Brazil company sells cellphones with Apple's iPhone name
It's not your Apple's iPhone.
A Brazilian company has begun selling smartphones in Brazil with the iPhone brand after winning the legal right to use the name in Latin America's biggest country. Adding insult to Apple Inc's injury, the phone runs on the Android operating system from arch-rival Google Inc.
Gradiente SA said in a statement that it filed its request to use the iPhone brand in 2000 when it realised "there would be a technological revolution in the world of cellphones with the convergence of voice and data transmission and reception via mobile Internet."
In 2008 Brazil's government gave Gradiente the right to use the brand on its cellphones.
Brazilian trademark office spokeswoman Maratan Marques said Gradiente requested permission to use the brand before Apple did and has the exclusive right to use it through 2018.
Brazil Apple spokeswoman Maria Parra Rodriguez said the company had no immediate comment. Phone calls and emails to Apple Inc's headquarters in California went unanswered.
Gradiente said on its website that it started selling its iPhone on Tuesday for 600 reals (USD 300). It runs the relatively old 2.3 version of Android and its features include a 3.7-inch touch-sensitive screen, Bluetooth, dual chip capability, 3G, Wi-Fi and camera. Its appearance is similar to that of Apple's iPhone.
The Brazilian company said it did not use the iPhone name until now because its "priority was to conclude a corporate restructuring process that ended earlier this year."
"In Brazil, Gradiente has the exclusive right to use the iPhone brand," the statement said.
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