Domino effect: Apple sued again over Snow Leopard trademark in China

Summary: Commodities company Jiangsu Xuebao sues Apple for knowingly infringing its Snow Leopard trademark in China, seeking US$79,000 and apology as compensation.

Apple is once again embroiled in yet another trademark lawsuit in China--this time, with its Snow Leopard operating system (OS) in question.

Jiangsu Xuebao, a Chinese chemical company which manufactures daily commodity products ranging from toothpaste to shoe polish, said the Apple OS--launched in 2009--contravenes its Chinese name "Xuebao" for which it had filed for the trademark back in 2000, according to a report by Chinese news site cnYes.com on Thursday.

It claims Apple is "making a knowing infringement" since the U.S. company tried to apply for the "Snow Leopard" trademark in China in 2008, but was rejected by the trademark office of the State Administration for Industry and Commerce.

The commodity producer added it is in possession of 42 registered trademarks for Snow Leopard across different classes of products, including that of computer products, which it had made since 1994.

The Chinese company brought the case to a court in Shanghai, and also filed a lawsuit against several companies that advertise and sell Apple's Snow Leopard operating system. It is seeking compensation of 500,000 yuan (US$79,000) and an open apology from Cupertino.

The lawsuit came right after Apple paid US$60 million to settle the iPad trademark dispute with Proview Technology. Some Chinese netizens teased that private enterprises in China had found "a new tactic to make money".

Jiangsu Xuebao on Jul. 4 claimed its lawsuit should not be compared with the Proview case, since the amount it was seeking was "nominal". Its ultimate goal is to have Apple stop using the Snow Leopard trademark and apologize for the infringement.

The Shanghai court will start its hearing on Jul. 10, according to the Chinese company. It said it was not clear how Apple will respond to the case.

Topics: Legal, Apple, Patents, China

Kick off your day with ZDNet's daily email newsletter. It's the freshest tech news and opinion, served hot. Get it.

Talkback

7 comments
Log in or register to join the discussion
  • How did this case even get to a court?

    [b]Jiangsu Xuebao, a Chinese chemical company which manufactures daily commodity products ranging from toothpaste to shoe polish[/b]

    Because Jiangsu Xuebao also has it's very own OS... Then again if Apple was denied the patent then they should have named the OS something different in China.
    NonFanboy
    • it doesnt need to have an OS

      It just needs to have products with the same name or have a trademark on the name. Just like google had to change their email service to googlemail in certain EU countries because of a trademark on the name Gmail. Apple just doesn't care about the infringement just as they have shown in the past, they steal everyone elses technologies and really care less about infringement.
      Jimster480
  • How did this case even get to a court?

    [b]Jiangsu Xuebao, a Chinese chemical company which manufactures daily commodity products ranging from toothpaste to shoe polish[/b]

    Because Jiangsu Xuebao also has it's very own OS... Then again if Apple was denied the patent then they should have named the OS something different in China.
    NonFanboy
  • Easy fix .... don't call it Snow Leopard in Chinese

    use the English words.
    wackoae
  • Real Question is...

    If ProView got 60 million when Apple actually paid a subsidiary for the iPad trademark, what idiot from Jiangsu Xuebao decided Snow Leopard was only woth $79,000?

    Will that even cover their legal fees if Apple decides to fight it?
    piousmonk
    • Its petty cash compared to what htey have.

      They should have demanded like 70 Million for infringement.
      Jimster480
  • China doesn't really care about intellectual property rights!

    It's both ludicrous and hilarious that anyone would take any Chinese copyright, trademark or patent infringement claims seriously. China has been blatant in it's disregard for patents owned by foreign companies and the Chinese government has been gleefully hacking U.S. owned companies to steal technology for years. The only time China wants to observe these laws is when some foreign country wants to market a product in China. They say that you can't have it both ways, but China keeps trying.
    moby4444@...