Luxpro countersues Apple for $100 million over iPod shuffle knockoff

“Luxpro, a Taiwanese electronics company that won a lawsuit filed against it by Apple over an imitation of the iPod shuffle, intends to countersue Apple for $100m in damages,” Kathrin Hille ireports for The Financial Times.

“‘We plan to sue Apple in a Taiwanese court before the end of the month and demand $100m in compensation for the revenues we have lost due to their abuse of their global power,’ Wu Fu-chin, Luxpro chairman, told the Financial Times,” Hille reports.

“In March 2005, Luxpro created a stir at the CeBIT technology show in Germany when it presented an MP3 player that looked similar to the iPod Shuffle,” Hille reports. “…In July 2005 Apple asked the Shihlin District Court in Taipei for an injunction that would ban Luxpro from manufacturing or selling the product. The injunction was granted a month later.”

“Luxpro appealed and won subsequent lawsuits in the Taiwan High Court and the Taiwan Supreme Court,” Hille reports. “Luxpro estimates that it has lost revenues of about $100m because of the temporary ban on manufacturing and selling the Tangent.”

Full article here.

AppleInsider has a full copy of Luxpro’s press release, “David vs. Goliath: Apple Computer Inc. Loses Lawsuit, Luxpro Technology Files US$100 Million Compensation Claim” here.

Related articles:
Luxpro alters iPod shuffle look-alike music player, renames it ‘Super Tangent’ – March 31, 2005
Report: Luxpro ‘Super shuffle’ knock-off of Apple iPod shuffle a publicity stunt – March 21, 2005
iPod shuffle rip-off maker Luxpro’s Chairman: patents do not cover appearance – March 15, 2005
Apple moves to stop CeBIT presentation of Luxpro’s ‘Super shuffle’ iPod shuffle rip-off – March 14, 2005
Attention Apple Legal Dept: Luxpro debuts blatant ‘iPod shuffle’ rip-off called ‘Super shuffle’ – March 10, 2005

37 Comments

  1. Making the products look so similar and using the “shuffle” name is a pretty clear case of trademark infringment in the US, where the potential for customer confusion is the benchmark. Under US law, too, you can’t be sued for filing a non-frivolous lawsuit. (There are penalties for filing frivolous complaints, but if something goes to trial it is pretty much de facto not trivial.)

    I have no idea what Taiwanese law is, but it’s unlikely that that pseudo-state has any real pull over Apple unless Apple decides its Taiwanese connections are worth more than 100 mil.

  2. My Microsoft Word quit suddenly preventing me from getting some work done today. I am going to sue MS for $100 Million. While I am at it I will sue Apple for $100 million for allowing my Mac to let Word crash.

    Man oh man…I am liking this I think

  3. i have been over 20 times to china and taiwan, i just hate china and taiwan. you see that is exactly the chinese style, oh no, this is no copy sir, oh no, instead they sue 100m, can you believe that ? typical chinse..

    “when a chinese laughs at you while doing business, then you know you are fucked”

  4. I wonder if this has anything to do with the fact that Taiwan has never signed the Berne Convention, thus limiting the application of international copyright to pretty much anything sold in Taiwan. At least in terms of ‘rights of the author’.

    ~A~

  5. The Taiwanease legal system in incredibly corrupt.

    So im not all at surprised Apple lost the case, even though it’s an obvious rippoff of Apple’s Shuffle.

    The other company must have given a load of US$ to the judge to win that one.

  6. It’s amazing to me the breadth of people who read this site. Apparently it includes people like Emil that do not know the difference between Taiwan (an island off the coast of China that is a computer component manufacturing powerhouse) and Thailand (a nation in southeast Asia that was affected by the tsunami of late 2004, and is not the setting for any Apple lawsuits).

  7. I think Apple should treat this lawsuit all the respect that Taiwan gives to foreign IP, that it, give it the middle finger and ignore it.

    Does Apple manufacture anything in Taiwan? If so, they should threaten to pull all their business out of the country unless their patents get fair protection.

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