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Mojang & Don Mattrick receive cease and desist letters from Putt-Putt mini golf chain

Minecraft developer Mojang has received a cease and desist letter from American mini golf chain Putt-Putt over user-created levels that recreated the company's miniature courses.

Mojang founder Markus 'Notch' Persson posted an image of Putt-Putt's letter on Twitter.

It reads, "It has recently come to our attention that Mojang AB has been using, without authorization our famous Putt-Putt trademarks in connection with your business," and adds, "We feel that Mojang AB's use of of the Putt-Putt name has benefited Mojang AB to the detriment of Putt-Putt."

The company wants Mojang to immediately refrain from using Putt-Putt's logos and designs henceforth. However, as it is up to users what they do when making Minecraft creations, it's not actually Mojang who is using the Putt-Putt brand

Here's an example of a Putt-Putt world:

Cover image for YouTube video

But as PCGamesN points out, Contributory Liability law does seek out to block those who enable copyright infringement. As Mojang gave players the necessary tools to make their Putt-Putt stages, it could be held accountable.

However, the site adds that would only stand up if the Putt-Putt can prove Minecraft launched in an incomplete state, and that it spurred players to fix it themselves, causing an infringement on another company's copyright. It quite rightly adds that this would be hard for Putt-Putt to prove.

Also, Putt-Putt sent the letter to Don Mattrick due to the Xbox 360 version of the game. He's off to Zynga though, so it's not yet clear what his stance is on the matter.

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Dave Cook avatar

Dave Cook

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Dave worked on VG247 for an extended period manging much of the site's news output. As well as his experience in games media, he writes for comics, and now specializes in books about gaming history.

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