BlackBerry sues Ryan Seacrest's Typo over iPhone keyboard
Blackberry Ltd. said Friday it had filed a suit in a
California court against Los Angeles firm Typo Products for violating its
patents with a Blackberry-like keyboard made for Apple's iPhone.
The struggling Canadian maker of the Blackberry smartphone
said that Typo's $99 keyboard case, which attaches a Blackberry-like physical
keyboard to an iPhone 5, "blatantly copied BlackBerry's keyboard."
"This is a blatant infringement against BlackBerry's
iconic keyboard, and we will vigorously protect our intellectual property
against any company that attempts to copy our unique design," said
Blackberry's chief legal officer Steve Zipperstein.
"We are flattered by the desire to graft our keyboard
onto other smartphones, but we will not tolerate such activity without fair
compensation for using our intellectual property and our technological
innovations," he said in a statement.
Typo was created by media entrepreneur Laurence Hallier and
show-biz personality Ryan Seacrest, together with inventor-designers Ryan Hyde
and Jonathan Goodrich.
The company's website said it is taking pre-orders for the
Typo keyboard case, with the products to be shipped this month.
Blackberry is seeking to turn around its fortunes after
losing a leadership position in the cellphone and smartphone business.
In December it reported a massive $4.4 billion loss in its
third quarter, four times the previous quarter's loss, as its smartphone sales
slumped by half.
The company announced last month that Taiwan-based Hon
Hai/Foxconn whose China factories produce products for Apple will develop and
manufacture a number of new devices and help manage inventory for Blackberry.
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