Follow Slashdot blog updates by subscribing to our blog RSS feed

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
The Courts The Internet Communications Network Piracy The Almighty Buck Hardware Your Rights Online

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."
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Grumpy Cat Wants $600K From 'Pirating' Coffee Maker

Comments Filter:
  • Seems about right (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday August 30, 2016 @08:10AM (#52795471)

    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.

  • 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)

      by mindwhip ( 894744 ) on Tuesday August 30, 2016 @09:18AM (#52795859)

      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.

    • by Maritz ( 1829006 )
      A court would throw that argument out. Because it's stupid.
  • by Zontar_Thing_From_Ve ( 949321 ) on Tuesday August 30, 2016 @08:36AM (#52795595)
    I guess that means either I'm not spending enough time on the internet or the rest of you really need to get a life/hobby because you seem to know every meme there is to be known. I'll allow the readers to decide for themselves which one of those choices applies.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday August 30, 2016 @09:12AM (#52795815)

    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

    • 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 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.

    • 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".

    • by antdude ( 79039 )

      Grumpy Cat would buy you grammar nazis. ;)

  • Makes in sound like Grumpy Cat pirated a Coffee maker.
  • I just looked up Grumpy Cat on Wikipedia. It says she was born in in Morristown, Arizona. Holy crap, I used to work there. It's like three trailers and a gas station. I'd be grumpy if I was from there too.

One half large intestine = 1 Semicolon

Working...