The Scotsman

Cuthbert returns in copyright row

- By JOSIE CLARKE newsdeskts@scotsman.com

Aldi has defiantly announced it is bringing back its Cuthbert the Caterpilla­r cake after learningit­isthesubje­ctofcopyri­ght infringeme­nt legal challenge by Marks & Spencer.

Posting its latest response to the row on Twitter, the German discounter announced a limited edition of the cake will return to shelves next month with all profits to be donated to cancer charities.

The post reads: "Hey Marks and Spencer we're taking a stand against caterpilla­r cruelty. Can Colin and Cuthbert be besties? We're bringing back a limited edition Cuthbert next month and want to donate all profits to cancer charities including your partners Macmillan Cancer Support and ours Teenage Cancer Trust. Let's raise money for charity, not lawyers #caterpilla­rsforcance­r."

Aldi is calling on other supermarke­ts to join it and M&S in raising money for cancer charities through the sale of caterpilla­r cakes.

M&S lodged an intellectu­al property claim with the High Court last week, arguing the similarity of Aldi's product leads consumers to believe they are of the same standard and "ride on the coat-tails" of M&S'S reputation.

It wants Aldi to remove the product from sale and agree not to sell anything similar in the future.

Aldi's social media team promptly responded with a stream of posts about the upcoming legal challenge and a sketch of Cuthbert in court.

Starting off by mocking M&S'S slogan, the budget supermarke­t tweeted: "This is not just any court case, this is... #Freecuthbe­rt."

Aldi also announced a "packaging update", showing Cuthbert locked up in a prison cell and then tweeted: "Marks & Snitches more like."

M&S tweeted back: "Hey @ Aldiuk we love a charity idea (Colin's been a BIG fundraiser for years). We just want you to use your own character.

"How about #kevintheca­rrotcake? That idea's on us... and we promise we won't do Keith."

M&S launched Colin the Caterpilla­r around 30 years ago and his appearance has been substantia­lly unchanged since around 2004, except for adaptation­s for events such as Halloween and Christmas, and related products such as Connie

the Caterpilla­r. The product is central to M&S'S partnershi­p with cancer charity Macmillan, and the retailer has created a Colin product for the annual World's Biggest Coffee Morning fundraisin­g event.

M&S has three trademarks relating to Colin, which the retailer believes means Colin has acquired and retains an enhanced distinctiv­e character and reputation.

Neverthele­ss, the M&S original has spawned a range of imitators since its launch,

such as Sainsbury's Wiggles, Tesco's Curly, Morris by Morrisons, the Co-op's Charlie, Cecil by Waitrose and Asda's Clyde.

A spokesman said: "Because we know the M&S brand is special to our customers and they expect only the very best from us, love and care goes into every M&S product on our shelves.

"We want to protect Colin, Connie and our reputation for freshness, quality, innovation and value."

 ??  ?? 0 M&S has started legal action against Aldi’s Cuthbert the Caterpilla­r Cake
0 M&S has started legal action against Aldi’s Cuthbert the Caterpilla­r Cake

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