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GameStop Spat Prompts U.K.'s Robin Hood Society To Say, 'We're Not That App'

caption: A Robin Hood society in the U.K. is welcoming new followers online, even if some of them found the group while looking for the Robinhood stock app. Here, Errol Flynn portrays Robin Hood alongside Olivia de Havilland as Maid Marian in a film about the famously generous bandit.
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A Robin Hood society in the U.K. is welcoming new followers online, even if some of them found the group while looking for the Robinhood stock app. Here, Errol Flynn portrays Robin Hood alongside Olivia de Havilland as Maid Marian in a film about the famously generous bandit.
FilmPublicityArchive/United Archives via Getty Images

The Robinhood stock-trading app sparked outrage after it halted trading on GameStop and other companies at the center of a battle between small investors and hedge funds.

Suddenly, the World Wide Robin Hood Society noticed a flood of interest online – and the U.K. group politely clarified that it isn't the Robin Hood some commenters were looking for.

"Lovely to have all these new followers," the Society tweeted, "can we just check that you know that you're following The World Wide Robin Hood Society in Nottingham and not the Robin Hood App .. if so .. a big welcome from Sherwood."

For the record, the World Wide Robin Hood Society is not a cosplay group for enthusiasts who want to don a pair of green tights or an embroidered bodice. It's devoted to promoting the legend of the hero who famously stole from the rich and gave to the poor.

But on Twitter, people flocked to the society's account — @robinhood – by the tens of thousands this week, after the Robinhood stock-trading app became embroiled in the controversy on Wall Street. The app blocked trading on several stocks that hedge funds had shorted – but which were seeing huge gains, driven by small investors in Reddit's r/wallstreetbets community.

The move triggered a class-action lawsuit and allegations that the app was essentially manipulating the market to protect wealthy hedge funds at the expense of regular people.

"Pro tip," tweeted Charles Payne, of the Fox Business Network. "Don't call yourself Robin Hood if you are going to turn your back on the folks in Sherwood forest after one phone call from the Sheriff of Nottingham."

The company has denied those accusations, and it said it would allow limited trading on the volatile stocks to resume on Friday.

As people sought ways to vent anger and skepticism online, many came across the World Wide Robin Hood Society, prompting it to clear the air about its mission. In the spirit of Sherwood Forest's famous renegade, it welcomed new followers: "You can now consider yourself to be a fully fledged member of our band of outlaws, so put a feather in your cap and shout 'Huzzah!' "

A similar clarification came in the U.S., where Robin Hood is also the name of a non-profit in New York City that has been fighting poverty since 1988, providing millions of dollars in aid to families.

Noting its status as a charitable organization, the group said, "We are not affiliated with any for-profit businesses that use a similar name."

With the Wall Street controversy putting new attention on their namesake, the two groups even connected.

"Hope your day is going as well as ours," the U.K. Robin Hood said in a tweet to the New York Robin Hood, adding a "Huzzah!!" for good measure. [Copyright 2021 NPR]

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