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Wacky Packages - Still Illegal After All These Years

Morton Salt forces eBay to ban sale of vintage children's collectible

By Gregory Grant
May 7th, 2003


If your age puts you in the 30 something crowd then you probably remember
Wacky Packages. Wacky Packages are stickers (peel and punch-out) that were
released by the Topps Chewing Gum Company between 1967 and 1992.  They 
parodied common household products and were extremely popular among
children in the 1970's.  Kids loved them because they were fantastically
rebellious for the times, they had an edgy humor and they showed     
characters that were massively appealing to children.

Wacky Packages were more than a fad since they raged for at least two  
years and stuck around for several more. They are still actively
collected, traded, bought and sold.  The advent of the Internet has    
allowed collectors from all over the country to reach each other fueling
desires to finish those old unfinished sets.

However, not everyone was as big a fan of Wacky Packages as the kids were.
Many of the companies that had products being parodied filed cease and
desist (C&D) letters.  This lead to Topps pulling some titles during     
production creating "short printed" wacky packages which fetch a pretty
penny these days.

Now to everybody's disbelief, in the year 2003, 35 years later, eBay has  
started shutting down auctions for the Wacky Packages card "Moron Salt"   
which parodies "Morton Salt."  This title came out in 1967 and was pulled
about half way through the run because the Morton Salt Company filed a C&D
with eBay.  Most Wackys change hands these days on eBay.  There are some
500 auctions going at any given time.  But now you cannot sell "Moron
Salt" and soon maybe others.  Who could believe it but they have actually 
forced eBay to ban auctions of a 35 year old children's trading card.     
Ebay's explanation is as follows:

    "A member of our Verified Rights Owner (VeRO) Program [Morton Salt  
    Division of Morton International, Inc.] notified us, under penalty    
    of perjury, that your item infringes their copyright, trademark, or       
    other rights."  And they followed up with the threat "If you relist
    this or any other similar items on eBay, your account could be       
    suspended."   
  
This raises the question on whether Morton Salt's interpretation of  
copyright infringement is correct.  Time for the lawyers to step in just
like they did in the 1960s and 1970s when the C&D letters were first
presented.
  
Of course the Wacky Packages collectors think this is fabulous.  They  
would thank Morton Salt directly if they could, because that is what Wacky
Packages were all about.  It's nice to know it still gets under their skin
35 years later.  That makes collecting them even more like it was in 1973
(just adding a few zeros to the prices).

 
 
 
 
© copyright Greg Grant, 2003. This article is available for for free republication, please write greg@wackypackages.org for permission to reprint.