Apple sued for Animoji trademark owned by Japanese company: Details here

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A Japanese software company has sued Apple in a US court over the trademark for the term "animoji", alleging the US technology company stole the name to use on a feature of its iPhone X.

Tokyo-based Emonster kk sued Apple on Wednesday in federal court in San Francisco, saying it holds the US trademark on the term animoji and that Apple's use of the word is a "textbook case" of deliberate infringement.

What is this application?

Emonster owns an iOS app called "Animoji" that lets people send emoji that are animated in a loop like GIFs.

The iPhone X's "Animoji" feature lets people transform their face into customised moving emoji with the help from Apple's face recognition technology “FaceID".

Apple sued by Japanese company that owns Animoji trademarkhttps://t.co/GwbKFuITkn pic.twitter.com/nS77bR2MPN
The Verge (@verge) October 20, 2017

The TrueDepth camera in iPhone X brings emoji to life in a fun new way with "Animoji".

Working with A11 Bionic, the TrueDepth camera captures and analyses over 50 different facial muscle movements, then animates those expressions in a dozen different "Animoji", including a panda, unicorn and robot.

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