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Marc Kasky (born 1944) is a consumer activist best known for bringing a lawsuit against Nike Inc. in 1998 under a California law against false advertising and unfair competition for their advertising claims about treatment of Chinese, Indonesian and Vietnamese workers at company subcontractors.
Nike paid US$250,000 to Capitol Records Inc., which held the North American licensing rights to the recordings, for the right to use the Beatles' rendition for a year. That same year, Apple Records sued Nike Inc., Capitol Records Inc., EMI Records Inc. and Wieden+Kennedy for $15 million.
Nike sweatshops. 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.
Nike filed a trademark infringement lawsuit on March 29, and a judge granted the company a temporary restraining order on April 1 that to stop MSCHF from fulfilling orders. Before the restraining ...
Nike Inc (NYSE: NKE) is under heavy scrutiny in 2018, and for all the wrong reasons. Nine high-level company executives, including Trevor Edwards, president of the Nike brand and a rumored ...
- Distance runner Mary Cain files $20M lawsuit against Nike, coach alleging abuseaol.com
- Elon Musk documents subpoenaed in Jeffrey Epstein lawsuit by U.S. Virgin Islandsaol.com
- Cooper Flagg reclassifies up to the 2024 high school class, eligible for 2025 NBA Draftaol.com
Nike Inc (ticker: NKE), the world's largest athletic apparel company, has been dealing with one scandal after the other for the past few years. In 2018, nine high-level company executives ...
Lawsuit. On January 22, 2015, photographer Jacobus Rentmeester sued Nike, claiming copyright infringement over the use of the Jumpman logo. According to Rentmeester, Nike copied a photograph for which he had granted the company temporary permission to use for the logo.
John Donahoe. John Joseph Donahoe II (born April 30, 1960) [1] is an American businessman who is the CEO of Nike. Early in his career he worked for Bain & Company, becoming the firm's president and CEO in 1999. [2] He is on the board of directors at Nike, [3] The Bridgespan Group [4] and is chairman of PayPal.
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Students for Fair Admissions v. Harvard, 600 U.S. 181 (2023), is a landmark decision [1] [2] [3] [4] of the Supreme Court of the United States in which the court held that race-based affirmative action programs in college admissions processes violate the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. [5]