Apple Tells Leaker To Snitch On Sources Or It Will Report Them To the Police (vice.com) 45
Apple is escalating its war against leakers, sending out cease and desist letters, according to a copy of a letter obtained by Motherboard. An anonymous reader writes: The letter was sent by Fangda Partners, Apple's law firm in China, on June 18, 2021. In the letter, Apple asked the seller to stop acquiring, advertising, and selling leaked Apple devices, and requested a list of anyone who provided them with the leaked devices. In other words, Apple wants the reseller to say who gave them the devices. Finally, the company requested the seller to sign a document promising to comply with the request within 14 days of receiving the letter. "You have disclosed without authorization a large amount of information related to Apple's unreleased and rumored products, which has constituted a deliberate infringement of Apple's trade secrets," the letter read.
/. editors: You had ONE job (Score:3, Funny)
If only /. had editors ... /s
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Don't worry, they'll catch it in testing.
Re:/. editors: You had ONE job (Score:5, Funny)
sending out cease and desist letters
Mainly the letter "A" so far.
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That entire post was so full of typo's it's crazy. Yeah, one of them is from the legal filing (Crosby) but there are more. Like the guy's name.
typos, not typo's (Score:1)
(not a typo, I'd say...)
Re:/. editors: You had ONE job (Score:4, Funny)
Re: /. editors: You had ONE job (Score:2)
Pple is a quality brand such as Sorney and Magnetbox.
But being a brand new tech startup it's not surprising you've never heard of them.
snitches get stitches but apple can bribe cops (Score:2)
snitches get stitches but apple can bribe cops better then the leakier.
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It IS China. What were you expecting?
how is this a story? Misleading headline (Score:2)
So a company is concerned about its IP being stolen and offers not to prosecute the receiver of stolen goods if it helps them track down the theif? Well that seems like a pretty measured and decent response. Of course lawyers will make it sound ominous but they are not just suing everyone for punishment but trying to solve a problem and end device theft. Headline makes it seem like they are doing something hostile and exaggeratedly unprecedented
Re: how is this a story? Misleading headline (Score:2)
It is not stolen. it was just made public. Note they don't sue the journalists reporting on it because they know they would lose everywhere
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Did you miss the part about acquiring and selling "leaked" (AKA stolen) devices? We're talking about stolen physical goods here.
China is Apple's best friend (Score:1)
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Apple is rotten at the core. ...see what I did there?
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Apple wants it both ways (Score:1)
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Trade secrets are protected by law, your 'regular secret' isn't. That is a siginificant difference.
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Educate yourself. Here is the US (federal) protection of trade secrets: https://www.uspto.gov/ip-polic... [uspto.gov]
States may, in addition, have their own trade secret laws. There are similar laws internationally: https://www.wipo.int/tradesecr... [wipo.int]
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How is a trade secret different from a regular secret?
Probably the "leaked" color scheme, since that's about the most impressive change with this model.
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I just refer to my source as "/b/" on 4chan.
Since all threads on "/b/" are killed after just a few days or sometimes just hours then they would end up at a dead end.
How do you "leak" a physical object? (Score:4, Insightful)
Yes, *information* about the object is leaked as a side effect, but isn't the device itself *stolen*?
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Yes, *information* about the object is leaked as a side effect, but isn't the device itself *stolen*?
I wonder if this is a deliberate strategy by Apple to protect their IP more broadly.
The lack of protection for foreign IP in China is pretty infamous. Taking a slam-dunk legal win (property theft) and branding it as a very difficult legal win (IP theft) they might be trying to build a narrative to make Chinese companies more reluctant to infringe on their IP.
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Re:Apple has NDA with leaker, not with seller (Score:4, Interesting)
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An Apple employee steals a prototype device. They sell it to the reseller in question. The reseller will then sell it to a publisher of Apple 'rumors.' That publisher will then disassem
Report them to the police for what, exactly? (Score:2)
Last I heard spreading rumours you believe might are true is not illegal p? If it were, all flat earthers would be in prison.
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Beyond stolen services, trade secrets have their own set of laws. It's what got the web site Think Secret in trouble: It's okay to publish information that someone sends you unsolicited -- if it's a trade secret, they are on the hook. But asking people with access to trade secrets to breach that secrecy turns it into something like a conspiracy to violate the trade secret, and everyone involved can get in trouble then.
Civil matter (Score:2)
Sounds abusive on Apple's part to say the least to threaten police - leaking trade secrets is a violation of civil agreements, but not a crime.
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You can take pictures of a somewhat camouflaged test mule at the track, maybe even sell the pictures. Having someone give you the keys (or steal the keys) and selling said car is still GRAND THEFT AUTO.
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Yeah, but if the person building that special race car orders enough parts to build a hundred cars and the manufacturer builds 101 of every part, gives the builder 100 of them, and slips the 101st under the table to someone else who builds you a car and then gives it to you, the ownership is not as clear-cut.
That sort of overproduction is really common in a lot of Chinese factories, resulting in lots of knock-offs that are literally identical to the original products other than badging. From the sounds of
Wrong approach (Score:2)
This threat wouldn't work in the US (Score:2)
In so many big cities now, the response would be "What police?" Elsewhere, the cops would have no idea how to handle such a report.
Why not ensure prototypes have hard-coded IDs? (Score:1)
If "Find My iPhone" can remote-brick a lost phone, why can't Apple encode asset identifiers into each phone that they can track to the chain of custody allowed by the early release program? That would tell them enough about the source of the leaks to plug them, and they would be able to brick the prototype phones, removing the financial incentive to do it in the first place.
I realize this might increase the cost of the prototype phones, but only by a trivial amount relative to the phone itself (prototypes
Might wanna RTFA (Score:3)
People might actually wanna RTFA here. They sent the threaatening letters IN CHINA. U.S. IP law is not relevant to the discussion. They sent the letter to a probably pseudonym. Even if police in China care to do something about it, it's unclear that they can.
If anyone here knows anything about relevant laws IN CHINA, that would be much more helpful. I do not.
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> If anyone here knows anything about relevant laws IN CHINA, that would be much more helpful. I do not.
Apple can get what it wants in China if the CCP isn't negatively affected.
And the list reads (Score:2)
I. P. Freely
Hugh Jass
Amanda Hugginkiss
Ivana Tynqle
and finally..
Maya Buhtreaques