By Gabriela Baron
A Russian man sues Apple after saying his iPhone drove him to homosexuality.
A man is suing Apple after claiming his iPhone "made him gay". (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez, File/MANILA BULLETIN)
According to a report by The Moscow Times, the man is asking Apple over $15,000 in damages, claiming the company caused him "moral suffering and harm to mental health" due to "manipulatively pushing him towards homosexuality."
He told a local radio station that he became "mired in same-sex relationships" earlier this year after he received 69 Gaycoins on a cryptocurrency payment app he downloaded in his iPhone in 2017.
"I thought, indeed, how can I judge something without trying it? decided to try same-sex relationships," the plaintiff added.
He continued saying he entered into a steady romantic partnership.
"I have a steady boyfriend and I don't know how to explain it to my parents. I can say after the passage of two months that I'm mired in intimacy with a member of my own sex and can't get out."
In 2013, Russian president Vladimir Putin passed a law called "gay propaganda law" which led to threats, bullying, abuse, and discrimination against the LGBT members in Russia.
The bill faced international backlash from all over the world.
Reports say that homophobic vigilante gangs regularly terrorize LGBT people in the country.
A man is suing Apple after claiming his iPhone "made him gay". (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez, File/MANILA BULLETIN)
According to a report by The Moscow Times, the man is asking Apple over $15,000 in damages, claiming the company caused him "moral suffering and harm to mental health" due to "manipulatively pushing him towards homosexuality."
He told a local radio station that he became "mired in same-sex relationships" earlier this year after he received 69 Gaycoins on a cryptocurrency payment app he downloaded in his iPhone in 2017.
"I thought, indeed, how can I judge something without trying it? decided to try same-sex relationships," the plaintiff added.
He continued saying he entered into a steady romantic partnership.
"I have a steady boyfriend and I don't know how to explain it to my parents. I can say after the passage of two months that I'm mired in intimacy with a member of my own sex and can't get out."
In 2013, Russian president Vladimir Putin passed a law called "gay propaganda law" which led to threats, bullying, abuse, and discrimination against the LGBT members in Russia.
The bill faced international backlash from all over the world.
Reports say that homophobic vigilante gangs regularly terrorize LGBT people in the country.