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Coca-Cola Calls Oslo Soda ‘Offensive’ Because The X’s Look Too Much Like Censorship

by Leona Pham
November 2, 2025
in Social Issues

A name can make or break a brand. For one Oslo-based soda maker, it nearly led to a full-blown legal war. Their bubbly lemon drink had once proudly carried a familiar-sounding name until Coca-Cola’s lawyers came knocking.

In a bid to keep their business alive, the small company rebranded with what seemed like a playful twist: a few X’s instead of the disputed word. But to Coca-Cola, that clever workaround crossed another line. And now, what started as a creative fix might cost them far more than new labels.

Coca-Cola asked a small Norwegian soda maker to stop using “Sprite” in its drink name and still hated their new name once they complied

Coca-Cola Calls Oslo Soda ‘Offensive’ Because The X’s Look Too Much Like Censorship
not the actual photo

'Coca-Cola sues small company for using the name XXXXXX?'

The Oslo-based soda manufacturer O.

Mathisen might be legally required to change the name of their brand Jallasprite to JALLAXXXXXX after receiving legal threats from Coca-Cola.

"The name is offensive and will not be accepted", says Coca-Cola.

The Coca-Cola Company is threatening to sue Jallasprite if they change name to jalla JALLAXXXXXX.

The world-famous soda brand dislikes the new name since the X’s creates an impression of censorship.

Coca-Cola has threatened to take the soda manufacturer Jallasprite to court if they don’t change their name.

The soda manufacturer in a neighbourhood in downtown Oslo called Grønland agreed to change the name and stopped all production and sales of Jallasprite.

But now, Coca-Cola's contesting Jallasprite’s manufacturer O.

Mathisen's right to use the new name on their lemon soda, jalla JALLAXXXXXX..​.

Coca-Cola Calls Oslo Soda ‘Offensive’ Because The X’s Look Too Much Like Censorship
The new jalla JALLAXXXXXX
Coca-Cola Calls Oslo Soda ‘Offensive’ Because The X’s Look Too Much Like Censorship
Jallasprite before O. Mathisen had to change their brand name

In an e-mail to O Mathisen, Coca-Cola's lawyer, Håkon Tysnes Kaasin wrote:

“The name that’ll replace JALLASPRITE has to be totally different from any of The Coca-Cola Company’s hallmarks

and shouldn’t contain any references to any of TCCC’s hallmarks or this ongoing conflict.

The name JALLAXXXXXX will be considered a continued offense and will not be accepted.”

No references to Sprite.

In a letter to Coca-Cola's lawyer, Jarle Hollerud, the man behind O. Mathisen and Jallasprite wrote:

“We have chosen to use jalla JALLAXXXXXX as a hallmark on the labels that will soon be in circulation.

In our opinion, this name is different to any of the of The Coca-Cola Company’s hallmarks.

It contains no references to any of The Coca-Cola Company’s hallmarks either.

It can be argued that any change of the name of our lemon soda will be a reference to what you refer to as “the ongoing conflict”.

This part of your suggestion to an agreement text can not be complied.

It’s regrettable that your client consider JALLAXXXXXX as an offense, but unfortunately nothing we can take into account.

The best choice aesthetically

According to Jarle Hollerud, Rikard Svensk and he at O. Mathisen have ordered 20,000 new labels for the new name.

"We haven’t been able to find a solution to a name that looks better. We haven’t decided on another name that sounds good either",

Hollerud informs to lawyer Håkon Tysnes Kaasin at the law firm Bryn Aarflot.

"We’ve chosen this name because it was the best aesthetically and because of time pressure. We simply can’t allow the production to remain any longer.

We’ll see if we want to change the X’s to another name", Rikard Svensk at O. Mathisen informs.

The X’s in JALLAXXXXXX makes it look that the Jallasprite name is censored, Coca-Cola’s lawyer says.

