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TroutPaste 05/25/21 10:19:40 AM #1: |
https://www.cnn.com/2021/05/24/business/timbuktu-yoruba-trademark-scli-gbr-intl/index.html
A British clothing retailer has come under fire for trademarking the name of the west African Yoruba people several years ago, igniting a debate online about whether trademarkingnames of ethnic groups amounts to cultural appropriation. Timbuktu, an outdoor clothing brand based in northern England, filed to trademark the word "Yoruba" in 2015, records from the UK's Intellectual Property Office show. But the registration sparked anger on Sunday when the owner of CultureTree, an African cultural center in London, wrote that she had attempted to trademark "Yoruba Stars" and claimed she faced a challenge from Timbuktu due to its similarity to the phrase the company had registered. In the United Kingdom, a proposed trademark can be challenged if it conflicts or bears similarity to one that was previously approved. The Yoruba people form one of the largest ethnic groups in western Africa, and make up around a sixth of Nigeria's population. "I thought it was really strange that a company would be allowed to trademark the word 'Yoruba', a tribe and language of millions of people," CultureTree founder Gbemisola Isimi wrote, adding that Timbuktu had opposed her attempts to register her own phrase. "I feel this is the height of cultural appropriation," she wrote. Isimi, whose center teaches young people to speak Yoruba, went on to accuse Timbuktu of "attempting to claim sole ownership of a birth right belonging to the people of another continent." --- ... Copied to Clipboard!
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TroutPaste 05/25/21 10:23:02 AM #2: |
"I don't think anybody should own 'Yoruba,'" she added to CNN. "I don't think it should be allowed to happen."
Timbuktu did not respond to CNN's request for comment. Later on Monday, Isimi said Timbuktu had withdrawn its opposition to the trademark of "Yoruba Stars." The practice of trademarked words relating to specific cultures, languages and locations is widespread, and Timbuktu are far from the first company to register such a term. But CultureTree's Twitter thread went viral and sparked a debate about colonial nostalgia in British business, and whether companies should use the names of ethnic minorities to promote products. "This is the violence of cultural appropriation, simply deciding that the history of something is irrelevant once you decide that you want it and want to profit off it," fitness studio founder and influencer Kelechi Okafor wrote on Twitter. "What goes through your mind to be able to trademark the word 'Yoruba' FOR YEARS," added author and journalist Bolu Babalola. Several commentators also took issue with Timbuktu's corporate branding, accusing it of an attempt to erase a culture. The company is named after the Malian city, but its website claims: "Timbuktu literally means 'the middle of nowhere,' a location that has intrigued mankind for centuries, whether it's to discover something new or simply escape the everyday." The word Timbuktu has long been used as shorthand in Britain for any generic, faraway place a usage which began when Mali was under French colonial rule in the 19th century. Others argued that the outcry misunderstood trademark law, and the reasons why a phrase could be registered. "This is not an argument about 'appropriation'. Just the law," the Nigerian novelist and lawyer Elnathan John wrote on Twitter. "It is not done secretly. And that if no one opposes an application that is not in breach of the IP rules, it will be registered and approved," he wrote, adding that "Welsh," "Swahili" and many others relating to a specific culture were trademarked in the United Kingdom. The use of cultural terms associated with empire, and modern-day celebrations of those involved in Britain's colonization of other countries,have generated a fierce backlash in recent years. Last week, a debate over a statue of colonialist Cecil Rhodes at Oxford University was re-ignited after the college housing it said they would not remove the monument. Those debates have been heightened since a British government report dismissed the suggestion that institutional racism remains prevalent in the country. (2/2) --- ... Copied to Clipboard!
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TroutPaste 05/25/21 10:39:31 AM #3: |
I'd be interested to know where they make the clothes. American clothing is often made in Central America or Southeast Asia
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ElatedVenusaur 05/25/21 11:30:38 AM #4: |
Sounds about white to me.
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TroutPaste 05/25/21 12:33:34 PM #5: |
To put it in perspective
![]() Similar number --- ... Copied to Clipboard!
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Bio1590 05/25/21 12:41:50 PM #6: |
Whoever approved that trademark in the first place is a fucking moron
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Funkydog 05/25/21 12:43:42 PM #7: |
TroutPaste posted...
To put it in perspectiveI don't think you'd want us to treat them as badly as we treat the Scots. But yeah, not terribly surprising this sort of thing happens tbh. --- ... Copied to Clipboard!
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Joohny 05/25/21 12:56:50 PM #8: |
There was a British supermarket chain called "Iceland" that just got its trademark revoked a year or two ago after the Iceland government complained.
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Joohny 05/25/21 12:57:18 PM #9: |
Also there's Fiji water, which seems to have avoided controversy so far
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Bio1590 05/25/21 1:04:09 PM #10: |
Joohny posted...
Also there's Fiji water, which seems to have avoided controversy so far Fiji Water is indeed actually from Fiji. --- ... Copied to Clipboard!
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Joohny 05/25/21 1:18:50 PM #11: |
Bio1590 posted...
Fiji Water is indeed actually from Fiji.The water is from Fiji, the company is American. ... Copied to Clipboard!
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Were_Wyrm 05/25/21 1:25:42 PM #12: |
Imagine how butthurt white folks would get if someone tried to trademark something like "Celtics", "Yankees", or "Canucks"
--- I was a God, Valeria. I found it...beneath me. - Dr. Doom https://imgur.com/FKDXbHs ... Copied to Clipboard!
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TroutPaste 05/25/21 1:37:32 PM #13: |
Were_Wyrm posted...
Imagine how butthurt white folks would get if someone tried to trademark something like "Celtics", "Yankees", or "Canucks" You think that's the same? --- ... Copied to Clipboard!
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FL81 05/25/21 1:38:15 PM #14: |
here go the British, claiming ownership over other ethnic groups again
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The Trent 05/25/21 1:38:41 PM #15: |
![]() --- i swear to God most of y'all cats just don't know The Trent you barely know yourself so i guess most of y'all should be offended ... Copied to Clipboard!
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FunkyCat 05/25/21 1:41:11 PM #16: |
Joohny posted...
There was a British supermarket chain called "Iceland" that just got its trademark revoked a year or two ago after the Iceland government complained.The fact they kept filing complaints against Icelandic companies and the tourism board didnt help --- ... Copied to Clipboard!
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Bio1590 05/25/21 1:51:59 PM #17: |
So I tried to look up this company and either their website is down or they don't allow web traffic from outside the UK or Europe?
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FunkyCat 05/25/21 1:53:46 PM #18: |
Bio1590 posted...
So I tried to look up this company and either their website is down or they don't allow web traffic from outside the UK or Europe?Looks like it's down after checking to me or been hacked. Tells me to finish registering the domain --- ... Copied to Clipboard!
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TroutPaste 05/25/21 2:00:27 PM #19: |
Bio1590 posted...
So I tried to look up this company and either their website is down or they don't allow web traffic from outside the UK or Europe? I think their Twitter was closed yesterday... Kinda old news by Twitter standards Not sure about the website --- ... Copied to Clipboard!
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