• @secret300@lemmy.sdf.org
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      494 days ago

      This is why I’ve always loved unmarked clothes since I was in middle school. When I was a kid I was very cynical about being branded

      • Natanael
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        104 days ago

        Same. While I don’t necessarily do anything to actively avoid branding, I won’t wear anything where it’s prominent.

        • @pipes@sh.itjust.works
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          23 days ago

          Me too, I tend to avoid it when it’s larger than a few centimeters or when it’s written out; a little drawing/symbol I don’t mind

    • @Someonelol@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      334 days ago

      There’s a cyberpunk novel called Feed in which some teenager got a trendy Nike tattoo that would force him to say “Nike” in every sentence. I think that’s the next step in our deliberate effort to pay for the privilege of branding ourselves.

    • @skuzz@discuss.tchncs.de
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      134 days ago

      I just realized how odd it would be to see people walking around in brandless clothes. As odd as when someone removes all the badges from their car.

      The advertising has been so prevalent for so long that it has been normalized. Fascinating.

      • @Yoga@lemmy.ca
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        294 days ago

        Most of my clothes are non branded with jeans being the only meaningful exception (and band t-shirts lol)

        Wearing designer brands on your sleeve is a materialism trap for poor people.

        • @SkunkWorkz@lemmy.world
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          134 days ago

          Expensive designer brands also have multiple lines, the cheapest lines have their logo printed on in bold. While the expensive lines have no branding at all. If you wear expensive designer clothing that screams out the branding then it just shows that you can’t afford the good stuff.

          • ѕєχυαℓ ρσℓутσρє
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            4 days ago

            For both, the branding’s on the inside. On a label for jeans. And on the soles for my shoes afaik. (These are some leather shoes. My sneakers do have visible branding, unfortunately.)

            • @Yoga@lemmy.ca
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              13 days ago

              Interesting, I have maybe one or two pairs of jeans without a big patch on the back, it seems to be a mandatory convention for most pairs.

    • @cybersin@lemm.ee
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      74 days ago

      Sure, but good luck finding a decent quality running shoe without conspicuous branding at a local shop though.

      Can’t wear it, if they don’t make it.

      • @MonkeMischief@lemmy.today
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        4 days ago

        This is why I spent my highschool years in combat boots. Ankle support, tough soles, the same footwear was great for hiking, shopping, whatever. Inconspicuous if your pant legs cover them. Like $40 at the time. Lasted me beyond school.

        Only downside was I lived in a desert so too much time outside would make them really hot. That, and I got a lot of people scuffing them going “HEY ARE THOSE STEEL TOE?!” (they were not)

        Meanwhile shoes that fall apart in 3 months had some giant billboard logo so you’d have to keep up with their latest image, I guess. Gross.

      • @enemenemu@lemm.ee
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        34 days ago

        Thanks for mentioning that. I have no idea how to judge a shoe’s quality. I have to do some research

    • @Appoxo@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      3 days ago

      That’s why I like mine: Very subtle branding, though if I could I’d prefer unbranded. But I only bought them because I liked the color scheme and they were comfortable.

      Fun fact: The colors of them are:
      Ties: Electric Blue
      Main material: Thunderstorm blue
      Soles: Fog grey

      I just think the colors have funny but cool names :)

      Edit: (Please put the hate for Linus Tech Tips (LTT) to the side for now)
      I actually like the way LTT brands some of it’s merchandise.
      Some is subtle/stealth, some is only on tags or subtly integrated in the graphic design.
      I generally dislike their prominent branded items.

    • @TriflingToad@sh.itjust.works
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      14 days ago

      hmmm I don’t really care about having a logo on my undershorts. Usually I’m really bothered about advertisements but in that circumstance it doesn’t really bother me.

      doesnt help that every other brand of cycling shorts suck

      • @enemenemu@lemm.ee
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        44 days ago

        Some people wear underwear with huge names on them. I don’t understand it. Good for you if it does not bother you.

        I’m not liking the idea that my partner sees an ad every time we get intimate

        • Muad'dib
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          54 days ago

          Well that is your name, isn’t it? Calvin Klein? It’s written all over your underwear.

  • @fibojoly@sh.itjust.works
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    554 days ago

    I bring swag from my previous employers to whatever employer I am currently at :)
    Let them know how much I care about company spirit.

    • Natanael
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      214 days ago

      Bonus point if you bring stuff mainly from bankrupt companies

  • @LeninOnAPrayer@lemm.ee
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    4 days ago

    I work for Microsoft. When I had a kid they sent a “care package” with some items. But literally every item had “Microsoft” or “Met Life” (our employee life insurance I think) all over everything.

    I ripped the “met life” shirt off of the snoopy plush and trashed everything else.

    It’s not just limited to backpacks. They try to turn everything, even a kids blanket, into a fucking ad. It’s so gross.

    You can’t send some cheap items to your employee without branding it with an ad.

    I don’t work for MetLife. Why the fuck would that even be on there? I guess they want to keep reminding me to get life insurance because I’m a kid. Like, holy fuck, I hate this shit.