"In our opinion, we have fulfilled The Coca Cola Company’s requirements as far as possible from our side, Hollerud says in an answer to Kaasin."

The word SPRITE appears censored

According to The Coca-Cola Company, the word JALLAXXXXXX makes it look that Coca-Cola has censored the new name on O.

Mathisen’s lemon soda. In an e-mail to O. Mathisen, the lawyer Håkon Tysnes Kaasin says:

“I will make it clear that the alternative JALLAXXXXXX or other alternatives where it appears that the word SPRITE is simply censored, will not be applicable.

I therefore request a quick confirmation from you that you will accept to refrain from such names.

If not, there will be no reason for further negotiations.

JALLASITRON or JALLABRUS or the like, on the other hand, will be perfectly acceptable from our side.”

"Sitron" translates to "lemon" and "brus", soda, in Norwegian.

Coca-Cola’s seven requirements.

The seven requirements of The Cola-Company to waive the writ against O. Mathisen are:

* All the bottles and bottle caps that are marked JALLASPRITE and are not already distributed can't be distributed and can only be replaced with new products.

* The name replacing JALLASPRITE have no similarity to any of TCCC’s hallmarks

or contains any references to any of TCCC’s hallmarks or the dispute between the parties involved.

* The name JALLAXXXXXX will be considered a continued offense and will not be accepted, as previously explained.

* TCCC must be sent a copy of the bottle with the new label to confirm that it meets the requirements

after the agreement before O. Mathisen can start distribution under the new name.

* Bottles that are already distributed to shops, restaurants and other outlets can be sold out as they are.

* Mathisen has to inform all shops, distributors and restaurants that sells the product that they have to stop all further promotion of JALLASPRITE.

* All marketing and promotional material, included those at stores and restaurants, must be destroyed.

"TCCC is willing to renounce their compensation claim against O. Mathisen and Hollerud Grafiske (Hollerud Graphical) if we reach an agreement,

but if the settlement agreement is broken from your side, TCCC nevertheless reserve the right to claim compensation."

No comment. The lawyer Kaasin refuses comment and refers interested parties to The Coca-Cola Company.

Coca-Cola's spokesperson Frida Keane states the company is currently in negotiations with O. Mathisen and have no further comments.

(Photo credits: O. Mathisen). Source: (October 07, 2018)

TL;DR: Company made a brand name similar to a Coca-Cola brand name. Coca-Cola says new brand must change the name to remove similarity.

New brand replaces similarity with X's. Coca-Cola not happy.

Trademark disputes like this one reveal how far corporate power can stretch when it comes to brand protection and how it sometimes backfires spectacularly.

According to The World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO), trademarks are meant to prevent consumer confusion, not to censor humor or artistic expression. “If the public can easily distinguish between brands, there’s no infringement,” explains intellectual property attorney David L. Cohen of Kidon IP.

In this case, JALLAXXXXXX doesn’t look or sound like Sprite. What it does resemble is satire, a deliberate poke at corporate overreach. “When a big company threatens a smaller one for parody or commentary, it often damages their image more than the alleged infringement,” notes legal scholar Dr. Amanda Levendowski in the NYU Law Review.

Coca-Cola’s claim that the new name “appears censored” ironically validates the parody itself. As marketing strategist Mark Ritson puts it, “Once a brand becomes so dominant that it owns everyday words, even jokes about it start sounding like threats.”

This legal hypersensitivity is what consumer psychologists call the Streisand Effect: the harder you try to suppress something, the more attention it gets.

Now, thanks to this dispute, Jallasprite, or JALLAXXXXXX, is gaining worldwide recognition. Local fans are rallying behind the company, with some joking that Coca-Cola accidentally handed them a viral marketing campaign. It’s a modern example of how authenticity and humor can outshine corporate legal muscle.

If Coca-Cola’s goal was to protect its image, this fight might have done the opposite, reminding the world that not every battle is worth picking, especially when it’s over a handful of letters and a bottle of lemon soda.

