cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/43030335

Plant-based drink maker Oatly has lost a long-running legal battle over its use of the word “milk” in its marketing.

The Swedish company tried to trademark the slogan “post-milk generation” in the UK in 2021 but Dairy UK, the representative body for British dairy farmers, objected.

Following rulings in several courts, the UK Supreme Court on Wednesday said Oatly could neither trademark nor use the phrase “post-milk generation”.

The long-running dispute has centred on Dairy UK’s argument that, under trademark law, the term “milk” can only be used to refer to products that come from an animal.

  • AbsolutelyNotAVelociraptor@piefed.social
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    2 hours ago

    Alpro had a dispute with their soy milk too in Italy.

    In Italian, milk is “latte” (double t, important for the question).

    They got said that they can’t call the product “latte” because it is not milk as it doesn’t come from an animal.

    They created a new packaging with a huge writing saying: “Questo non è LATE” (with a single T). It could roughly be translated to English as “This is not MYLK” . They are still selling it because they are not selling milk.

  • CerebralHawks@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    4 hours ago

    Begs the question, where are the nipples on the oats?

    Really though, do they have to call it milk? I mean what even is plant based milk? It isn’t milk. Are they that afraid of people knowing what they’re getting that they can’t call it what it is or give it a friendly name that doesn’t mean something it’s not?

    They need to talk to whoever named hot dogs. We’re all know what they are and yet they’re still popular. They aren’t dogs and they’re sold cold so… clever marketing?

    • CharlesDarwin@lemmy.world
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      1 hour ago

      Really though, do they have to call it milk? I mean what even is plant based milk? It isn’t milk. Are they that afraid of people knowing what they’re getting that they can’t call it what it is or give it a friendly name that doesn’t mean something it’s not?

      I find it really weird when Big Dairy (and Big Meat) are overly sensitive about what competing products call themselves.

      It’s not like people are going to get confused about what is what. Big Dairy just want to force people to name their product something unappealing.

    • queermunist she/her@lemmy.ml
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      4 hours ago

      We’ve been calling magnesium hydroxide “milk of magnesia” for 150 years. This isn’t some new, confusing thing.

    • cannibalkitteh@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      3 hours ago

      Really though, do they have to call it milk? I mean what even is plant based milk? It isn’t milk. Are they that afraid of people knowing what they’re getting that they can’t call it what it is or give it a friendly name that doesn’t mean something it’s not?

      Nobody particularly wants to have to come up with branding because the dairy lobby are assholes.