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Denizens of the darker corners of the Internet turned an innocent frog comic into a hate symbol of the "deplorable" alt-right. "Pepe the Frog" first appeared in 2005 in the comic "Boy's Life" by ...
Online cartoon Pepe the Frog has been added to the Anti-Defamation League (ADL)'s database of hate symbols. Other logos cited as offensive by the ADL include the Swastika and the "Blood Drop Cross ...
The Anti Defamation League (ADL) has added “Pepe the Frog” to its database of online hate symbols. The cartoon frog is a popular meme among “alt-right” Twitter trolls and white supremacists.
The Anti-Defamation League, on Tuesday, designated the cartoon character “Pepe the Frog”—an online favorite of white supremacists of the alt-right—an online hate symbol. Also known, as the ...
Frog Design’s Energy ThinkIn Searches for Energy Efficiency’s “Livestrong” Symbol Energy efficiency is becoming increasingly mainstream idea, but it has an image problem.
When Matt Furie created his cartoon Pepe the Frog, he never imagined the laid-back amphibian might one day be considered a hate symbol. But that's what the Anti-Defamation League says the comic ...
Furie saw his frog dropped into “the entire range of human experience online over the years, from simple innocence to the most f—ed up, racist, tortuous stuff,” he said in September.
A logo, they say, is not the same as a symbol, which in turn is not the same as a combination mark. Everyone seems to have come up with their own definitions for this.