Showing posts with label United States International Trade Commission. Show all posts
Showing posts with label United States International Trade Commission. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 12, 2011

Apple files patent complaint against HTC

Apple Inc has filed a fresh complaint against Taiwanese smartphone maker HTC Corp with a US trade panel over unspecified portable electronic devices and software, according to the panel's web site.
Apple already filed a separate action last year against HTC before the US International Trade Commission,
where HTC then leveled its own patent infringement claims against Apple.
The latest complaint by Apple was filed on July 8, according to a brief description on the ITC's web site on Monday. A copy of the complaint was not available.
Apple has launched patent lawsuits over its iPhones and iPads against different handset manufacturers, including HTC and Samsung.
Grace Lei, HTC's general counsel, said the company continues to deny all of Apple's past and present claims.
"HTC is dismayed that Apple has resorted to competition in the courts rather than the market place," Lei said in a statement.
Apple spokeswoman Kristin Huguet referred on Monday to an earlier company statement about HTC, which said competitors should create their own technology and not steal Apple's.
The ITC, a US trade panel that investigates patent infringement involving imported goods, has become an increasingly popular venue for patent lawsuits because it can bar the importation of products that infringe patents.

Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Apple agrees to pay Nokia patent licensing fees

Apple has agreed to license wireless phone patents owned by Nokia that sparked a long-running legal dispute between the two companies. The deal will settle all patent litigation between Nokia and Apple, and the two will withdraw their respective complaints with the U.S. International Trade Commission. In addition, Apple will pay Nokia an undisclosed one-time fee and on-going royalties, Nokia said today. "We are very pleased to have Apple join the growing number of Nokia licensees," Stephen Elop, president and chief
executive officer of Nokia, said in a statement. "This settlement demonstrates Nokia's industry leading patent portfolio and enables us to focus on further licensing opportunities in the mobile communications market." Apple representatives did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The legal skirmishing began in October 2009 when Nokia sued Apple in over 10 wireless handset patents the Finnish phone maker said it owned. The 10 patents, which Apple reportedly refused to license, related to making phones able to run on GSM, 3G, and Wi-Fi networks. They include patents on wireless data, speech coding, security, and encryption, according to Nokia. Apple filed a countersuit in December 2009, charging Nokia with infringing 13 Apple patents related to the iPhone. In its suit, Apple denied Nokia's claims of copyright violations and said the licenses Nokia insists Apple pay were "unfair, unreasonable, and discriminatory" and "non-essential" to the iPhone. The dispute escalated later that month when Nokia lodged a complaint with the U.S. International Trade Commission, accusing Apple of infringing seven Nokia patents "in virtually all of its mobile phones, portable music players, and computers." A Delaware court put the lawsuits on hold in March 2010, pending the U.S. International Trade Commission's decisions on the matter. Apple then took its fight to the U.K. in September 2010, accusing Nokia of infringing on 9 patents it owned. However, a judge with the U.S. International Trade Commission ruled in March that Apple was not in violation of five of Nokia's patents.