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10:41:00 AM
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Summary: Lifeix CEO Xiong Wanli says the company launched
its own "Timeline" feature in 2008 before Facebook did likewise in 2011.
He adds that U.S. law firms have approached Lifeix to offer their
services if the company intends to sue.
A Chinese Internet startup company planning to sue Facebook for intellectual property infringement has been been offered legal services from several U.S. law firms, according to its CEO and founder.
Lifeix China
was founded in 2007 by Xiong Wanli, a Harvard PhD dropout, and first
launched the "Timeline" function on its Web site in 2008, along with the
company's cube-like logo. Lifeix claimed Facebook copied the Timeline's
name and idea, and used the cube logo during its own launch in 2011.
"As everybody can see, our Timeline function was available on the
Internet," said Xiong, now CEO of Lifeix, in an interview with a local newspaper.
"I especially introduced it in my speech at Stanford University, and
Mark Zuckerberg was among the audience. Some American law firms are
approaching us to ask if we would like to sue Facebook. If so, they
would provide services."
Having little consciousness of protecting intellectual property
rights among Chinese companies was the reason why copying was common
practice in the country, according to Xiong.
"It was quite common for Chinese companies
to copy foreign counterparts, but not so much vise versa," said
intellectual property right lawyer Xu Xinming.
"This incident could mean that we have some creative advantages too. It
also reminds Chinese companies of applying for patents and protecting
their intellectual properties.
"Creativity is vitality. Instead of investing, some big IT companies
in China only copy the new ideas invented by small company, which is
unfair and the greatest hurdle of creativity," Xu said.
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