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Hogan Lovells states that "In summary, the threshold for an industrial design product to enjoy copyright protection is still quite high and even famous industrial design products have been denied such protection by Italian Courts." This likely also applies to logos. For example, the logo of A.C. Milan is not copyrighted.
Silvio Berlusconi, who was born and remained based in Milan, did use stylized biscione symbols in the logos for his companies Mediaset and Fininvest (with the child replaced by a flower); his residential zones Milano Due and Milano Tre and the Mediaset-owned television channel Canale 5 all also use biscione-inspired imagery.
This logo image consists only of simple geometric shapes or text. It does not meet the threshold of originality needed for copyright protection, and is therefore in the public domain . Although it is free of copyright restrictions, this image may still be subject to other restrictions .
The following other wikis use this file: Usage on ar.wikipedia.org إنتر ميلان; نهائي كأس إيطاليا 1977; Usage on bg.wikipedia.org
In 1928, Inter's name and philosophy made the ruling Fascist Party uneasy; as a result, during the same year the 20-year-old club was merged with Unione Sportiva Milanese: the new club was named Società Sportiva Ambrosiana after the patron saint of Milan. [116] The flag of Milan (the red cross on white background) replaced the traditional ...
Date/Time Thumbnail Dimensions User Comment; current: 20:02, 7 December 2019: 512 × 512 (4 KB): DZwarrior1: This is the Official logo version (in svg) used by FC Internazionale Milano on their official website and on the team's shirt source: https://110.inter.it/en/ any other svg versions are not official and the difference in the details can be seen easily
The club was founded on 9 March 1908 as Foot-Ball Club Internazionale following a schism from the Milan Cricket and Football Club (44 members). A group of Italians and Swiss (Giorgio Muggiani, a painter who also designed the club's logo; Bossard; Lana; Bertoloni; De Olma; Enrico Hintermann; Arturo Hintermann; Carlo Hintermann; Pietro Dell'Oro; Hugo and Hans Rietmann; Voelkel; Maner; Wipf; and ...
The first team in sports history to adopt a star was Juventus, [2] who added one golden star with five points in the team's shirt, after Italian Football Federation (FIGC) approval, in 1958 to represent their tenth Italian Football Championship and Serie A title, at the time, the new national record. [1]