Brompton wins out in copyright case against Get2Get
A copyright infringement case brought by UK folding bike manufacturer
Brompton against a South Korean bike maker has drawn to a conclusion in
a landmark case that could have wider implications on copyright law.
Get2Get
of South Korea is stood accused of infringing the copyright of the
manufacturer having begun producing a folding bike of its own following
the expiry of a patent. The Asian producer then began manufacturing and
selling a folding bike into Belgium, with Brompton quickly objecting to
the design similarities.
Get2Get argued in its defence that the
appearance of its design was dictated by the technical solution desired;
a bicycle that can fold in to three.
Initially the Belgium
Companies Court was unable to establish whether a copyright could apply
to shapes “necessary to obtain a technical result”, so the case was
escalated to the Court of Justice of the European Union, which has now
passed a decision.
The ruling, which sets a new precedent that
could be applicable outside of the bicycle industry, hands designers and
businesses a new range of possibilities in copyright protection and
enforcement of those protections in Europe.
The CJEU concluded
that copyright protection was indeed applicable for products whose shape
is, in full or in part, required to obtain the technical result. In a
small but important detail, the CJEU said that copyright protection
stems from the expression of ideas and no necessarily the idea itself.
A previous case 2019 in Cofemel (C-683/17), was considered in reaching the verdict.
Brompton
recently gave CI.N insight into its supply and demand hurdles faced
during the Covid-19 outbreak. The Greenford manufacturer has suggested
that an increase in the prevalence of cycling infrastructure around the
globe has led to a surge in demand for its commuter-suited folding
bikes.
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