BlackBerry Sues Typo Again Over Second-Generation iPhone Keyboard Case

BlackBerry today filed a second lawsuit against Typo Products, the startup backed by Ryan Seacrest, alleging that the second-generation Typo keyboard continues to infringe upon its intellectual property, reports The Hollywood Reporter. In a complaint lodged in a California federal court on Monday, BlackBerry claimed Typo "slavishly copied" its keyboards down to the "smallest detail."

Just as they did with the Typo Keyboard, Defendants have again copied numerous proprietary BlackBerry designs and patents in the Typo2 Keyboard. The Typo2 Keyboard still blatantly copies BlackBerry's iconic keyboard trade dress designs that have been embodied in numerous BlackBerry smartphones from the 2007 BlackBerry 8800 to the current Q10 and Classic models. The Typo2 Keyboard also infringes numerous BlackBerry utility patents related to BlackBerry's proprietary keyboard design, backlighting and typing automation technologies.

Typo Products first clashed with BlackBerry shortly after the former debuted its first-generation Typo iPhone keyboard case in late 2013. Backed by media personality Ryan Seacrest, the product was the result of a desire to create a physical keyboard for the iPhone after he and his partner Lauren Hallier saw many of their friends carrying two phones -- one for typing and correspondence, presumably a BlackBerry, and an iPhone for everything else.

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The Typo2 for the iPhone 6

The snap-on iPhone keyboard that Seacrest and Hallier developed looked very similar to a BlackBerry keyboard, which BlackBerry took offense to. BlackBerry sued and won an injunction against Typo Products, leading Typo to produce the Typo2, a second-generation keyboard that it claimed did not violate any BlackBerry patents.

The $99 Typo2 features a sleeker design with a built-in keyboard that unfortunately blocks the Touch ID fingerprint sensor on the iPhone 6. Though Typo Products claims that its second-generation offering does not infringe on BlackBerry patents, it continues to bear a visual resemblance to the keyboards BlackBerry has used in its products for years.

According to BlackBerry, with the Typo2, Typo Products produced a "minimally modified derivative version" of the original Typo keyboard that continues to abuse BlackBerry's trade dress. The lawsuit cites a range of media reviews that compare the Typo2 to the BlackBerry, pointing out the marked similarities between the two, including a comment from one of our own forum members. BlackBerry's lawsuit also accuses the Typo2 of infringing on five BlackBerry patents.

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BlackBerry now has two lawsuits pending against Typo, for the original Typo keyboard and the Typo2. BlackBerry has also won an award of $860,000 after Typo continued selling its original keyboard in violation of the previously mentioned injunction. In the newest lawsuit, BlackBerry asks for "enhanced and exemplary" damages for Typo's continued infringement.

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Top Rated Comments

joelisfar Avatar
138 months ago
Great move Blackberry! I bet this lawsuit will go down as the thing that sparked their big comeback!
Score: 50 Votes (Like | Disagree)
peterdevries Avatar
138 months ago
I HATE patents. End them. End them ALL.

If you would understand the true purpose of a patent, or had at any time in your life invested money and time to develop a product and bring it to market, then you wouldn't have made such a dumb comment.
Score: 40 Votes (Like | Disagree)
macintologist Avatar
138 months ago
Why anybody would buy a Blackberry, let alone a Blackberry keyboard for your iPhone, is beyond me.
Score: 37 Votes (Like | Disagree)
SteveJobs2.0 Avatar
138 months ago
I HATE patents. End them. End them ALL.

Sure, that will encourage companies and inventors to invest their time and money into R&D. /s :rolleyes:
Score: 35 Votes (Like | Disagree)
oneMadRssn Avatar
138 months ago
Also, the keyboard still literally looks identical to a blackberry keyboard, sooooo...

You're famous!
Score: 16 Votes (Like | Disagree)
yousifabdullah Avatar
138 months ago
Looks like they're only trying to protect their IP, though I'm not sure legally what chance they actually have.
They should still go for it as it's their intellectual property. Just because there's the chance they might lose in court doesn't mean they shouldn't defend what's rightfully theirs. Unlike some other companies, BlackBerry is still actually using its patents in current products ever since the original "BlueBerry" models.
Score: 15 Votes (Like | Disagree)