A Beijing court’s judgment against Apple Inc. with respect to the validity of a patent held by Zhizhen Internet Technology,
a Chinese company, is making headlines. Apple challenged Zhizhen's
contention alleging that the patent rights of Zhizhen Internet
Technology to a speech recognition technology were invalid and thus
dragged the Shanghai based company to Beijing's Number One Intermediate
People's Court to procure a verdict in its favour on the matter. Since
the Lower court found no merit in the contentions made by Apple Inc.,
the company is now planning to bring the case to Beijing Higher People's
Court, with the hope to reverse the original verdict after its initial
efforts have been thwarted.
On more than one occasions, Apple has been down and out in China over patent-infringement case(s). In 2013, Zhizhen sued
Apple laying claim that the company's Siri, which is used on iPhones,
violates intellectual property rights in its speech-recognition
technology. Zhizhen also accused Apple the same year for the violation
of its intellectual property rights after Apple declared that Mandarin
and Cantonese were being appended to the list of Siri's supported
languages. Zhizhen maintained that it had filed a Patent application to
the rudimentary technology in 2004 and was granted a patent after two
years. Apple also sought to impede the case by calling for China's State
Intellectual Property Office to invalidate the patent, but was shown a
red signal.
Siri
is a voice recognition software that permits users to inquire a virtual
personal assistant with doubts or questions after which the virtual
personal assistant responds through its natural language user interface
accordingly. For example, it allows users to find train and flight
times, shopping malls, restaurants, stock prices etc. Zhizhen volunteers
as an app over Xiao i Robot in Apple's iOS .The Chinese company had
issues with the method in which a person's speech is distinguished,
recognized and examined through Siri.
The
bombardment of trademark infringement claims against Apple in China is
setting out to build up the steam. Some time ago, a chemical company
registered a complaint against Apple for the Snow Leopard trademark,
and now Zhizhen has filed this complaint about the much talked about
“Siri” trademark. The dust around Siri was far from being settled, when
Apple has faced a fresh slaughter recently, with the Chinese state
broadcaster charging Apple’s "Frequent Locations" function of flummoxing
Chinese security by alleging it to be a potential ‘security risk’ to
the country. Clearly it is tough times ahead for Apple Inc. in its
second largest market, China. This is not the first time that Apple has had problems in taming the Dragon. Taiwanese company Proview Electronics sued Apple
in 2006, claiming the company infringed its trademark for the word
'iPad'. Apple had to settle the Trademark Dispute with Proview for a
hovering $60 Million. After the multimillion-dollar settlement with
Proview Technology, Chinese company Jiangsu Xeubao also filed a lawsuit against Apple,
claiming its OS 'Snow Leopard' contravene Jiangsu Xeebao's trademark of
its name. The company's logo Xuebao (雪豹) is the Chinese tantamount of
‘Snow Leopard’.
What
is my conclusion? A little bit of greed is health. Everyone wants a
slice of Apple, but China wants the whole damn pie! It seems Chinese
firms will continue excruciating Apple until they own the company; there
is simply no denial to that. On a serious note, if such a scenario
persists, it won’t be far-fetched to argue that Apple might bid farewell the nation. While I continue my quest for something more juicy on this topic, you folks can stay tuned for more!
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