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Lego Changes Bulk Ordering Policy Following Ai Weiwei Controversy

Accepted submission by takyon at 2016-01-13 23:39:03
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The Lego Group has announced [lego.com] that it will no longer ask customers who buy large amounts of Lego bricks [wikipedia.org] what the bricks will be used for:

As of January 1st, the LEGO Group no longer asks for the thematic purpose when selling large quantities of LEGO bricks for projects. Instead, the customers will be asked to make it clear - if they intend to display their LEGO creations in public - that the LEGO Group does not support or endorse the specific projects.

NPR reports [npr.org] that the change in guidelines comes after Lego had previously refused to sell bricks to Chinese artist and activist Ai Weiwei:

In October, Ai said Lego had refused to sell him the bricks he needed for an exhibition on free speech at Australia's National Gallery of Victoria. He intended to use the bricks to create portraits of freedom advocates. A frequent critic of China who was imprisoned by the government, Ai accused the Danish company of censorship and said it was afraid to offend Beijing.

After the company's decision, supporters of Ai set up donation points around the world [npr.org] for people to donate used bricks. Ai also told NPR that he was flooded with messages of support on social media:

They're not necessarily museumgoers, but they understand what is the most important meaning of art, which is to really express yourself successfully and to really defend the essential values.

Ai said pressure from his supporters had pressured Lego to change its policy on bulk orders, and he told The Associated Press that it was a "good move":

Lego is a language which everybody can appreciate and should be able to use ... according to their will, and that's what all freedom of expression is about.


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