Lord Rixondale wrote:
Mr Kissyfur wrote:
I'm still not entirely sure how the word "olympic", which has been around for centuries, ended up being owned as a trademark by a load of faceless freeloading twats.
You'd be amazed at which words are restricted in Company Names. "Sheffield" is restricted due to a 400 year old law which is still enforced and using a seemingly innocuous word like "British" is very tricky.
My company law is a little hazy, but I do recall that there are indeed loads of things you have problems with in company names, including things that are a bit rude. The problem with the Olympic bollocks is that it covers
everything, including anti-olympics protest posters put up in the windows of private homes - it covers the use of those two lists of words in anything at all that can be deemed as "advertising".
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"Olympic" being restricted is not all that surprising,
Well, I still think it is, to be honest. It's a little odd that a literally ancient word for an ancient event has been appropriated by a self-appointed committee
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but the way they enforce it is pretty brutal. Even words that sound a bit like it, like "Olympus" are restricted.
As was "Ravelympics", which was some sort of knitting compo.