Polaroid wants millions in royalty from Fujifilm for copying its trademarked white border film
Until this fall,
Polaroid had not made instant cameras and film in about a decade and
instead branched out to licensing its name to other electronic products
like televisions, tablets, and even drones.
But despite all that, Polaroid is still trying to keep its brand
synonymous with the square instant film look. So much so that it’s
demanding millions of dollars in royalty payments from Fujifilm, which
found continued success with its Instax line after Polaroid exited the
instant photography industry in 2008.
This week, Fujifilm filed a formal complaint
to a US District Court in New York, claiming that PLR IP, the brand
licensor for Polaroid instant cameras, sent the company multiple letters
requesting Fujifilm either pay millions in annual royalty payments or
remove its line of square-shaped Instax film
from market. Previously, Fujifilm only sold rectangular instant film,
with sizes ranging from small postcards to a business cards.
In the letter sent to Fujifilm, Polaroid claims that it
owns the trademark to the “square within a square” effect, and that
Fujifilm’s new line of film is “essentially identical” in shape and
border margins. Fujifilm has responded by saying that Polaroid is
attempting to gain revenue from what remains of the company’s
intellectual property portfolio after failing to profit from its own
product sales.
The back and forth has been going on between the two
companies since January, with things finally headed to court now that
Fujifilm has submitted a complaint. Fujifilm is hoping the court will
rule that its square Instax film do not violate Polaroid’s IP and cancel
Polaroid’s trademarks.
Fujifilm isn’t the only company that continued to produce
instant film since Polaroid dropped out of the business. After that
announcement in 2008, a company called The Impossible Project was formed
to continue manufacturing instant film (most of which were
square-shaped) only for one of the investors to buy a huge stake in
Polaroid and renaming the company Polaroid Originals in September 2017.
It is remains unrelated to Polaroid Corporations.
The Article was Published on : TheVerge
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