stuff. I don't want a Squenix guy getting a hold of it, so I can basically try and field requests that way. Fortunately they'll only need the password once, and it probably won't be anything hard to remember. Anyway, that's my thought.