Matt Collins
Member
- Joined
- Jun 9, 2007
- Messages
- 47,707
Well, the question becomes what their beef is... is it trademark or copyright infringement? Is it a trade / pricing / wholesale distribution sort of law?
It depends... they probably have a copyright / trademark claim. They might also have a claim on sales distribution or price setting.I'm gonna laugh when he puts them back up.
If a company is buying them, customizing them and then supplying them to Rand for sale, then Ray Ban doesnt have jack squat in the argument. The only thing Rand cant do without their consent is use their official logo in the advertising of them.
Purchasing items for resale has ZERO bearing on the claim ray ban is making.
Well, the question becomes what their beef is... is it trademark or copyright infringement? Is it a trade / pricing / wholesale distribution sort of law?
It would be interesting to see the actual complaint
It depends... they probably have a copyright / trademark claim. They might also have a claim on sales distribution or price setting.
...
They would only have a claim if Rand is buying them direct from Ray Ban and signed an agreement with them.
Utterly irrelevant. Ray-Ban was not objecting to the sale; the objection was to rebranding them with Rand Paul's name.
Here is the relevant law in brief: https://www.law.cornell.edu/wex/trademark_infringement
The first sale doctrine only limits the distribution rights of copyright holders. This principle sometimes clashes with the holder's other rights, such as the right reproduction and derivative work rights. For example, in Lee v. A.R.T, the defendant bought plaintiff's artworks in the form of notecards and then mounted them on ceramic tiles, covering the artworks with transparent epoxy resin. Despite plaintiff's assertion of violation of his right to prepare derivative works, the 7th Circuit held that the derivative work right was not violated and that defendant's sale of the tiles was protected under the first sale doctrine.
marketing fail on their behalf