Grumpy Cat Wants $600K From 'Pirating' Coffee Maker (torrentfreak.com) 186
Eloking quotes a report from TorrentFreak: Grumpy Cat is not pleased, yet. Her owners have asked a California federal court to issue a $600,000 judgment against a coffee maker which allegedly exploited their copyrights (PDF). In addition, they want damages for trademark and contract breach, and a ban on the company in question from selling any associated Grumpy Cat merchandise. There are dozens of celebrity cats on the internet, but Grumpy Cat probably tops them all. The cat's owners have made millions thanks to their pet's unique facial expression, which turned her into an overnight internet star. Part of this revenue comes from successful merchandise lines, including the Grumpy Cat "Grumppuccino" iced coffee beverage, sold by the California company Grenade Beverage. The company licensed the copyright and trademarks to sell the iced coffee, but is otherwise not affiliated with the cat and its owners. Initially this partnership went well, but after the coffee maker started to sell other "Grumpy Cat" products, things turned bad. TorrentFreak adds: "The cat's owners, incorporated as Grumpy Cat LLC, took the matter to court last year with demands for the coffee maker to stop infringing associated copyrights and trademarks. After Grenade Beverage failed to properly respond to the allegations, Grumpy Cat's owners moved for a default, which a court clerk entered in early June. A few days ago they went ahead and submitted a motion for default judgement."
Seems about right (Score:5, Insightful)
For once copyright is being used as it was intended. I'm not a fan of copyright in any sense, but when it's used like this, at least I'm not sitting here seething. Pretty damn obvious you can't just slap someone else's stuff on your coffee bags and expect they'll be OK with it.
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No, it's a fucking copyright.
Bitch all you want, but the issue still stands. The owner of the copyright followed the law, the company that is using the copyrighted material didn't. I had never heard of this dispute before I read this article, and it took me all of 30 seconds to realize who is in the wrong. Read the article, look at the coffee bag. It says "grumpy cat coffee" with a picture of the "fucking cat" on it. They had a licensing agreement for another product, but violated the agreement by relea
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Plaintiff GRUMPY CAT LIMITED (“Plaintiff”) is deemed the prevailing party on its first, second, third, fourth, sixth, and seventh causes of action against Defendant GRENADE BEVERAGE, LLC (“Grenade”) for Copyright Infringement, Trademark Infringement (Federal and Common Law), Trademark Dilution , Breach of Contract, and Accounting
I'm curious though, how are they guilty of "Accounting"?
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In this context, I think "Accounting" means "fraudulent accounting" as in I promise to pay you 10% of my gross (or $10 per unit), so I lie about my gross, and pay you 10%
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Defendants did respond in some fashion and also filed a counter-suit. The request for default judgement does not mean the defendants never responded, it could be that some complaints were not responded to or not resonded to in a way that they wished, or it's just a standard legal move used whether or not there is a response, or they could be flat out lying by saying there was no response, which it is why it's up to the judge to decide the merits of the request.
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summary judgment that you win, because it is the only conclusion possible under the agreed upon facts.
It's quite rare, but I've seen people lose a movement for summary judgement where the defendant didn't reply. The judge stipulated to all the facts as presented by the one side, then ruled they were not sufficient to "win" even if 100% true, so the opposition needn't even show up to win. It's rare, but it's a legal option, and done more than you imply.
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Copyright is supposed to further the arts, not necessarily enrich 'owners'.
How are "artists" and the"arts" they create supposed to be furthered if they aren't compensated for their work? (I'm using quotes in this instance, because calling an Internet meme of a cat "art" is a bit of a stretch, but this is obviously about the larger issue of copyright in general) That is kind of the point of the copyright, it's a contract between an artist and the government (which is representing the public) saying "If you agree to produce art we will help prevent others from making money off
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Let's say hypothetically that the cat doesn't belong to the so-called owners and they don't have a valid trademark. In such a situation, the coffee company should still not be allowed to market under that brand name without the cat's permission. However the cat does not have the appropriate opportunity to hire a legal team to defend the trademark.
