Steve Jobs may be quite the little chatty kathy with end users sending him emails, but his acquaintance, AT&T CEO Mr. Randall Stephenson is not. Engadget reader Giorgio Galante contacted Stephenson on two separate occasions. The first email asked Stephenson to shorten his contract length so he could upgrade sooner and to inquire on tethering options. His second letter wasn’t nearly as cordial, voicing his extreme disgust for AT&T’s new data plans and stating that he was taking his money to Sprint.
AT&T then called back and apologized profusely, credited his account for three months worth of service, and promised to take his kids to Chucky Cheese for their birthday. Just kidding — AT&T threatened Giorgio with a Cease & Desist letter if he dare email Stephenson again.
- December 16, 2009 10:08 am

You know, I’m not an “anti-protect your property” kind of person. I understand credit is needed where credit is due. With that said, the sad and downright maddening circumstances surrounding by far the best weather widget on the Android Market — Beautiful Widgets by LevelupStuios — are enough for me to voice my displeasure here. Time and time again we see companies wasting corporate dollars and time pursuing stupid ass lawsuits that won’t benefit anyone.
With that past us it is with great sadness that I announce HTC sent LevelupStudios a C&D over Beautiful Widgets. It was a nicely designed Weather + Clock widget that mimicked HTC’s widget found on Sense UI supported Devices. LevelupStudios used their own know-how and help from a few other outside developers to create their own version allowing non-HTC devices to share in the same weather + time sexiness their HTC toting brethren enjoy. In all honesty, a lawsuit because the two products were extremely similar isn’t all that surprising, however, I as well as many others expected HTC to ignore it as it’s not going to do any financial harm to HTC. No one is going to by a non-HTC device simply for Beautiful Widgets.
The only stipulation I can find fault with in LevelupStudios is that they were charging and therefore profiting on a design that even though was coded in-house, was a more or less copy of HTC’s weather widget. Even still, HTC could have added a clause that said either reduce Beautiful Widgets to free or remove it from the Android Market completely. That would have been a much better option. At $0, even less harm (read: none at all) would have been done to HTC or their profit margins and non-HTC users could still rock the weather + clock widget. Now I as well as countless Beautiful Widgets users are going to have to find illegitimate ways of getting the same style and functionality on our devices. If you’re a new Android user whom doesn’t use an HTC device, I’d pick up a copy of Beautiful Widgets now before it is removed from the store.
Nice job HTC. Now you simply come across looking like a typical corporate asshole.

Android Central