People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) is in the news again for its cheeky ad campaigns, which sometimes use well known trademarks of other parties to garner exposure for its views on Canada’s seal hunt. We previously blogged about the use by PETA of an ad featuring the 2010 Winter Olympic and Paralympic Games mascots.
A recent Globe & Mail article reports that PETA had been distributing postcards in a number of bars in Toronto, with plans to roll out the campaign across the country. The postcards pictured on one side, a cartoon featuring a seal sitting at a bar and asking the bartender for “Anything but a Canadian Club”. The other side of the postcard featured a photograph of a hunter about to club a seal.
The North American distributor of Canadian Club Whisky didn’t see the humour in PETA’s cartoon and sent a cease and desist letter, claiming that the publication had caused degradation of Canadian Club’s corporate image and damage to its brand and trademark.
In response to the demand letter PETA agreed not to send out more postcards and to remove the cartoon from its website. Notwithstanding its compliance with the demand, a spokesperson for PETA argued that it had the doctrine of fair use on its side, to permit the use of trademarks for parody or satire. Unfortunately for PETA, fair use is a U.S. doctrine that doesn’t apply in Canada in the context of either copyright or trademarks.