That being said, it is a very happy outcome, $4K to food banks and the author seems happy. Plus I'm sure Kraft's design company can write off the charitable donation anyway.
In my mind, [a substantially larger settlement] would not have been just. It would have been a reverse form of theft, taking advantage of one person’s mistake for my personal gain. While it’s tempting to blame the “big corporation” for this kind of thing, ultimately these kinds of mistakes are made by people who are prone to the same kinds of errors that you and I make every day.
They didn't steal anything. They only infringed on the exclusive right granted under copyright law.
Actually stealing IP is near impossible to do.
[0] http://krazydad.com/blog/2014/07/13/hmm-this-maze-looks-fami... [1] http://krazydad.com/mazes/sfiles/KD_Mazes_IM_v1.pdf
The clause in the contract doesn't mean that Kraft is immune to suit. But it does give Kraft the ability to file a cross-claim against the design firm if it is sued so that damages can be assigned to the design firm if necessary. See Fed. R. Civ. Proc. 13(g).