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Apple Is Still Trying to Sue the Owner of an Independent iPhone Repair Shop: Apple lost its counterfeit case against a Norwegian repair shop owner last year, but the $1 trillion company won't let it go.

Despite initially losing the case last year, Apple is continuing its legal pursuit against the owner of a small, independent iPhone repair...

Despite initially losing the case last year, Apple is continuing its legal pursuit against the owner of a small, independent iPhone repair shop in Norway. Apple is attempting to hold the repair shop owner liable for importing what it says are counterfeit iPhone screens into his home country of Norway.
Last year, Apple sued Henrik Huseby, the owner of an independent smartphone repair shop called PCKompaniet in the town of Ski, Norway. Apple sent Huseby a letter notifying him that a shipment of 63 iPhone 6 and 6S screens had been seized by Norwegian customs, and said that he must pay the company $3,566 and admit wrongdoing to avoid being sued. Huseby refused, Apple sued him, and the case went to court.
“That’s a letter I would never put my signature on,” Huseby told Motherboard in an email last year.
At issue in the case is the definition of what makes an aftermarket part “counterfeit.” The screens that Huseby purchased were refurbished, he said, and were never advertised as official Apple parts and were thus not counterfeit. Apple logos on the screen were painted over, and wouldn’t be visible anyway to anyone who used a repaired iPhone (the logos would face the inside of the phone.) In April 2018, the court decided that because the logos were not visible, Apple's trademark hadn't been violated, and Huseby won the case.
Apple appealed that decision, however, and the case was reheard by a higher Norwegian court on Monday and Tuesday, leading right to repair activists to wonder why the most valuable company in the world continues to go after a small business owner over a paltry sum of money.
“It’s the ultimate David and Goliath,” Janet Gunter, co-founder of the UK’s Restart Project, which advocates DIY repair in Europe, told Motherboard. “It really is almost as if they’re handing us our David. I always wonder with these big companies—do they see that he’s naturally going to garner more sympathy than they are?”
Kaja Juul Skarbø, who works for Restarters Norway, a group that organizes repair parties in the country, told Motherboard that Huseby’s case is of immense importance for the rest of Norway’s repair community.
If he loses, the court would be saying you cannot import refurbished screens, and also, Apple doesn't provide original screens,” she said. “So then, how is that a resolution? Obviously, independent repairers would not have the spare parts they need in order to be able to do the repairs. The consequence could be that you can't do independent repair anymore.”
Gunter speculated that the company could be testing the waters—that if it is able to win against Huseby, other independent repair company owners who use aftermarket parts could be next.
"Why choose a guy in Ski, Norway?," she asked. "I don’t understand why they targeted this guy."
Huseby confirmed to Motherboard that he expects to know the final result of the case within two weeks. “There was no special argument from Apple, they just said it’s counterfeit goods and use a lot of time explaining it over and over again,” he said. “I just have to cross my fingers and hope it goes my way.”
His lawyer, Per Harald Gjerstad, said that the screens Huseby imported were made of both original Apple parts and refurbished, non-Apple parts. The glass, for example, is aftermarket.
“The screens are also not sold as an original but used as a refurbished, compatible screen,” Gjerstad said. “The goods are not ‘counterfeit’ when they are imported with all logos covered with paint.”
“Henrik never removes the paint,” he added. “It is of course possible to remove it, but removing the paint covering the Apple logo is very risky, because the plastic wires that have logo can be damaged by acetone or alcohol. You can also damage the glass if you use acetone or alcohol. The paint over logo screen is also mounted in the customer's phone and becomes invisible, therefore it is not important to remove the paint.”
American repair professional Louis Rossmann testified in support of Huseby in via video chat, which he uploaded to his popular YouTube page Wednesday. Rossmann is facing a similar situation in the United States—a shipment of aftermarket laptop batteries was seized by Customs and Border Patrol before they reached his repair shop in New York City. In his testimony, Rossmann provided a general background about the secondary market for iPhone parts.
The point, as Rossmann and other right to repair activists have made for years, is that Apple will not sell repair parts to independent repair companies, which makes aftermarket and refurbished parts the only options.
At one point, Apple’s lawyer cross-examined him and presented to the court a print out of some of the titles of his YouTube videos in an attempt to paint him as biased.
“From some films you have uploaded on YouTube—the titles are more-or less ‘fuck Apple,’ ‘fuck Apple part II,’ ‘Part III,’ ‘Why Apple pisses me off,'” the lawyer said. “Is my understanding that you have some issues with Apple?”
“Yes, I have issues with how they treat the consumer and how they treat independent repair,” Rossmann replied.
Gunter said that regardless of the outcome, Huseby’s case has already had a chilling effect on repair because of the cost and effort involved in fighting the case.
“Imagine Apple coming to you with that agreement they tried to force him to sign and him saying, 'No.' It’s remarkable,” she said. “Him losing would be a devastating scenario. What we would have to do is create a war chest to try to fight these cases.”

6 comments

  1. Incredible how small minded a giant can be.

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  2. All tech companies stop supporting their products far sooner than many of those products last. I hate to throw things away that only need a small repair to make whole again. Apple is shooting themselves in the foot. People aren't going to pay Apple prices to repair an iPhone that's a couple of years old. Many families will hand down older phones and it's worth a small amount of money to get a screen repaired at an independent shop before they give them to their kids. Make it impossible or very expensive and many will start looking at the much cheaper Android alternatives.

    It's in Apple's best interest to have as many people using iPhones as possible. It's a good product. The outcome of banning third party repair is those phones that need a minor repair will get scrapped. It really takes the shine off of a product that cost a stack of money in the first place to have to spend 3x the cost of a competing Android phone to get a screen replaced. Faced with those economics, Apple will only lose market share and not bolster their repair/replacement business.

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  3. Apple is run by a retarded Gay CEO - what do you expect?

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  4. Yup, this is an attack on freedom of choice, where Aple can crew us because they can, and when this can be done for much less, since the job isnt rocket science, it will be desicive and Norwegian corts arent famous for been with ordinary people, corrupt as much else is.
    And it was Norwegians whom invented Mobile phones as we know them to day, notbody bothered to invest, when the Sweds/Finns saw the potential, etc, etc.


    This sounds like the auto ind. attacking repairing of new cars.
    I had to dump my old car, and went for shopping, uh.... and ended up with two cars, 2 years between in age, one had GPS and the other was more like stone age, cruice ac etc all in it but no GPS, since I use my briliant Garmin, witch I even can take into the outback as an safty messurment.
    Yeah, f.... new cars, total waist of mooney, and they dont impress me, more buttones more problems, its an law of the nature.
    So I went for the one without GPS.


    This is the way I think also when it comes to Phones, its up to me what I do with it, not Aple, if not, I simply ignore Aple, and thats one of the reasons I years ago, sweared to never ever tuch anything with Dell on, etc.
    But I hope this Norwegian makes it, dont expect it, but for the users it would be game changing.


    peace

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  5. My 1st ever smart phone is gonna be a Huawei. I support fair capitalist competition.

    ReplyDelete