Can a Tribe Sue for Copyright? The Maasai Want Royalties for Use of Their Name
Can a Tribe Sue for Copyright? The Maasai Want Royalties for Use of Their Name
For years, companies have been making millions off the Maasai name. Now the tribe wants its cut
“…estimates six companies have each made more than $100 million in annual sales during the last decade using the Maasai name. In 2003, Jaguar Land Rover sold limited-edition versions of its Freelander called Maasai and Maasai Mara. Louis Vuitton’s (MC:FP) 2012 spring-summer men’s collection included scarves and shirts inspired by the Maasai shuka. The shoe company Masai Barefoot Technology (MBT) says on its website that the distinctive curved soles of its sneakers were inspired by “the wonderfully agile Masai [sic] people walking barefoot.” Bedding by Calvin Klein (PVH), shirts and trousers by Ralph Lauren (RL), and cushions by Diane von Furstenberg have all been sold using the tribe’s name. “Most of the value of the Maasai brand is not in the handicrafts the tribe produces,” Layton says. “It’s in the cultural value of an iconic brand.”
Get em
The Navajo Nation sued Urban Outfitters for use of their name on products and have since copyrighted the word Navajo.
Really neat to see tribes from other places do the same!
GHOOOOOD
Get it!!!!
Get their asses.
When you think about it, cultural appropriation and copyright infringement are very similar–just one is an idea that belongs to a culture and the other is an idea that belongs to a corporation. In either case, it’s a case of “That’s ours, you can’t use it without our permission.” But one is respected (or at least enforced by the law), and the other is not.