Cisco sues Apple over rights to iPhone name

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Cisco Systems has filed a lawsuit against Apple accusing the company of infringing its iPhone trademark, the networking company said on Wednesday.

The suit also accuses the iPod maker used a front company to try to acquire rights to the name.

Cisco accused Apple in a suit filed in United States District Court for the Northern District of California of willingly infringing its trademark when it announced the new iPhone at the Macworld Expo in San Francisco on Tuesday.

Cisco said in the complaint that Apple had attempted to get rights to the iPhone name several times, but after Cisco refused, the company created a front company to try to acquire the rights another way, according to the lawsuit.

Mark Chandler, senior vice president and general counsel at Cisco, said in an interview that the companies were close to finalising a deal on Monday night that would have allowed both Cisco and Apple to use the iPhone name. One aspect of the agreement called for some sort of technical interoperability between Cisco's Linksys internet telephony products and Apple's mobile phone. Chandler said the hope was that by making the products interoperable, it would help alleviate confusion among customers, who are likely to be target consumers for both products.

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The companies left the negotiating table at 8pm on Monday with only a few points left to negotiate, Chandler said. Then on Tuesday, Apple chief executive Steve Jobs took the stage at the Macworld Expo and, amid much fanfare, unveiled the new "iPhone".

"We indicated that it was important that the negotiations be completed before the launch of their product," Chandler said. "Our expectation was that our name wouldn't be used without permission. And it is a surprise when any large company announces a product using a name they don't have a right to use."

Chandler said Cisco made it clear after Apple's launch that negotiations needed to be completed immediately, but he said Cisco has still not heard from Apple.

Cisco is seeking an injunction that will prevent Apple using the name as well as damages from the company, the lawsuit said.

Fresh off one of the biggest launches in its history, a product Jobs called one of the most exciting products he's ever worked on, the company dug in its heels. "We think Cisco's trademark suit is silly... We believe [their] trademark registration is tenuous at best," said Natalie Kerris, an Apple spokeswoman.

"There are already several companies using the iPhone name for VoIP products," Kerris said. "We're the first company ever to use iPhone for a mobile phone. If Cisco wants to challenge us on it, we're confident we'll prevail."

Cisco obtained the iPhone trademark in 2000 when it acquired Infogear, a small Redwood City, California, start-up that developed consumer devices that allowed people to easily access the internet without a PC. Infogear had actually registered the iPhone trademark in March 1996. Cisco's home-networking division, Linksys, has been using the iPhone trademark on a new family of VoIP phones since early last year, Cisco said. And last month, Linksys expanded the iPhone family with additional products.

A UK company called Orate Telecommunications Services also offers a VoIP phone called an iPhone, and a Californian company called Teledex offers an iPhone for hotel rooms.

Chandler said Cisco is aware that other companies have used the iPhone name and in the past Cisco has been involved in "enforcement actions involving the use of this name".

For more than a year, Apple watchers have speculated about a new phone developed by Apple that would combine smart phone mobile technology with the full functionality of an iPod music and video player. Fans and bloggers had been referring to an Apple-designed mobile phone as the iPhone for some time, and Apple's repeated attempts at obtaining the trademark make it clear Apple hoped to use the moniker as well.

Cisco said in its complaint that Apple had first approached the company about acquiring the rights to the iPhone trademark in 2001. Over the years, Apple continued to make requests for the rights, including several attempts in 2006, Cisco said.

"Each time, Apple was told that Cisco was not interested in ceding the mark to Apple," Cisco's complaint reads.

Apple apparently was not willing to accept Cisco's decision, so it created a front company called Ocean Telecom Services that applied to use the trademark in the US on 26 September, 2006, according to Cisco's complaint. That company, Cisco says in the filing, is "owned or otherwise controlled by Apple and is the alter ego of Apple". Around the same time on 19 September, 2006, Apple also filed for the trademark for iPhone in Australia.

In Ocean Telecom Services' US filing and in Apple's Australian filing, each company refers…

Talkback

How about 'i-fon' ?

cummon...get creative dammit!

'Vpod' is even better

...jeeze

YO STEVE...Is Marketing Hiring at Apple? They should be!

sk8josh 11 January, 2007 20:46
Reply

I was thinking iMob or something along those lines.

It will be interesting to see how this plays out Cisco being in the stronger position

welshtroll 12 January, 2007 13:46
Reply

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