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SmartAZ
02-03-2005, 01:37 PM
Lawyers Lay Waste to Military Models Industry
by James Dunnigan
February 3, 2005
Discussion Board on this DLS topic

For over half a century, kits have been sold that enable military history buffs to assemble scale models of military ships, aircraft and vehicles. But that era is coming to an end, as the manufacturers of the original equipment, especially aircraft, are demanding high royalties (up to $40 per kit) from the kit makers. Since most of these kits sell in small quantities (10-20,000) and are priced at $15-30 (for plastic kits, wooden ones are about twice as much), tacking on the royalty just prices the kit out of the market. Popular land vehicles, which would sell a lot of kits, are missing as well. The new U.S. Army Stryker armored vehicles are not available because of royalty requirements. Even World War II aircraft kits are being hit with royalty demands.�

These royalty demands grew out of the idea that corporations should maximize �intellectual property� income. Models of a companys products are considered the intellectual property of the owner of a vehicle design. Some intellectual property lawyers have pointed out that many of these demands are on weak legal ground, but the kit manufacturers are often small companies that cannot afford years of litigation to settle this contention. In the past, the model kits were considered free advertising, and good public relations, by the defense firms. The kit manufacturers comprise a small industry, and the aircraft manufacturers will probably not even notice if they put many of the model vendors out of business. Some model companies will survive by only selling models of older (like World War I), or otherwise �no royalty� items (Nazi German aircraft) and ships. But the aircraft were always the bulk of sales, and their loss will cripple many of the kit makers.�Some of the vehicle manufacturers have noted the problem, and have lowered their demands to a more reasonable level (a few percent of the wholesale price of the kits).

LINK (http://www.strategypage.com/dls/articles/2005230.asp)
Found @ boingboing (http://www.boingboing.net/).

A.T.Hagan
02-03-2005, 01:48 PM
Talk about shooting yourself in the foot...

.....Alan.

CanadaSue
02-05-2005, 08:33 PM
DH does a lot of modelling - luckily mainly WW2 armour. But whenever I get dragged to the model shop, it's clear the biggest sellers are the various scales of modern aircraft. Some of the more elaborate & larger scale ones are NOT cheap. This is going to kill a great hobby for many.

What a damned shame.

Hamilton Felix
02-10-2005, 09:22 PM
That sucks. Don't patents expire? One might claim "intellectual property" for the lates fighter, but a WWII fighter could make no such claim.

Gnomon
02-17-2005, 07:57 PM
Model railroaders ran into the same problem with existing companies demanding royalties and licensing agreements to use company names and trademarks on models. I believe in some cases something was worked out, but I didn't follow all the details.