BlackBerry Ltd., the smartphone maker
that withdrew plans to sell itself and go private last year, sued Ryan
Seacrest’s Typo Products LLC alleging it copied designs for a keyboard
case.
The company said Typo’s product, an
external case for Apple (AAPL)’s iPhone 5 and iPhone 5s with an
integrated physical keyboard, infringes patents and designs used in the
Q10, a keyboard-equipped smartphone BlackBerry released last year,
Bloomberg reports.
“Typo chose to copy BlackBerry’s iconic
keyboard design as embodied in, among others, BlackBerry’s Q10
smartphone, seeking to trade on BlackBerry’s commercial recognition and
goodwill,” the Waterloo, Ontario-based company said in a complaint filed
today in federal court in San Francisco.
Seacrest, the radio and TV producer and
host of “American Idol,” is founder of closely-held Los Angeles-based
Typo, according to the company’s website. The disputed product is
scheduled to begin shipping this month, according to the complaint.
“Although we respect BlackBerry and its
intellectual property, we believe that BlackBerry’s claims against Typo
lack merit and we intend to defend the case vigorously,” Erika
Gutierrez, a spokeswoman for Typo, said in an e-mailed statement. “We
are excited about our innovative keyboard design, which is the
culmination of years of development and research.”
Apple isn’t a defendant in the case.
Android Devices
BlackBerry has over the years lost
business to Apple and Google Inc. (GOOG)’s Android devices. Its share of
the global smartphone market tumbled to just 1.7 percent in the third
quarter from 4.1 percent a year earlier, according to IDC.
Last month BlackBerry co-founder and
former Chief Executive Officer Mike Lazaridis walked away from a
possible takeover plan and reduced his stake in the smartphone maker
after it ended an attempt to sell itself.
Following the collapse of a $4.7 billion
buyout by Fairfax Financial Holdings Ltd. in November, BlackBerry ended
its strategic review, opting instead to raise $1 billion in convertible
debt and seek a new CEO. Former Sybase Inc. chief John Chen was named
executive chairman and interim CEO.
BlackBerry is seeking a court order
blocking Typo from infringing its intellectual property, Typo’s profits
from infringing products and triple damages. It also asked for an order
forcing Typo to take infringing products off the market.
BlackBerry rose as much as 1.6 percent before ending the day with a 0.5 percent loss at $7.61 in Nasdaq trading.
The case is BlackBerry Ltd. (BBRY) v.
Typo Products LLC, 14-00023, U.S. District Court, Northern District of
California (San Francisco).
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