Barbies Shop (sic) sells “custom clothing and hot brands for bad
boyz and girls” at barbiesshop.com and from premises in Calgary.
The owner has Barbara Anderson-Walley on her birth certificate, but
says she has been known as Barbie since starting school.
She has designed clothing under the name Barbie Anderson-Walley
for 14 years, although the website has only existed for the past
year. She expressed delight at hearing the case against her had
been dismissed this week.
“This is thrilling," she told the Edmonton Sun. "As a little guy
with no money, I thought I didn't have a hope."
Mattel sued in New York but its case was dismissed on the
grounds that it did not have jurisdiction in Canada, according to
CTV news.
This is not the first time that Mattel has lost its attempts to
protect Barbie's good name.
In 2003, a US appeals court found that an artist who published a
series of photographs showing the popular figurine naked and
stuffed inside an oven and a blender had not infringed Mattel's
trade mark as the works were a parody or satire.
Earlier the same year, the US Supreme Court refused to hear
Mattel's appeal after losing its lawsuit over the 1997 hit Barbie
Girl. Record label MCA convinced a judge that Denmark's Aqua had
written a humorous commentary on cultural values.