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12 Feb 2015, 1:26 am by Jani
The case in question was Fenty & Ors v Arcadia Group Brands Ltd, decided in the Court of Appeal in the early days of 2015, which dealt with the sale of a simple article of clothing; a t-shirt. [read post]
30 Jan 2018, 10:23 am
 Recently the Ugandan High Court issued an interesting decision that to some extent echoes the outcome of the Fenty v Arcadia UK litigation. [read post]
15 Jun 2015, 7:13 am
Merpel has her say on that Eponian spy-story.* Robin reliant on opposition, but can he fend off Fenty? [read post]
11 Mar 2007, 10:35 pm
The court did not address provisions that prohibit people from carrying unregistered guns outside the home.The court correctly declared that the Second Amendment's use of the words "the people" conferred an individual right to bear arms, and that the - an enormous triumph for freedom, and for the safety of the beleaguered citizens of our crime-ridden capital.From the 2-1 opinion in Parker v. [read post]
22 Jan 2015, 4:33 am
 Indeed, Vogue was right and in fact today the Court of Appeal issued its decision in Fenty v Arcadia, confirming Birss J's judgment and holding that "the sale by Topshop of the t-shirt amounted to passing off. [read post]
29 Nov 2013, 5:10 am
Similarities can be drawn with the recent case of Fenty v Arcadia Group Brands Ltd (t/a Topshop) [discussed by the IPKat here] in which the pop star Rihanna succeeded in her claim for passing off against the retail moguls Topshop, who used her image on a T-shirt without her permission (although Topshop thought they were on solid ground by getting a licence from the photographer to use the picture). [read post]
18 Feb 2022, 2:22 pm by Rebecca Tushnet
Emma Perot, Publicity Rights, Celebrity Contracts, and Social Norms: Industry Practices in the US and UK Fenty v Topshop: Misrepresentation/passing off theories were successful for Rihanna in UK. [read post]
14 Mar 2024, 6:56 am by centerforartlaw
From crowd-sourcing and domain squatting websites for the next U.S. president to a frame-by-frame recreation of the entire Bee movie, MSCHF is redefining what it means to challenge norms of traditional art and law.[1] With antics including a “Ketchup or Makeup” art drop in collaboration with Rihanna’s Fenty Beauty brand or a series of fake Andy Warhols amidst an original, this art collective is certainly causing a bit of MSCHF and testing the extent of creativity in art… [read post]