By Daniel Drew Turner
December 20, 2004 

Updated: The company says someone "has recently misappropriated and
disseminated through Web sites confidential information about an
unreleased Apple product."

Apple Computer Inc. filed suit Dec. 13 in the Superior Court of Santa
Clara County, California, alleging that an unknown person has released
confidential information pertaining to an upcoming Apple product. 
"An unidentified individual, acting alone or in concert with others, has
recently misappropriated and disseminated through Web sites confidential
information about an unreleased Apple product," Apple said in the
lawsuit, some documents of which the company has requested be sealed.
The claim admitted that the Cupertino, Calif.-based company does not know
the real identity of the defendant, stating that the complaint would be
amended once that fact is known. 
"Apple has filed a civil complaint against unnamed individuals who we
believe stole our trade secrets and posted detailed information about an
unannounced Apple product on the Internet," the company said in a
statement. "Apple's DNA is innovation, and the protection of our trade
secrets is crucial to our success." 
Apple traditionally has been secretive about upcoming product releases,
regularly declining to comment on the topic. In the past, the company has
garnered much media attention by revealing new products in a flashy
fashion, such as at keynote speeches by company CEO Steve Jobs at annual
Macintosh-specific events. 
And in late 2002, Apple sued a contractor, who had since left the
company, when he posted information about yet-unreleased Power Macintosh
G4 desktop models. 
However, where Apple goes from here is unclear. Recently, Mac-centric
rumor sites on the Web have been abuzz with talk of new products in
anticipation of January's Macworld Expo, which commonly features surprise
rollouts of products.
If the suit is targeting an anonymous or pseudonymous poster on such a
site, Apple's claim of culpability for the site's owner has a negative
precedent. 
In August 2001, Microsoft attempted to file suit against the Web site
Slashdot.org when an anonymous poster published what Microsoft claimed
was "unauthorized reproductions of Microsoft's copyrighted work." 
The company claimed that Slashdot was liable for the content of its
servers and potentially liable for damages. The case was dropped. 
Editor's Note: This story was updated to include a statement from Apple.


Jeff Slyn, Owner
SLYN Systems & Peripherals
(502) 426-5469
serving Kentuckiana clients 7 days a week since 1985!
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