Aug 30, 2013 - 04:07 PM EDT â" AAPL: 486.8179 (-4.8821, -0.99%) | NASDAQ: 3589.869 (-30.435, -0.84%)
âThe problem isnât that the iPhone will be gold, per se. Rather, itâs that the device could be called a light shade of âchampagne,ââ Fung reports. âAnd now a trade association for French wines is preemptively warning Apple against doing so.â
Fung reports, ââWe canât say that a âchampagneâ colour exists,â said Charles Goamaere, legal director for the Interprofessional Committee for Champagne Wine, in an interview with French media this week. Therefore, any company wanting to use the name âChampagneâ would be doing so [only] to attract all the benefits that surround [the label.]â Goamereâs trade group is among the biggest defenders of the champagne brand. If youâre a sparkling wine producer located outside of the Champagne region of France, you have to call your beverage something else.â
Read more in the full article here [1] .
MacDailyNews Take: Itâs a color, not a drink or foodstuff.
If thereâs still an issue, Apple should buy the rights to use âChampagne,â then license it back to the French sparkling wine producers of the Champagne region with a perpetual, exclusive license.
And isnât âa bunch of irate Frenchmenâ superfluous?*
*Just kidding: We love the French (mostly)!
[Thanks to MacDailyNews Reader "Edward W." for the heads up.]
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