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Comment removed (Score:4, Informative)
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It's the INTERNET'S fucking cat
It doesn't belong to you. The cat, and her trademarks, belong to the owner.
Seeing something on the Internet doesn't give the Internet ownership.
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So, what are the owners of the cat making money from? Pictures of the cat? Or pictures of the cat, superimposed with text someone else wrote?
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Also, the coffee company's logo is an illustration of an angry looking cat. It's not the photo of THE Grumpy cat. The owners of the cat in the meme can't claim ownership on the name "Grumpy Cat" nor can they claim ownership of every angry cat in existence.
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I like this definition of ownership. If it feels like something is mine, then it is mine.
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Ha, you reminded me of the "Dog's rules of ownership" - there are various versions floating around.
Dog Rules of Ownership
If I like it, it's mine.
If it's in my mouth, it's mine.
If I can take it from you, it's mine.
If I want it later, it's mine.
If I want it now, it's mine.
If I chew it up into pieces, they're all mine.
If you want it, it's mine.
If I saw it first, it's mine.
If I ever had it, it's mine.
If it's broken, it's yours!
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Part of this revenue comes from successful merchandise lines, including the Grumpy Cat âoeGrumppuccinoâ iced coffee beverage, sold by the California company Grenade Beverage.
It's their fucking cat. They've promoted it as a brand, legally licensed it out and then another company abused that license. This is one of those good uses of copyright/t
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They are making money off of the picture which was turned into a meme, which they owned originally.
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Re: Seems about right (Score:5, Funny)
It's their fracking cat.
This makes me lose a lot of sympathy for the cat, the cat is clearly aligned with Big Oil interests and shouldn't be using wealth gained by its climate destroying drilling practices to stomp on small time coffee makers.
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Be charitable, I'm pretty sure this means the cat is part of the resistance movement against the Cylons.
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Can't don't really have owners, just staff.
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When my cat tries to escape, I prevent it. Are you saying I am really a kidnapper? Will the cat bring a false imprisonment lawsuit against me?
Re:Seems about right (Score:4, Informative)
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Also, "copyright" is the current generic term for "Intellectual Property" because "intellectual property" takes too long to say/type, and "IP" is ambiguous, at least in many contexts.
If you are going all proscriptive on language, there are more important targets than "copyright".
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Someone above noted that both trademark (the "Grumpy Cat" in general) and copyright (a particular image of the Grumpy Cat) are involved. I didn't RTFA so I dunno.
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Also, "copyright" is the current generic term for "Intellectual Property" because "intellectual property" takes too long to say/type, and "IP" is ambiguous, at least in many contexts.
Since this is the second instance of this assertion in the comments, I'll just point out that this is completely absurd, and can only be true among the truly illiterate or those too lazy to learn the language or basic logic. (he says, hoping that's not too strongly put ...) I've never heard _anyone_ misuse copyright in that way. It's reasonably OK to use IP as a generic because you are unsure of whether something is copyright or trademark, but not the converse. Using "copyright" that way is analogous to
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I have some folks here who disagrees:
https://upload.wikimedia.org/w... [wikimedia.org]
http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-q1n2... [blogspot.com]
http://ep.yimg.com/ty/cdn/madi... [yimg.com]
http://totallyhistory.com/wp-c... [totallyhistory.com]
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Until then that craftsmanship ascribes to God at best, so "copyright infringement damages" would go to him, or whatever construct you place responsible for inventing cats.
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I'm surprised that you don't see that what we're talking about is a picture of a face, not the face itself. It's not the grumpy cat that's under IP protection, it's the image of the Grumpy Cat.
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Only because I'm pretty sure the copyright has run out. But these days, you can never be sure. Maybe Time Warner bought up the rights to all daVinci's work and has gotten the copyright extended.
