The fiercest rivalry in the world of smartphones is heading back to
court this week in the heart of the Silicon Valley, with Apple and
Samsung accusing each other, once again, of ripping off designs and
features.
The trial will mark the latest round in a long-running series of
lawsuits between the two tech giants that underscore a much larger
concern about what is allowed to be patented.
"There's a widespread suspicion that lots of the kinds of software
patents at issue are written in ways that cover more ground than what
Apple or any other tech firm actually invented," Notre Dame law
professor Mark McKenna said. "Overly broad patents allow companies to
block competition."
The latest Apple-Samsung case will be tried less than two years after a
federal jury found Samsung was infringing on Apple patents. Samsung was
ordered to pay about $900 million but is appealing and has been allowed
to continue selling products using the technology.
Now, jury selection is scheduled to begin Monday in another round of
litigation, with Apple Inc. accusing Samsung of infringing on five
patents on newer devices, including Galaxy smartphones and tablets. In a
counterclaim, Samsung says Apple stole two of its ideas to use on
iPhones and iPads.
"Apple revolutionized the market in personal computing devices," Apple
attorneys wrote in court filings. "Samsung, in contrast, has
systematically copied Apple's innovative technology and products,
features and designs, and has deluged markets with infringing devices."
Samsung countered that it has broken technological barriers with its own ultra-slim, lightweight phones.
"Samsung has been a pioneer in the mobile device business sector since
the inception of the mobile device industry," Samsung attorneys wrote.
"Apple has copied many of Samsung's innovations in its Apple iPhone,
iPod, and iPad products."
In the upcoming case, Apple claims Samsung stole a tap-from-search
technology that allows someone searching for a telephone number or
address on the web to tap on the results to call the number or put the
address into a map. In addition, Apple says Samsung copied "Slide to
Unlock," which allows users to swipe the face of their smartphone to use
it.
Samsung countered that Apple is stealing a wireless technology system that speeds up sending and receiving data.
The most attention grabbing claim in the case is Apple's demand that
Samsung pay a $40 royalty for each Samsung device running software
allegedly conceived by Apple, more than five times more than the amount
sought in the previous trial and well above other precedents between
smartphone companies. If Apple prevails, the costs to Samsung could
reach $2 billion. Apple's costs, if it lost, are expected to be about $6
million.
"You rarely get from the jury what you ask for, so companies aim high,"
said German patent analyst Florian Mueller. "But in my opinion this is
so far above a reasonable level the judge should not have allowed it."
The problem, he said, is that each smartphone has thousands of patented ideas in it; Apple is challenging just five.
Throughout the three years of litigation, Samsung's market share has
grown. One of every three smartphones sold last year was a Samsung, now
the market leader. Apple, with a typically higher price, was second,
with about 15 percent of the global market.
No comments:
Post a Comment