Beattie McGuinness Bungay hit with $12.5m lawsuit for 'iPint' app
LONDON - Molson Coors Brewing and Beattie McGuinness Bungay face a $12.5m (£7.1m) lawsuit for allegedly using a novelty iPhone application that allows users to drink a virtual beer.
iPhone application creator Hottrix is suing the brewer and ad agency for apparently ripping off its "iBeer" iPhone application and creating their own version called "iPint".
According to the lawsuit, Beattie McGuinness Bungay contacted Hottrix in order to license its iBeer application and the accelerometer technology that causes the virtual beer to appear as its being drunk as the phone is tipped.
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Hottrix rejected the proposal and Beattie McGuinness Bungay created its own version -- iPint -- using Illusion Labs, a Swedish technology company.
The iPint application was free, costing nothing but exposure to Coors brand Carling, where as Hottrix iBeer app cost iPhone users $2.99 (£1.70) per download.
The lawsuit said: "As iPint increased in popularity, iBeer 2.0 decreased in popularity since end users could get ostensibly the same application without a direct cost -- besides viewing the Carling advertising -- of paying $2.99 for iBeer 2.0"
When iPint appeared in Apple's App Store, it quickly became one of the most downloaded free applications and won the Silver Cyber Lion award at Cannes earlier this year.
The iPint application also included a Carling themed game called Barslide where users guide a sliding beer down the bar in order to win a prize -- a virtual beer. In the lawsuit, Hottrix said the game was nothing more than a cover to hide the fact its iBeer application had been ripped off.
Hottrix sent a "cease and desist" request to Beattie McGuinness Bungay and informed Apple of the infringement. Apple responded by removing iPint from the Apple store in the US, although it still remains available for download internationally.
After iPint was removed from US Apple stores, iBeer quickly became one of the most popular paid-for applications, however, because the iPint app still remains available to international iPhone users, Hottrix estimates loss of profits to be worth $12.5m.
Jason Fisher, the lawyer representing Hottrix said: "Hottrix is a small 'mom and pop' company that takes the protection of its intellectual property very seriously."
Molson Coors and Beattie McGuinness Bungay were both unavailable for comment.
Beattie McGuinness Bungay, the agency co-founded by Trevor Beattie, was in the process of being acquired by Omnicom-owned TBWA\ before talks suddenly fell apart last week.
iPint: lawsuit looms
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Comments
Matt Stewart - 15/10/2008
It will all end in beers.
robin caller - 15/10/2008
I thought the golden rule of being a creative was making sure nobody found out where you stole the idea!
Alexander Moore - 15/10/2008
I'm sick of the big agencies stealing ideas from small creative agencies and pretending they were theirs. If the above allegations are true then I hope Hottrix get the full GBP7 million in compensation. That's enough money to buy a lot of real beers.
Giles Stafford - 15/10/2008
Big up to Hottrix, I say! Good to see the little guys having a justified pop at the big guys every so often.
Ad Grrrl - 15/10/2008
I particularly appreciate this, having recently attended the IPA legsregs seminar - first rule of IP law?...If you are going to nick somebody's idea, at least don't ask their permission beforehand. Doh BMB! I'm sorry to say that you deserve to lose every cent. Not least for trying to get one over a smaller Agency, but furthermore for such an obvious blunder whereby the only possible outcome would be a costly court case. "Kerching" Hottrix!
Will Arnold-Baker - 15/10/2008
Probably not what Omnicom were looking for when they were going to buy BMB and merge em with TBWA. Might explain the about-turn
Trevor Bradford - 15/10/2008
As they say, intellect borrows, genius steals...but don't get caught. Very dumb BMB. Nuff said.
joe woollen - 16/10/2008
What does it say when blatant rip offs win big awards?
James Stewart - 16/10/2008
£1.70 per download? I would like to see how they justify that the quantity of free downloads would come anywhere near the quantity of downloads if they had to be paid for.
Victor Houghton - 16/10/2008
Personally I'd rather drink a virtual pint of Carling than a virtual pint of Coors. Like Monty Python said, drinking an American beer is like making love in a canoe: it's f***ing close to water.
Dan Leahul - 16/10/2008
F***ing close to water, that is brilliant!
Gordon Macmillan - 16/10/2008
Is that glass half empty?
Steffan Aquarone - 17/10/2008
And I thought the arguments in MY local about who last paid for the beer were bad...
Michael Nevins - 17/10/2008
Back before artists were keen to allow their songs into TV spots, we had the same issue. I was in the ad music biz and we often turned down gigs to create sound-alikes. My first questions would be: Have you approached the artist or the label already? If the agency's answer was yes, we refused to get involved.
Oliver Gandy - 17/10/2008
Victor - i'd rather drink a virtual pint of Coors than a real pint of Carling. Coors is a pretty lame lager but Carling is filth!
NEIL COWAN - 20/10/2008
Poor BMB...beerated on every front.