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Apple probably believes that it has paid for the license when it bought the chip. Samsung probably believes that the license didn't transfer. What is the big judgement against Apple here? What is so "evil" about making an argument based on the law? They are either right or wrong, but they have a right to make their case to a court of law. It is absurd to blame a company, or anyone, for simply defending what it sees are its rights. The courts exist exactly to sort this thing out.
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A Judge even threw out an Apple lawsuit because of their inflexibility : http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2...inst-motorola/ If anything, trying to paint Apple as a good citizen in these cases is absurd in light of what the trials/lawsuits revealed. Apple is simply trying to weasel themselves out of these licenses to keep their margins high. Other players invested a lot in building the infrastructures that enabled Apple to build the iPhone and have the success it has today, Apple apparently wants to profit from it without giving back or by giving back much less (how is that fair ?) than everyone else.
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"What you leave behind is not what is engraved in stone monuments, but what is woven into the lives of others." -- Pericles |
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Some detail here: http://www.fosspatents.com/2012/07/j...ework-its.html and here: http://www.fosspatents.com/2012/02/a...t-against.html If you remember the details of Apple's "antilawsuit" lawsuit, Google told Qualcomm to not transfer licenses if the customer was Apple. Otherwise, their license transfer remained in effect. Those are standard essential patents (SEP). So this action is highly discriminatory by Google, not very FRAND. Apple is suing to stop them from doing this. Very different than not paying. In the link above, you'll see that the courts agreed that Apple wanted to pay a license that the courts felt were good enough that Google could not reject without being guilty of antitrust using SEPs. Contradicts your assertion that Apple doesn't want to pay, doesn't it? As I see it, Apple wants to minimize how much it pays (doesn't everyone). But the big issue is Google trying to use SEPs as weapons, when the FRAND principle exists to prevent exactly that. They just got hit hard in Europe for doing this and the ITC may well do the same in the US. No company in its right mind would agree to licensing terms that use SEPs in a discriminatory way, as Google has being doing specifically against Apple products: Quote:
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Last edited by Brazuca; Dec 28, 2012 at 12:47 PM. |
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I suggest you read less biased sources (Florian is on Oracle's payroll and has been spreading anti-Android/Google FUD since the trial with Oracle) and rethink the case toroughly. The Judge threw it out because Apple said they would pay what the Judge ordered, as long as it was no more than 1$ per device (so around less than 0.2% royalty, when everyone else was doing 2-3% royalties per devices). Also, Apple's attack on companies trying to gain injunctions for FRAND patent infringment have mostly failed as a patent being FRAND doesn't mean it's free and thus as long as entities show good faith in licensing it, if the other party still doesn't pay, it is fair game to ask for injunctions (different EU courts ruled and I think also the US FTC).
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"What you leave behind is not what is engraved in stone monuments, but what is woven into the lives of others." -- Pericles |
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http://blogs.computerworld.com/smart...t-apple-europe "The biggest surprise is Samsung's decision to end European FRAND-related injunction attempts against Apple." "The decision may have been taken in reaction to a European Commission decision to launch an antitrust probe to ensure the Korean firm is offering fair access to patents it offers under industry-agreed FRAND agreements." http://www.theverge.com/2012/12/11/3...rand-antitrust "Under such a settlement, Google would likely agree to license any standards-essential patents in the Motorola portfolio, as well as abstain from seeking sales bans on products it feels infringe said patents." |
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Apple's position is clear, and I think everyone agrees: FRAND should not be used for injunctions. Companies who use FRAND licenses should pay a FRAND fee. Patent exhaustion should be respected. Besides the fact that it is Apple who is making these arguments, what is your problem with these positions?
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Otherwise, the EU Commission has specifically stated in their news release that injunctions are still an option: "The preliminary view expressed in today's Statement of Objections does not question the availability of injunctive relief for SEP holders outside the specific circumstances present in this case, for example in the case of unwilling licensees." On the contrary, the ITC has recently reaffirmed that it strongly believes in the use of injunctions for SEP cases. (It has to, because stopping imports is its primary purpose!) In October an ITC administrative judge... Quote:
Last edited by kdarling; Dec 31, 2012 at 05:41 PM. |
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In 3 cases now (Motorola, Samsung and Nokia), Apple has shown it is unwilling to pay fair prices. This is not an isolated incident, Apple seems to always choose litigation rather than negotiations. Any other entity that would do the same, and at the same time ferociously attack others over its own IP, would deserve the same from me. I think it's highly hypocritical. And have you found other sources than Mueller ? You should, it would open up your eyes a bit more to the realities going on in the industry.
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"What you leave behind is not what is engraved in stone monuments, but what is woven into the lives of others." -- Pericles |
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But I guess because it is Apple, they should pay extra to everyone.... ---------- Quote:
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Plus, you quoted the most Fandroid publication on the planet: groklaw. They have been rabidly anti-Apple during the entire trial. They were so outraged at the juror that they forgot about the law. I guess you only read what confirms your viewpoints, eh?
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Funny uh ? So yes, to all casual observers, it does seem Apple doesn't want to pay licensing. They always go for litigation, argue patent exhaustion, argue against injunctions for SEP/FRAND patents and generally just don't seem willing to sit down and negotiate until a judge makes it clear that the court won't rule in their favor. Any player acting like Apple would deserve the same contempt from me. It has nothing to do with the fact that this is Apple. I never said they should pay extra, just that they should pay period. Apple is arguing that it doesn't have to pay or should pay less if anything than others. ---------- Quote:
I assume you have no idea what Groklaw was built on and why if you think it's an Android fansite.
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"What you leave behind is not what is engraved in stone monuments, but what is woven into the lives of others." -- Pericles |
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