Apple's efforts to trademark an icon for its iOS music player in the
U.S. have been denied due to design from a company that no longer
exists.
As part of a decision
handed down by the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board last week, the
group found Apple's icon a bit too similar to one issued to iLike in
2008, upholding an initial finding from a trademark examiner. iLike, of course, no longer exists. The company was gobbled up by MySpace in late 2009 and was eventually absorbed into the company's own music product.
"In comparing the marks within the above-noted legal parameters, the marks at issue are similar because they comprise a double musical note in an orange rectangle," the decision, picked up by GigaOm today, reads.
The group adds that the similarities "outweigh any specific differences" when the two icons are put side-by-side:
(Credit: USPTO)
The decision can be appealed by Apple, which spent a considerable part of last month arguing the merits of its own icon designs and the very minute similarities and details with icons created by Samsung for use in its smartphones and tablets. That spat dealt with the look and feel of the devices in conjunction with various other patent and antitrust claims.