Apple gets go-ahead to use iPhone in Brazil

Nevertheless, Apple decided to order its suppliers to stop using benzene and n-hexane during the final assembly of iPhones, iPads, iPods, Mac computers and various accessories.

Nevertheless, Apple decided to order its suppliers to stop using benzene and n-hexane during the final assembly of iPhones, iPads, iPods, Mac computers and various accessories.

Published Sep 26, 2013

Share

Brasilia - A court has ruled that Apple can use the trademark iPhone in Brazil, ending the exclusive rights Brazilian firm Gradiente had been given by INPI, the Latin American nation's intellectual property office.

Judge Eduardo de Brito Fernandes ruled that the INPI must end the exclusive rights to that name that had been formally held by Brazil's IGB Electronica, Gradiente's owner.

Last December, the Brazilian company launched a “Gradiente iphone” which is actually an Android-run smartphone.

The judge ruled that both companies could legally use the name in Brazil.

But he stressed that Apple's iPhone is “world renowned” and that allowing Gradiente to use the brand name without restrictions would be unfair to Apple since “all the (Apple) product's renown and client following have been built on its performance and excellence as a product.”

Apple in 2007 was denied the trademark in Brazil because Gradiente had requested it in 2000. - Sapa-AFP

Related Topics: