Last night, the US Customs and Border Patrol Agency announced a seizure of 2,000 pairs of OnePlus Buds on the grounds that they were counterfeit AirPods. A hilarious mistake, we all thought, but it seems there’s more to the story. Now, US Customs claims that OnePlus Buds actually violate Apple’s AirPods trademark.
A statement released to the this afternoon by the US Customs and Border Patrol Agency (CBP) seems to rule out that this seizure was a mistake. Rather, CBP claims that the earbuds violated Apple’s configuration trademark.
Upon examining the shipment in question, a CBP import specialist determined that the subject earbuds appeared to violate Apple’s configuration trademark. Apple has configuration trademarks on their brand of earbuds, and has recorded those trademarks with CBP. Based on that determination, CBP officers at JFK Airport have seized the shipment under 19 USC 1526 (e).
CBP’s seizure of the earbuds in question is unrelated to the images or language on the box. A company does not have to put an ‘Apple’ wordmark or design on their products to violate these trademarks. The importer will have many opportunities through the adjudication process to provide evidence that their product does not violate the relevant recorded trademarks.
This could easily be a move from the CBP just to try to retain respect following the mistake. points out, too, that it’s hard to take this statement at face value. After all, a quick search on Amazon finds of other AirPods knockoffs that look a whole lot more like Apple’s product than OnePlus Buds do. Still, saying that OnePlus Buds violate the AirPods trademark is the stance CBP has decided to take.
OnePlus has yet to respond to the agency’s statement.
More on OnePlus:
- Thousands of OnePlus Buds seized by US Customs after being mistaken for fake AirPods
- OnePlus Buds review: Affordable OnePlus-only wireless earbuds [Video]
- OnePlus 8T leak shows off Samsung-inspired hardware to match OxygenOS 11
Author: Ben Schoon
Source: 9TO5Google