Calgary Herald

Blackberry sues Seacrest company over iphone case

- DAVID FRIEND THE CANADIAN PRESS

BlackBerry is suing Typo Products, a company cofounded by TV personalit­y Ryan Seacrest, saying its new iPhone case rips off the famous BlackBerry keyboard.

In documents filed in a California court, BlackBerry accused Typo of copying its keyboard design in an effort to capitalize on the smartphone maker’s “commercial recognitio­n and goodwill.”

“Typo’s keyboard product has caused and is likely to continue to cause confusion, mistake and deception as to the source of origin of (its) products,” BlackBerry said in the filing.

“(It) is likely to falsely suggest a sponsorshi­p, connection, or associatio­n between Typo, its products, and its commercial activities with BlackBerry.”

Typo Products did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment and none of the allegation­s have been proven in court.

Seacrest is the host of American Idol, weekly countdown radio show American Top 40, and a producer on several television shows. He founded Typo alongside entreprene­ur Laurence Hallier, creator and CEO of Show Media, which sells advertisin­g space on taxi cabs in the U.S.

The idea for the Typo keyboard was born when its founders no- ticed their friends were carrying two phones — “one for typing and correspond­ence and an iPhone for virtually everything else,” the company said on its website.

The Typo case runs on a Lithiumion battery and adds about six millimetre­s in thickness and less than two centimetre­s in length once it is attached to an iPhone 5 or 5S.

While the case is already available for preorder online for $99 US, it will officially debut at the Consumer Electronic­s Show in Las Vegas next week.

BlackBerry’s lawsuit comes as the company moves to protect its keyboard, one of the key differenti­ators between its smartphone and most other competitor­s on the market.

The lawsuit outlines in meticulous detail the specifics of the keyboard layout and the roots of its current design. It also highlights several industry and analyst reviews that referred to “blatant copying” of the BlackBerry keyboard in Typo’s product.

BlackBerry is seeking numerous rulings, including damages from Typo, all of Typo’s profits, and a stop to future sales of the keyboard technology.

“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,” said Blackberry chief legal officer Steve Zipperstei­n in a release.

 ?? Vince Bucci/getty Images ?? Typo Products, co-founded by American Idol host Ryan Seacrest faces legal action from BlackBerry over allegedly copying its keyboard design.
Vince Bucci/getty Images Typo Products, co-founded by American Idol host Ryan Seacrest faces legal action from BlackBerry over allegedly copying its keyboard design.

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