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Olympics Committee Says Non-Sponsors Are Banned From Tweeting About the Olympics (gizmodo.com)

An anonymous reader shares a Gizmodo report:The U.S. Olympics Committee has gone off the deep end, when it comes to intellectual property. It's willing to sue anyone to protect their trademarks, even when the use is no real threat. But the committee's latest claim is an entirely new level of absurdity. What's getting the U.S. Olympics Committee in a tizzy this time? Tweets. Specifically any company that tweets about the Olympic Games and isn't a sponsor. ESPN obtained a letter from the U.S. Olympic Committee chief marketing officer Lisa Baird who outlines the absurd demands. "Commercial entities may not post about the Trials or Games on their corporate social media accounts," Baird writes, apparently in earnest. "This restriction includes the use of USOC's trademarks in hashtags such as #Rio2016 or #TeamUSA. And according to ESPN, it gets even more absurd. Apparently the letter says that any company whose primary mission isn't media is forbidden from using any pictures taken at the Olympics, sharing, and even reposting anything from the official Olympics account.

3 of 247 comments (clear)

  1. Not an idle threat by sjbe · · Score: 3, Informative

    You can bluster and threaten as much as you want, but reporting on the facts is perfectly legal.

    That's true but the IOC and USOC don't care. They will sue you even if you did nothing illegal and I don't think this is an idle threat. They (mistakenly) think they are protecting their corporate sponsors by doing this. They sued Wizards of the Coast for using a symbol that could not possibly have been mistaken for the Olympic rings.

  2. Re:Rhetorical... by RevRagnarok · · Score: 3, Informative

    Hey hey hey... it's "The Big Game" not "Super Bowl." Or the NFL will come after you the exact same way.

    --
    I should put something clever here. Maybe someday.
  3. Re:One thing I don't understand by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    Rio is located 22 degrees, 54 minutes, and 30 seconds (+- city boundaries) south of the equator.
    The Tropic of Capricorn is 23 degrees, 26 minutes south of the equator.

    While close (roughly 35 miles or 55 kilometers), this does technically mean that Rio is in the tropics and functionally does not have winter.
    Living just under 5 degrees temperate of a tropic line myself, I can vouch that "winter" in or near the tropics is only slightly cooler than summer, and we are not likely to be buried under snow even if the interglacial period ends tomorrow.