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The German sportswear company said Wednesday it was dropping its opposition to an attempt by a Black Lives Matter campaign group to trademark a logo featuring three parallel stripes.
By Amanda Holpuch Two days after Adidas objected to a trademark application by the advocacy group Black Lives Matter for a logo featuring three parallel stripes, the German sportswear company said ...
Adidas AGADS0.99%increase ... The Black Lives Matter Global Network Foundation’s logo, which the advocacy group is seeking to trademark, consists of three parallel yellow lines on a transparent ...
Adidas AG, in a reversal, will no longer object to a trademark application filed by the Black Lives Matter Global Network Foundation (BLMGNF) for a logo the sportswear company had previously ...
adidas is pulling back its opposition against a Black Lives Matter campaign group to trademark a logo that featured a trio of parallel stripes. A spokesperson for the German sportswear imprint ...
Adidas Group/Reebok International, LTD, vice president of design, 1997-2008; Reebok International, design director, 2002-2005 Q: Leon Imas, an Adidas America designer, created a logo for Derrick ...
Adidas' lawyers wrote in the filing that it has been using its logo since at least 1952 and ... of being overly litigious and targeting a group founded to advocate for a minority group against ...
Adidas reversed an attempt to block a Black Lives Matter logo from being trademarked, just two days after asking U.S. authorities to reject the design. “Adidas will withdraw its opposition to ...
Sportswear maker Adidas on Wednesday reversed course 48 hours after asking the U.S. Trademark Office to reject a Black Lives Matter application for a trademark featuring three parallel stripes.
After arguing that the three-stripe trademark could confuse consumers, Adidas retracted its opposition to the Black Lives Matter logo with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office Wednesday morning.