As you'd expect from the world's largest seller of consumer electronics, Apple gets sued a lot. Some of those suits go places, others get dismissed out of hand the first time they get to court. And then there's Florida. MacRumors- has spotted a gem of a lawsuit filed by-Thomas S. Ross, a Floridian who feels that Apple's iPhone infringes on the sketches he made of an "Electronic Reading Device" in 1992. DON'T MISS:- Video gives us a 15-min walkthrough of the Galaxy Note 7’s leaked next-gen software Ross's sketches detail something that does, in all seriousness, bear a passing resemblance to some kind of smart device. It's a large rectangle with rounded corners, a keyboard at the bottom, cell antenna, and a 80MB hard drive. Ross filed for a patent in 1992, but apparently never paid the fees, and the application was abandoned by the USPTO in 1995. I'd say it looks more like a late Symbian device or a squashed Blackberry than an iPhone, but that hasn't stopped Ross from seeking damages from Apple. Specifically, he has experienced-"great and irreparable injury that cannot fully be compensated or measured in money," and seeks a jury trial, $10 billion in damages, and a 1.5% royalty on all iPhone sales worldwide. Given how long it took Apple to extract money from Samsung for a much more plausible copyright case, I'm not holding my breath for the future of this lawsuit. Still, it's nice to see that the lawyers of the world remain gainfully employed.
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