A new
coffee shop has opened in Los Feliz, Los Angeles, titling itself "Dumb Starbucks." The mock
coffee shop utilizes a virtually identical logo to Starbucks' logo on all its
products and signage, but places the word "Dumb" before everything.
According
to news reports, the owners are claiming that their coffee shop is some kind of
"pop art" installation intended to mock the massive Starbucks
corporation. They apparently claim that they are shielded from liability
for trademark infringement or dilution by the First Amendment, and that their
lawyers are fully in control of the situation.
Notably,
the news reports also claim that their coffee is not for sale, but is handed
out free of charge, which would tend be garner some sympathy for the argument
that the whole excursion is a non-commercial artistic endeavor. However, the
"FAQ" disclosed by the owners seems to suggest that the coffee is
very much for sale. It states, in relevant part:
"Although
we are a fully functioning coffee shop, for legal reasons Dumb Starbucks needs
to be categorized as a work of parody art. So, in the eyes of the law, our
"coffee shop" is actually an art gallery and the "coffee"
you're buying is actually the art. But that's for our lawyers to worry about.
All you need to do is enjoy our delicious coffee!"
But what
does that matter? Under the federal Lanham Act, there is a
requirement that the unauthorized use be "in commerce" to be
considered an infringement. The Federal Trademark Dilution Act does not expressly contain
such a commercial use requirement, but it would certainly be relevant to a court's
consideration if the whole stunt has no commercial element.
Rather,
here, it would appear the entire endeavor is a publicity stunt essentially
inviting the Starbucks' chain to file a lawsuit. Even if Starbucks won, it
might lose in the court of public opinion, for looking like it has no sense of
humor. So the owners may be taking an expensive gamble.
That being
said, Starbucks Corporation is inevitably going to be forced to sue this
particular coffee shop, and the odds are that it will likely prevail in
shutting it down in very short order. Perhaps that is the reason that news
reports that there is a several hour wait to enter the shop.
I agree, Joe. Thanks for writing about it!
ReplyDelete