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Copyright assumes some degree of intellectual effort, "something" created by an author or artist - with the focus on CREATED
Copyright law in terms of photographs, painting, drawings, etc, is long settled in favor of the person clicking the shutter or holding the pen, etc. Clearly what is in question is the images, not the actual cat's actual face. One if someone tried to put the actual cat's actual face on a bag of coffee, then your rant about a cat's face not being art might be relevant.
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I hope you like it when you create something and others make money off of it, and you don't.
(Yes, even if all they did was post pictures of their cat, they "created" something that was popular, and other companies paid for rights to use it.)
How is this different from a human celebrity's likeness being their own (for commercial purposes, not for newsworthy purposes)?
Meme (Score:1, Redundant)
Arguably, Grumpy Cat is only famous for because of the actual meme, not the image alone. The collective internet created that meme, not grumpy Cat's owners.
Re:Meme (Score:4, Informative)
But while the meme is "about the cat" the original meme is actually based on a specific photograph/video(s) of the cat that the owners published on the internet and hold copyrights on - the cat itself doesn't exist inside a computer and isn't published on the internet. While they have allowed use of the image for memes they also have chosen to require any commercial use to be licensed (using both copyright and trademark laws as appropriate).
The drawing is almost certainly a derivative work of those images/videos being used for commercial use... having done some further reading the drawing in use was *not* made directly from the real life cat which pretty much ties up the copyright claim for every instance where the drawing, a derivative work of a copyrighted image, was used without licence.
As far as the trademarks go its a little more fuzzy but in initially licensing the use of trademarks from Grumpy Cat LLC for the one product the coffee company acknowledged and accepted the validity of the trademark and will make it difficult, if not impossible, for them to argue otherwise in court.
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That might help for Copyright, but not Trademark; also, a 'slaveish imitation' (or some term like that) is still copyright infringement anyway.
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Yes, it's a likeness of a living being. That rights to likeness should only apply to persons and not to cats is human chauvinism at its worst.
Anyway, if the company licensed the cat meme for a specific iced coffee beverage and not for other products then I side with the cat's guardians on this one.
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Honestly never heard of this Grumpy Cat (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Honestly never heard of this Grumpy Cat (Score:5, Funny)
I've heard of Smelly Cat... does that count?
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No, but... it's not your fault.
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Grumpy cat
Keyboard cat
Nyan cat
Monorail cat
Please feel free to list the remaining popular internet cats.
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standing
box
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Hamburger/cheese
Long
Ceiling/basement
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Jupiter and Kona from klaatu42's Talking Cat Consultants [youtube.com]
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Something is hinkey here (Score:3, Insightful)
The defendant once licensed this IP and now infringes w/o license on new products.
Either
a) they now believe the IP is not licensable (in which case they would have responded in court) , or
b) they are going bankrupt and don't have the $ to fight and don't care as they know they are going tits up
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Not responding is exactly the wrong result. An entering of default judgement is a win for the plaintiff and they can and will go after the assets of the company. You can't appeal these default judgement unless you can prove beyond a doubt you never received the process as failure to respond is essentially pleading guilty in a civil suit (that's how the courts view it).
You always respond or you lose automatically.
Grumpy Cat has no need for money. (Score:2)
Grumpy Cat does not want $600k. Why would a cat want money? What's it going to do, bury it's poop in it.
Grumpy Cat's OWNERS want $600k.
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Actually it is the owner of the trademark and/or copyright: Grumpy Cat, LLC. And, since we often drop the suffix of incorporation when speaking informally, "Grumpy Cat, LLC." becomes "Grumpy Cat".
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Grumpy Cat would buy you grammar nazis. ;)
Misleading Title (Score:2)
Morristown, Arizona (Score:2)
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2012, actually.
But good luck to her owners. I've had 5 cats and never monetized a cent off them.
Re: Whole lawsuit probably planned.... (Score:2)
No different than an artist agent?
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Re:Paying for pussy (Score:4, Insightful)
Hence, the Kardashians. Who, from all I can conclude, are famous for being famous. . .
