Apple loses rights to iPhone trademark in Brazil
Regulators in Brazil on Wednesday rejected Apple’s application to register its iPhone trademark in the country, having already recognised a local manufacturer’s claim to the name.

Regulators in Brazil on Wednesday rejected Apple’s application to register its iPhone trademark in the country, having already recognised a local manufacturer’s claim to the name.
The Institute of Industrial Property (INPI) “denied Apple registration of the iPhone trademark,” the institute’s press office said. The decision was officially published by the INPI.
Apple had applied for exclusive rights to the iPhone name in Brazil in 2007 when it launched the wildly popular smartphone in the huge Latin American market.
But Brazilian manufacturer Gradiente had applied to register the brand “Gradiente iphone” in 2000, and was granted rights to it in 2008.
Apple can still sell its smartphones in Brazil with the iPhone name, but Gradiente has the option of suing for exclusivity, the institute said.
The US high tech giant had petitioned the institute to cancel Gradiente’s trademark, arguing that it had expired because the company had not used it in five years, the institute said.
But Gradiente surprised the market by launching a “Gradiente iphone” at the end of the year, bringing the dispute to a head.