Lego can challenge the appeal of even electronic games |
This article is urgently in need of updating, since Lego's post-1987 history -- particularly its litigation -- has been far more lively than that of its earlier days; its marketing and product development are also worthy of comment and analysis as the company works hard to preserve its market position in an increasingly competitive environment. This Kat hopes that some kind reader will take up the challenge and review the Lego Empire's activities over the past quarter of a century.
"An Empire Built of Bricks" a Brief Appraisal of Lego" was first published in [1987] 12 European Intellectual Property Review 363 to 366. You can access it here.
I remember that the late Brian Reid had a file about the invention of Lego. I don't know what has become of his magnificent IP library. But my recollection is that Page or Kiddicraft sued Lego for infringement of his patent, got into difficulties and settled on the basis of a payment for assigning the patent to Lego. An example of British innovation being ruined by the cost of British litigation?
ReplyDeleteThere is something of an update in Hitting the Bricks: Protecting the LEGO® Brick around the World, Aldo Nicotra, in Landmark Intellectual Property Cases and their Legacy, Christopher Heath and Anselm Kamperman Sanders (eds) Kluwer Law International, 2010
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