Re:Paying for pussy (Score:5, Funny)
I thought it was because of the occupation of Bajour and their alliance with the Dominion.
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That didn't work out well for them in the long term. Even the Pah Wraith alliance Dukat crafted was a big dud.
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The Buffalo Bills missed a pass for a touchdown, so they lost a game in 1970, so they to get the first pick in the draft, and got O.J. Simpson. OJ stays in Buffalo for awhile, meets his wife, allegedly then kills her. He hires the Kardashian's father as lawyer. They win, making the Kardashians slightly famous. Then Kim has a sex tape.
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I am not a K-fan. But a while back I watched a documentary (I forget the actual topic) that went into the industry that is Kim Kardashian, and how she ran the business. While class is not a term I would use in conjunction with her and the whole 'community' around them, I had to admire the professional way in which she ran the business. She in fact works very hard to provide value given for value received, and to maintain a good relationship with her 'customers' - fans, that receive her tweets, watch her
Re:They want 600k (Score:4, Insightful)
They are asking for the maximum $150,000 per infringement. At least in this case there really is commercial scale abuse, it's not like the RIAA demanding $150,000 from some kid's parents for one song.
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Somebody who actually figured out how to make an account on Slashdot.
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ACs don't see sigs. For someone to knowingly comment on sig content they must be able to see Slashdot from the perspective of a numbered user.
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So, you're saying that there are people so pitiful that they would have a Slashdot account for browsing, but comment as Anonymous Coward because they don't want to be associated with their opinions?
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No, they're just afraid you're going to dox them and attack them online with your horde of PC lynch mobs, harass their boss at work until they're fired, then make the headlines in various news outlets about how you defended the world against oppression and bigotry of the cyginscist white males.
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Wow, that's messed up. Do you really believe that? Has this ever happened to anyone on Slashdot or are you just doing drama queen theater?
Oh wait, I already know the answer to that.
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http://www.infowars.com/man-fa... [infowars.com]
http://www.breitbart.com/tech/... [breitbart.com]
It happens, even if you are willfully blind to it.
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No, mr anonymous idiot. The source of a message matters.
Re: They want 600k (Score:2)
Nice strawman, 10/10
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You're not supposed to participate in a thread if you've moderated.
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If you don't log out and instead check the post anon checkbox, all the mods go away anyways.
Re:They want 600k (Score:5, Insightful)
Do you have a problem with the content of the sig?
"SJW" is a completely useless term (it didn't used to be...). It means absolutely nothing now, as it's been so overused that it means anything at all, anything the speaker doesn't like. Now it's really only an indication that the speaker is a bit of a dullard, or has been entirely disconnected from the Internet since the start of GamerGate.
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Hey I liked the original (derogatory) usage of Social Justice Warrior. It got the point across, was a pretty accurate depiction of those we used to call "white-knight shit-stirrers."
But now it's basically the new "Nazi." It's just something you call someone else when you don't like their opinions (usually anything left of Objectivism) whether their opinions are anything like what the original SJWs did.
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
It has a meaning, but yes, it has been overused.
The way I define it is someone who tries to censor someone else because they don't like what they have to say.
Another thing I have seen from this group is that no matter how much evidence provided to them of how wrong their position is, they continuously argue the same points. AmiMoJo has actually taken to attacking sources, even when they provide numerous citations and screen captures of the incidents.
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You're pretty much right on. Grumpy Cat was a Reddit meme a couple of (several?) years ago, it got popular, companies wanted to use it, the cat's owner "won the lottery". That's all good. IMHO they've got as much right to exploit their good fortune based on the looks of a cat, as some random person who is lucky enough to have a photogenic face.
One thing that many people aren't aware of is that almost _nothing_ in the real marketplace is priced based on cost, nor should it be (there's a lot more to that.)
Re:copyright holder problems (Score:4, Funny)
It's not purrfect is it?
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That's pawsitively correct!
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(was that too direct?)
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