by JULES » Fri Jun 15, 2018 10:31 am
I'll try quickly to digest what I've found out over the last few years regarding copyright, trademarks, licensing and IPR…..
1/ All copyright holders prefer to be asked if it would be OK to make a model of an ‘XYZ’ car, certainly if the real 1:1 car is younger than 10 years. This is less of an issue for historic vehicles as often Trade Marks have a lifespan and are likely to be abandoned as the decades slip by. Any payments that might be due range from fair to zero. ALWAYS negotiate. There are no fixed fees.
2/ A scale model is a representation of the shape of a 1:1 car. It is not a direct copy. You can't use it as transport. Therefore there is no DIRECT infringement of copyright law or IPR, but the point can be argued if a bunch of lawyers were paid enough to do so. A scale model is not a copy, merely a derivative representation in a smaller form. It does not do the job for which the copyright exists (unless the Trademark Holder has specifically protected Toys/Models).
3/ You can print 'FORD Mustang scale replica model' without a license on product packaging because that is descriptive. You could not use the FORD logo or Mustang script (without a license) in an un-scaled format (ie not 1/32) as they are trademarked images. For example, making a model of a Mustang and printing a large Ford ‘Blue Oval’ on the packaging would be contravening a Trade Mark.
4/ What most copyright holders are concerned about – and the protection they seek - is a/ loss of income and b/ brand damage by poor copies. The original copyright holders, in this particular instance of model toy cars, are not ever in the business of scale model production or producing pinhead sized company decals/logos and neither is a poor scale model of a 1970 Chevy Camaro likely to damage sales at a 21st Century franchised Chevrolet dealer
5/ Most copyright infringement chasing is done by third party firms that trawl the world for potential transgressors, report their findings to the owner and then work on a no hay, no pay basis. These cases often begin and end with a ‘cease and desist’ communication.
6/ Most infringement of trademark (or trade dress) is directly related to logos and attempting to pass off a product as 'official licensing' when the product is most definitely not.
7/ If the model maker has access to CAD data supplied by the 1:1 car maker and chooses to ‘scale down’ that data then there is a strong case that the design originated with [insert car maker] designers and therefore if would be a copy (albeit smaller). The 1:1 car maker should be paid in some way, in the form of a license agreement.
8/ The larger model makers (not just slot cars, but all types of toy vehicles) will almost certainly have sales channels where the retailer (in particular big stores) will automatically expect ANY toy product to be licensed, whether or not, in reality, a license was legally required. For the avoidance of doubt, the toy maker will get a license ‘just in case’.
I agree with DK that this is a gray area. To make the matter even more complex, the rules do vary from country to country.
As far as I am aware, the issue of toy licensing / IPR infringement covering the shape of a car and its associated trade dress has not been tried in the USA courts. It has in Europe. The car maker (the Plaintiff) lost the case against the scale model maker largely due to the points I raised in (2) and (4) above. The 1:1 car maker did not have copyright protection that covered scale model toys and the court decided that absolutely no damage whatsoever was done to the car makers brand or image.
Jules