Microsoft posters don't stick in NYC
Published: 25 Oct 2002 15:19 BST
The city of New York ordered the software giant to remove butterfly posters that were plastered all over midtown Manhattan -- as part of a promotion for MSN's 8.0 launch.
The city has ordered Microsoft to remove a slew of butterfly posters that were plastered on phone booths, subway posts and traffic poles throughout Midtown Manhattan. The posters are part of Microsoft's promotion of its MSN 8.0 launch Thursday.
"Several different types of promotional poster, stickers and/or markings referring to products sponsored/produced by your company are defacing City-owned sidewalks and directional and informational traffic signs throughout New York City," wrote Cesar Fernandez, assistant counsel to the NYC Department of Transportation in a letter to Microsoft.
Inasmuch as your organisation is noted on the illegal markings, we intend to hold your firm directly responsible for this illegal, irresponsible and dangerous defacing of public property."
Microsoft executives could not immediately be reached for comment.
The fine for the related offence is $50 (£32), plus a $5 handling fee, said DOT spokesman Tom Cocola. He said the DOT received about a dozen phone calls Thursday complaining about the posters, and teams dispatched removed a few hundred of them.
The posters are a form of what's known as guerrilla marketing, a popular advertising method among tech companies of getting messages out to the public in unusual ways.
Microsoft isn't the first company to run into marketing trouble. Last year, IBM was chastised by officials in Chicago and San Francisco for spray-painting sidewalks as part of a Linux promotion.
"In the past we've run into similar situations with other corporations," Cocola said. "Sometimes corporations don't realise when they hire advertisers that there's a section of administrative code that doesn't permit it. Some other cities allow it."
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