Here’s the feedback from the Reddit community:

These Redditors turned the drama into comedy gold, suggesting a running gag of ever-changing parody names like JALLACOKESUX and JallaSpite

PieGeters − I would love the idea that they just keep changing the name. So Coke can't keep up.

Limited editions of each run so by the time they threaten to sue the name has changed: * JALLACOKESUX * JALLAJUSTCHANGINGTHENAME

* JALLACOKEASKEDUSTOCHANGETHIS * JALLASOMETHINGDIFFERENT * JALLADEFINITELYNOTSPRITE

* JALLAYOUBOREDYETCOKE * JALLAGOTCENSOREDBYCOK* Would probably help their sales as well :D

Black_Handkerchief − Next name change: JallaSpite. No reference to any Coca Cola trademarks,

just a name taken out of spite for being litigated that much over nonsense. It just happens to sound a little bit like the original...

This pair mocked Coca-Cola’s hypocrisy, pointing out that Coke literally caused the censorship look they were complaining about

Exceon − According to The Coca-Cola Company, the word JALLAXXXXXX makes it look that

Coca-Cola has censored the new name on O. Mathisen’s lemon soda. But... they literally did?

-AlternativeFacts − Coke sensors the company's use of the word "Sprite" ans made them change it...

then gets mad that the company now wants to use a logo that "looks like coke made them sensor the word Sprite

This commenter recalled a similar absurd lawsuit

Novodoctor − Always remember, McDonald's tried suing the head of the clan McDonald

because on his estate, he had a small 4 star restaurant called, logically, McDonald's.

That ended pretty quickly when a judge pointed out a) nobody was going to confuse his 4-star cuisine with their crap,

b) if they did they'd have an improvement in standing, and

c) as head of the clan, with a centuries-old right to the name, if he felt like counter-suing for defamation of his name by a stupid,

money-grubbing corporation, he'd rule for him in a heartbeat.

These users said Coke’s lawsuit backfired spectacularly, making people want to try Jalla instead

Shojo_Tombo − I've never heard of Jalla, but now I want to try their soda. Thanks for spreading the word, coke!

Comentarinformal − "Hey we don't want you using something from our brand REMOVE IT"

"whAT the F__K ARE YOU DOING WITH THE X IT LOOKS LIKE SOMEONE ASKED YOU TO REMOVE IT OR SOMETHING"

I don't see any judge siding with Coke now, would they?

This group ridiculed Coca-Cola’s legal arrogance, calling the lawyer petty and confused

KaiRaiUnknown − Coke's lawyer is coming off as a bit of a bell-end in this. "I don't like what you've changed it to. Make it something else."

Like who the f__k is this guy laying down the law?

jdc53d − Coca Cola out there acting like a baby that their products are so damn popular that people think of them as real words.

(it's not a bandaid, it's a bandage, but you don't hear bandaid complaining)

robhol − I don't even understand what on Earth is the matter. I get that "Jallasprite" (Norwegian for "wonky Sprite") is a clear violation.

I do not understand why Cock-a-Cola gets to demand "now change it to something that doesn't have anything to do with our trademar- NO, NOT LIKE THAT, REEEEE"

A local soda maker tried to comply with corporate demands and ended up in a second legal dispute for complying too well. Coca-Cola’s legal team may have wanted to protect its brand, but instead, it amplified a tiny competitor’s name across the internet.

Now everyone knows about Jalla’s lemon soda and Coke’s overreach might have done more for its marketing than any ad campaign ever could.

Would you side with the billion-dollar brand protecting its IP, or the small company making a point with a few X’s?

Leona Pham

Leona Pham

Hi, I'm Leona. I'm a writer for Daily Highlight and have had my work published in a variety of other media outlets. I'm also a New York-based author, and am always interested in new opportunities to share my work with the world. When I'm not writing, I enjoy spending time with my family and friends. Thanks for reading!

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