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Apple loses exclusive right to iPhone trademark in China

TaiShang

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Apple loses exclusive right to iPhone trademark in China
May 5, 2016


Apple Inc has lost exclusivity on the use of the "iPhone" trademark in China and has to share it with a Beijing-based leather products maker.

The Beijing Municipal High People's Court has ruled in favor of Xintong Tiandi Technology (Beijing) Ltd, which sells a number of leather products such as smartphone cases and handbags under the name "IPHONE".

In 2002, Apple applied for the "iPhone" trademark for its electronic goods in China, but it wasn't actually granted until 2013.

Xintong Tiandi filed for its own "IPHONE" trademark in China in 2007, the same year the first generation of Apple's iPhone was launched in the United States.

In order to obtain the exclusivity on the use of the "iPhone" trademark in China, Apple first took the case to the Chinese trademark authority in 2012, but it failed as the agency claimed Apple couldn't prove the name "iPhone" was a well-known brand prior to Xintong Tiandi's registration in 2007.

Apple then filed a lawsuit in a Beijing court. However, the court ruled against it and Apple appealed to the Beijing Municipal High People's Court.

The court said that the company didn't sell the iPhone in the Chinese mainland until 2009.

The final judgment means Xintong Tiandi could continue to use the trademark to sell its products.

Apple didn't comment on the ruling.

It came as Apple's latest quarterly earnings showed a 13 percent drop in revenue as sales of iPhones slipped. China was a particular weak spot as the sales in China fell 26 percent to $12.49 billion, due to weak demand for iPhones.

Xintong Tiandi confirmed the court ruling on its website and said the decision represented a victory for free consumer markets.

Zhu Dalin, an analyst at Beijing-based Internet consultancy Analysys International, said the influence of Xintong Tiandi is very minor, which wouldn't pose a threat to Apple anyway, and Apple mainly focuses on electronic devices, such as smartphones and iPads.
 
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how can a handbag be named "iphone" ? even "ibag" or "icase" can be understood.
 
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how can a handbag be named "iphone" ? even "ibag" or "icase" can be understood.

it is actually IPHONE with big character. A similar case is with IPAD, a trade mark did not belong to Apple at the very beginning.
 
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it is actually IPHONE with big character. A similar case is with IPAD, a trade mark did not belong to Apple at the very beginning.
well, uppercase or lowercase, naming a bag/case "IPHONE" is a little out of place. for eg. opening up a meat shop and naming it "hyundai".
unless of course, iphone has some other meaning in mandarin or they were using the term "IPHONE" before apple co. started using this for their smartfones.
 
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lol Good move. Apple thinks it can bully other companies into submission, well that's not happening in China. :azn:

They will take the case to the Supreme Court, I think. But they will likely lose it because two lower Courts already turned down their appeal.
 
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lol Good move. Apple thinks it can bully other companies into submission, well that's not happening in China. :azn:
I agree completely. China should copy away....

http://www.wired.com/2016/05/huawei-iphone-screws-ifixit/
...because Huawei is shamelessly copying Apple here. Yes, it migrated the fingerprint sensor like a flounder’s eye and eliminated the mechanical home button, but the two phones share similar antenna bands, styling, and finish. They even sport the same proprietary star-shaped security screw, in exactly the same spots. After all, if you want your phone to resemble an iPhone, you’ve got to nail the details.
Creativity...Originality...Not happening in China...:azn:
 
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i can't wait until donald trump becomes president. this will taken care ..
 
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