Chinese search engine giant Baidu has filed lawsuits against "relevant" app developers and Apple Inc over fake copies of its Ernie bot app available on Apple's app store.
The company's artificial intelligence-powered Ernie bot, launched last month, has been touted as China's closest answer to the US-developed chatbot ChatGPT.
Baidu said it had lodged lawsuits in Beijing Haidian People's Court against the developers behind the counterfeit applications of its Ernie bot and the Apple company.
"At present, Ernie does not have any official app," Baidu said in a statement late on Friday posted on its official "Baidu AI" WeChat account.
It also posted a photograph of its court filing.
"Until our company's official announcement, any Ernie app you see from App Store or other stores are fake," it said.
Apple did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
A Reuters search on Saturday found there were still at least four apps bearing the Chinese-language name of the Ernie bot, all fake, in Apple's App Store.
The Ernie bot is only available to users who apply for and receive access codes. In its statement, Baidu also warned against people selling access codes.


ADNOC to award AED200 billion in projects to advance growth strategy
OPEC+ agrees third oil output quota hike since Hormuz closure
Trump says he will raise tariff on autos from EU to 25%
UAE–South Korea CEPA comes into force on May 1
Meraas awards AED 2.4 billion in construction contracts for 'The Acres'
