I was checking my email now when I found an email from J.B. (I won’t write her name to protect her privacy) the Corporate/Group Sales Administrator at the Canadian National Exhibition asking me in a very polite manner to remove the post I had on the Canadian National Exhibition reduced ticket prices and also remove the CNE logo.
Here's the letter:
Dear “Boo Radleyâ€:
Kindly remove the CNE logo and corporate code information from your website as the use of these items is unauthorized.
Thank you for your attention to this matter.
J. B.
Corporate/Group Sales Administrator
Canadian National Exhibition
I understand the code I posted is especially for corporate customers so I will remove it today as she requested.
What I don’t comprehend, is why J.B.’s asking me to remove the Canadian National Exhibition logo?
. This is an exhibition all of us Canadian are proud of… why can’t we get to promote it and spread the word? The CNE logo I posted had CNE’s date and website address. This logo did nothing more than promote and provide some sort of free advertising for the CNE. How would removing it help CNE?
When I posted about the Canadian National Exhibition I was very thrilled (you’ll notice I added two smiley faces which I don’t often do). I’m disappointed that this exhibition has turned from something all Canadians pride and cherish to yet another commercial production. I will remove the logo and I don’t care about the CNE anymore.
and J.B. if you read this (and you probably will), let me give you some advice before you contact someone else:
- I suggest you don’t use your sympatico.ca email address because there is no way of verifying whether you really work at the CNE. Use a username@TheEx.com
- Your email was short and to the point but a word of motivation thanking the blogger for promoting the CNE for nothing in return but goodwill would have been nice.
- It looks like several websites out there have the CNE logo so you better start emailing them to have all logos removed before CNE 2007. Some are as old as 2004.