    Fuck Microsoft. Fuck their support of genocide. I didn’t even choose to work here. They bought my startup company for pennies on the dollar during Covid.

    • @onlinepersona@programming.dev
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      I ripped the “met life” shirt off of the snoopy plush and trashed everything else.

      Trashing was maybe unnecessary? Could’ve donated it to those in need.

      However I do support the sentiment. Fuck Microsoft. Hopefully you’ll be able to find employment that is more fulfilling and less genocidal. (This is not a stab at you, I get working for an evil company and wanting to get away from it).

      Anti Commercial-AI license

    • @Nexz@feddit.nl
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      94 days ago

      It’s probably also because of tax. Here in the Netherlands, you cannot provide any clothes without a logo of a certain size. Otherwise it would be seen as ‘wages’. True to some extent. This is why companies here print their logos on stuff (even for newborn rompers).

    • @harmsy@lemmy.world
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      84 days ago

      Fuck Microsoft. Fuck their support of genocide.

      I’ve been avoiding Microsoft like the plague because of other reasons for a long time, so I didn’t know about this.

  • @Milk_Sheikh@lemm.ee
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    254 days ago

    Just buy a seam ripper, and sanitize your branded sweater/blanket/jacket/etc from their embroidered trademark.

    Isopropyl alcohol or xylene can take off most printed/transfer logos on plastic or metal objects.

    Worst case scenario you give it to someone else/homeless so it doesn’t end up in a landfill or wastefully recycling an otherwise usable product.

  • Scrubbles
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    294 days ago

    What am I going to do, buy my own backpack and lug their laptop back and forth in that? I’ll gladly take a free backpack

    • I work for a multi billion multi national medical technology company at their office in central london. On day one after i got the job they gave me a brand spanking new top of the line macbook pro worth over £3k. I asked them for a bag for it and the IT guy who gave it to me looked like i slapped him in the face.

      “Am i supposed to walk around central london with 3k of macbook in a plastic shopping bag?”

      He produced some weird fabric envelope thing from a cupboard.

      Luckily i’m sad enough to turn up to work with my own laptop in my own bag so i did have a bag but he had no way of knowing that

    • @MicrowavedTea@infosec.pub
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      74 days ago

      Do you get to choose it with a budget or they buy whatever cheap, uncomfortable thing was available? I’d much rather use my own equipment if I’m gonna be using it everyday.

      • @IsoKiero@sopuli.xyz
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        74 days ago

        In our company we (at least IT department) get to choose our own bags (within reason). I have some generic lenovo backpack they had laying around when I started and it’s decent enough. Maybe a bit smaller side on what I’d like, but it carries my laptop, headset, random cables, power supply, notepad and stuff like that just fine. And it doesn’t have any kind of visible logo on it at all, unless you count the Think® colour scheme on zipper tabs.

        And it’s also a security thing. Should someone steal my backpack it does not have any logos to pinpoint which company it belongs unless I’ve left my lanyard in the pocket with my rfid-tag. And of course if you open the laptop it has AD forest name on there, so it’s pretty trivial to figure out, but at least I’m not advertising ‘steal my things if you want access to this company’ everywhere.

  • m-p{3}
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    294 days ago

    Personally I find it to be bad OPSEC, it just puts a big target on a potential victim from bad actors that are specifically targetting that business.

  • @stupidcasey@lemmy.world
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    214 days ago

    Linard! Why Isn’t your GPS tracking device working.

    I’ll fix it right away

    One year later

    Linard, I need to commend you, you’ve been in office 24/7 365.

  • @MetalMachine@feddit.nl
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    43 days ago

    Always thought that company merch is cringe. There may be a small minority of companies that do awesome things that aren’t immoral, but the majority aren’t.

    • @boonhet@lemm.ee
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      23 days ago

      The merchiest company in my country is one that does online casino software. Worst part is, they have the highest quality merch so people actually use it. I’ve seen the logo on like Thule backpacks and shit.

      Hasn’t gotten me to go work for them, but they’re damn good at reminding people that they exist.

  • TAG
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    33 days ago

    You still get company swag? In the 2010’s, I got a ton of it, but not anymore. Maybe it is just that the company I was working at got too cheap to give out swag and when I switched jobs, I joined another cheapskate, but I assumed that it was the same everywhere.

    I have enough company and recruiter swag collected during the good years that I have not needed to buy t-shirts, especially because I generally wear a collared shirt over them, so I don’t care what logos and slogans they have.

    • Sixty
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      13 days ago

      I’m union blue collar, but yeah there’s still branded swag and free meals/snacks during most meetings or training OT at least where I’m at.

      Canadian plant, Texan ULC.

  • @Valmond@lemmy.world
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    13 days ago

    Amateurs!

    At Thermo Fischer, you had to work for 5 years before you got the branded Tshirt! And a base all cap.

  • @01011@monero.town
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    3 days ago

    Besides the odd biro, never once did I ever use company merch outside of an office. Definitely never used the shitty backpacks or laptop bags. Those got donated to Goodwill.

  • @masterspace@lemmy.ca
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    74 days ago

    Buy a seam ripper, then spend every boring waste of time meeting picking out the logo stitching, find a new job when you’re done.