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Nike announced Thursday that it has settled its lawsuit against MSCHF, the company that collaborated with Lil Nas X to produce the controversial "Satan Shoes." MSCHF will issue a voluntary recall ...
Moore said some of the stolen shoes were recovered during a raid of a warehouse in Hawthorne, also on Jan. 27, where police found around $5 million worth of Nike products — so much that it took ...
The shoes garnered significant controversy, which led Nike to announce that they were suing MSCHF for trademark infringement and dilution. [44] In Nike's complaint against MSCHF and Lil Nas X, the brand argued that it had "suffered harm to its goodwill, including among consumers who believe that Nike is endorsing satanism."
Nike asserts that StockX is minting, marketing, and selling NFTs that bear Nike's trademarks at "heavily inflated prices" without the approval or authorization of the Swoosh.
In 2017, Nike released the Nike Zoom Vaporfly Elite shoe, [1] which was advertised as "ultra-lightweight, soft and capable of providing up to 85-percent energy return." ." These "super shoes" became the focus of claims that they were a form of technology doping and that they provided athletes an unfair adv
Satan Shoes were a series of custom Nike Air Max 97 shoes, created in 2021 as a collaboration between American musician Lil Nas X and MSCHF, a Brooklyn, New York art collective. Their design and marketing gained controversy through prominent satanic imagery.
Nike, Inc (NYSE: NKE) asked a federal judge to let it add counterfeiting claims and false advertising to the current trademark-infringement lawsuit against sneaker marketplace StockX, Bloomberg ...
Nike, Inc. has been accused of using sweatshops and worker abuse to produce footwear and apparel in East Asia. After rising prices and the increasing cost of labor in Korean and Taiwanese factories, Nike began contracting in countries elsewhere in Asia, which includes parts of India, Pakistan, and Indonesia.