....over penis measuring app.


Singer songwriter Chubby Checker, best known for the song "The Twist," is suing HP over an app called "The Chubby Checker" that claims to measure the size of a man's penis. The app was being sold on HP's Palm App Catalog. Checker, whose real name is Ernest Evans, says that the app violated his trademarks and that HP is responsible because it approves all apps before selling them in its app store, reports the Hollywood Reporter's Eriq Gardner. (Here's the full legal document.) HP says it's not liable since it didn't write the app or name it. It also says it removed the app from its store when it received a cease-and-desist letter from Evans. HP says a mere 88 copies of the app were sold at 99 cents each. "The application was not created by HP or Palm. It was removed in September 2012 and is no longer on any Palm or HP hosted web site,” an HP spokesperson told Business Insider. HP is asking the court to dismiss the lawsuit. Besides the amusing nature of a penis-measuring app, this lawsuit has interesting legal implications. When an app store approves every app, what liability does it have? If the court doesn't dismiss the case, this app could help measure the size of that liability.
Chubby Checker Is Suing HP Over An App That Measures The Size Of A Man's Penis - Business Insider

I'm not sure what's funnier, Chubby Checker whining about an obscure app, the fact that he actually took the time to file a lawsuit over it, or that 88 people actually paid 99 cents for an app that measures your penis.


May actually be kind of interesting to see what the court says about HP's liability in regards to trademark infringement by developers.



*Just thought I'd post a "lighter" news story that's not so trash and bash/doom and gloom as it has seemed in here lately. (Yes, there is actually something slightly newsworthy about liability and legal precedent here, even if it does seem ridiculous.)