Apple, Beatles settle trademark lawsuit

(AP)
Updated: 2007-02-06 10:23

But the Beatles' recording label, Britain's EMI Group, has rebuffed all suitors.

Elizabeth Freund, the US spokeswoman for Apple Corps, said EMI would first need an agreement with Apple Corps before licensing any music to Apple Inc. or other online services. She said no such deal has been reached yet.

EMI officials declined to comment.

Apple Corps was founded by the Fab Four in 1968 and is still owned by Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr, the widow of John Lennon and the estate of George Harrison.

The Beatles' company, whose corporate logo is a giant green Granny Smith apple, first sued what was until last month Apple Computer Inc. for trademark infringement in 1978. The computer maker agreed in 1981 to pay $80,000 and never enter the music business.

Apple Corps sued again nearly a decade later, alleging the musical instrument digital interface, or MIDI, software included on Apple's Macintosh computers violated those terms. Apple Inc. again settled, agreeing in 1991 to pay $26.5 million to secure the rights to the apple logo for selling computers and software, while Apple Corps would get it for producing and selling music.

But the tension flared again in 2003 while Apple Inc. was signing up recording labels to offer their songs through Apple's new iTunes download store and attempted to woo The Beatles' management.

Apple Corps contended that Apple Inc.'s use of the logo on iTunes amounted to a breach of the 1991 agreement. Lawyers for Apple Inc. have argued that music lovers are smart enough to tell the difference between the logos. Apple Corps uses a shiny green apple as its logo, while Apple Inc. has a cartoon-like apple with a bite taken out.

A British judge ruled in May that Apple Inc.'s logo is used in association with the store - not the music - and thus permitted. The settlement announced Monday replaces the 1991 agreement and makes an appeal of that ruling unnecessary.

Neil Aspinall, manager of Apple Corps, said the company was glad to resolve the dispute.

"The years ahead are going to be very exciting times for us," he said in a statement. "We wish Apple Inc. every success and look forward to many years of peaceful co-operation with them."

Apple Inc. still faces another high-profile trademark lawsuit, one over its much-hyped iPhone.

Networking equipment company Cisco Systems Inc., whose Linksys division has an identically named product, sued Apple last month.

Shares of Apple Inc. fell 81 cents to close at $83.94 on the Nasdaq Stock Market.


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