Lawsuit claims Apple infringing on ‘iAd’ trademark

“Despite Steve Jobs’s contention that Apple Inc. has commitments of more than $60 million for its iAd platform, the Cupertino, California-based company may have to get a trademark-infringement suit out of the way first,” The Associated Press reports.

“Apple was sued May 21 by Innovate Media Group LLP of Costa Mesa, California, owner of two registered U.S. trademarks for ‘iAd,'” AP reports. “Innovate, founded in 2002 by Yahoo! Inc. alumnus John Cecil, registered the trademarks for use with Internet advertising in October 2008, according to the database of the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office. The company has used the terms since 2006, it said in the complaint filed in federal court in Los Angeles.”

AP reports, “Innovate claims that Apple’s use of the ‘iAd’ mark ‘is just another sequence in a pattern of conduct by Apple, of ignoring and tramping the intellectual property rights of others.’ The complaint noted that ‘iPhone,’ ‘iPad’ and even the name ‘Apple’ were all marks held by third parties, ‘which Apple used without the owners’ permission, and ultimately took over.’ Innovate made reference to trademark disputes with the Beatles-founded record label Apple Corp. and Cisco Systems Inc.’s iPhone mark.”

MacDailyNews Note: MInor point (sarcasm), but Apple legally gained the rights to use iPhone, iPad, and Apple. They didn’t “take them over.”

AP continues, “Innovate claimed it has suffered ‘irreparable harm’ and notes that Apple has applied for to register ‘iAd’ as a trademark in Canada. It asked the court to bar Apple from using ‘iAd,’ and for an award of money damages and all profits realized by Apple relative to its alleged infringement. Additionally, Innovate requested awards of litigation costs and attorney fees, and extra damages for what it said is deliberate infringement by Apple.”

More details in the full article here.

[Thanks to MacDailyNews Reader “Carl H.” for the heads up.]

49 Comments

  1. @ MadMac

    The iMac trademark was filed for on March 8th, 1993.

    to restate:

    Who used the “i” naming scheme first before Apple as you mention without a name to give credit .. ? (I really wanna know)

    Your turn to do a search.

    Try to come up with something of substance.. like perhaps a name to reference rather than a “do a search” quip which is empty and void of insight.

  2. The AP article seems to contain some inaccuracy and a major lack of depth or fact-checking. A quick google search turned up Innovate Media Group, LLC’s trademark: “iAds” (plural), while Apple’s product offering is “iAd” (singular). I’m no attorney, so I have no idea whether the distinction is adequate in trademark law, but stating the fact correctly might be nice. Might that fact be interesting in the article?

    It would also be nice if the AP article could at least verify a few of the claims! The plaintiff in the case also claimed that Apple went on to register iadtoday.com, a domain which isn’t associated with Apple at all from what I can tell!

    Oh, and one more point, folks: The iMac was released in 1998, the iBook in 1999, the iPod in 2001, and of course a raft of “i” products in the the years that followed. This company trademarked “iAds” in 2007.

  3. You can stick an “i” in front of anything and then you wait for someone to actually do something with it, or a similar phrase. Kind of like domain name squatting.

  4. @ Wha,

    First of all, the iMac trademark was filed in 1998 by Apple, not 1993 as you claim. Here is a history of where the name came from, http://www.cultofmac.com/20172/20172

    Second, I think I stand corrected as I cannot find evidence of the use of “i”whatever prior to the iMac. I had thought there were but cannot back that up so I’ll have to give it to you.

  5. Just as a point of reference:

    iMac – 1998
    iBook – 1999
    iMovie – 1999
    iPod – 2001
    iTunes – 2001
    iPhoto – 2001
    iWork – 2005
    iPhone – 2007
    iPad – 2010

    The only “i” I’m aware of (doesn’t mean there aren’t more) that predates all those are the Cisco iPhone, which according to Cisco came from a company acquisition that held the trademark dating back as far as 1996 or 1999 – not sure which. But, it appears unclear whether Cisco took the necessary steps to keep their trademark protection in force.

  6. @ TheConfuzed1,

    Bah! I forgot about iTools!

    IIRC, there was a trademark infringement case of THAT name, too! Some UNIX or Linux developer toolkit or something… Maybe that gave rise to .Mac?!?!? I wonder how far back that other iTools name goes?

  7. On there WEB site, I don’t see iAd or iAds any were on the site, they do promote there product Innovate ADS for on line advertising not in app advertising. Remember iAd is for in App advertising not in WEB page advertising.

  8. “… and even the name ‘Apple’ were all marks held by third parties…”

    Well, fwiw, at the time Apple Computer and Apple Corps were having their last legal go-a-rounds – just before they settled their “differences” – the name “Apple” was being utilized by approximately two hundred other “third parties,” according to a elementary search of business names at a .gov site.

    And at the time Apple Computer originally approached Apple Corp about using the name, there were probably a lot more of them.

    Although I must say it appears Apple has a policy of “use first and ask permission later.” I suppose it is possible that might work out better for them as a negotiating strategy and financially in the long term.

  9. Has anyone located the claimed trademark in the US Patent and Trademark Office database? I tried the Trademark Electronic Search System (TESS), only to find all “iad” filings except “International Art Diary” labelled “dead.”

    I probably just do not know how to search properly, but now I am curious.
      

  10. @MadMac

    Kinda missed my point by a mile. Of course developers are a type of customer, I’m one such example. My point is that Apple could call it “Mo’ moneys ad-a-Rama” and it would be irrelevant. It’s just not a consumer facing brand and people who use iapps will never need to see the name of the product/framework. Therefore, who cares about the iAd name. Dump it.

  11. Apple’s greatest brand name is Apple, why not use that wonderful symbol. I’m just so tired of this childish ‘i’ tag on otherwise great products. It somehow cheapens the product’s perceived value in my book. Just retire the iAlready.

  12. Hey Guys, I think a ‘Go Nowhere’ company is in need of some easy money here. There will undoubtedly never be a shortage of the proverbial entrepreneurial opportunists and leeches only too happy to suck a few more $$$$$$$$$$$$$’s out of ‘Apple Inc.’ at any and every opportunity.

Reader Feedback (You DO NOT need to log in to comment. If not logged in, just provide any name you choose and an email address after typing your comment below)

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.