Saturday 28 April 2012

Apple vs Samsung 1 year anniversary: 10 lawsuits, 50 countries - and counting



With patent litigation fast turning into the tech industry's favorite past time, the year-long legal battle between Apple and Samsung that began last April now extends to more than 10 countries around the world and at least 50 initial filings. Incredible.
Patent expert Florian Mueller who thankfully tracks this stuff closely so the rest of us don't have to risk having our brains explode, has done his usual first-rate job compiling a list sorting out the venues of this "massively-escalated, planet-spanning dispute." Incredibly, he noted, the number of legal filings might even climb higher. As Mueller notes in his latest post:
 After an initial filing, lawsuits can be consolidated (which effectively happened to the first two lawsuits the parties filed against each other in California) or, which happened far more frequently, split up into multiple lawsuits by the courts. For example, German courts usually look at only one patent per litigation, and sometimes assign more than one case number per patent if there's a delay with serving the complaint on one of two or more defendants. Also, these parties tend to appeal each and every decision, and the list below doesn't contain cases before appeals courts.
Of course, there's always the possibility that these two might be able to work out a deal. During a conference call last week to discuss the company's quarterly earnings, Apple's CEO Tim Cook offered a general statement of his desire to end the litigation that has engulfed much of the wireless industry without mentioning Samsung specifically.
"I would highly prefer to settle than to battle," he said. "But it's important that Apple not become the developer for the world. We need people to invent their own stuff."
Both Cook and his opposite number at Samsung along with their top lawyers are supposed to give settlement talks a shot in front of a judge in San Francisco on May 21 and 22.
This long-running legal confrontation began in April 2011 when Apple filed a lawsuit in California accusing Samsung of copying "the look and feel" of its iPad tablet and iPhone smartphone. "Rather than innovate and develop its own technology and a unique Samsung style for its smart phone products and computer tablets, Samsung chose to copy Apple's technology, user interface and innovative style in these infringing products," Apple complained.
Samsung quickly responded with a counter-suit against Apple, taking the fight overseas to South Korea, Japan and Germany.
Ever since, it's been a veritable full-time employment act for the lawyers.




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