Samsung copied the iPhone with a bigger screen. So says the head of Apple

Joanna Stern of The Wall Street Journal released her documentary on the evolution of the iPhone on June 29, 2007, celebrating its 15th anniversary. Among other things, it includes an interview with Apple’s head of marketing, Greg Joswiak, who is considered one of the creators of the iPhone. In the film, Joswiak claims that in the early 2010s, Samsung copied the design of the iPhone by simply fitting it with a larger screen.

In an interview with Apple’s head of marketing, I was asked how much Samsung and other Android manufacturers have influenced iPhone screen sizes. To this he answered bluntly:

They were annoying. Because, as you know, they ripped off our technology. Took our innovation that we invented and made a bad copy just by installing a bigger screen. So yeah, we weren’t particularly happy.

When Samsung introduced the Galaxy S4 with a 5-inch display in early 2013, the iPhone 5 had a 4-inch screen. The Apple company succumbed to the trends and introduced smartphones with larger displays only in 2014, showing the iPhone 6 at 4.7 inches and the iPhone 6 Plus at 5.5 inches – as a result, these models were in such high demand that they became one of the best-selling iPhone in history.

Back in 2011, Apple sued Samsung for patent infringement – the plaintiff alleged that the South Korean company copied the design of the iPhone for its Galaxy smartphones. Apple won the case and initially received $1 billion in damages, but the retrial reduced the payment. This legal war was only settled in 2018, when the “apple corporation” again claimed that Samsung grossly copied the look of the iPhone.

Source: Trash Box

You may also like