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Apple's motion to stay an Apple Watch sales ban for the duration of its appeal was denied today by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, according to a court document viewed by MacRumors. Apple's interim stay will be lifted as of January 18 at 2 p.m. Pacific Time, the filing indicates, meaning the sales ban will be reinstated tomorrow.

Apple-Watch-Series-9.jpg

The order means that Apple will once again no longer be able to sell Apple Watch models with blood oxygen sensing in the U.S., including the Series 9 and Ultra 2. The ban first began last month, but it was quickly paused after Apple received an interim stay.

The U.S. International Trade Commission last year ordered the import and sales ban after ruling that Apple violated Masimo's pulse oximetry patents with the Apple Watch's blood oxygen sensing feature, first introduced on the Series 6 model in 2020. Masimo has accused Apple of stealing trade secrets and poaching employees.

Apple will likely sell modified Apple Watch Series 9 and Ultra 2 models without the Blood Oxygen app in the U.S. to sidestep the sales ban, while it continues to appeal.

"Apple's claim that its redesigned watch does not contain pulse oximetry is a positive step toward accountability," a Masimo spokesperson told MacRumors. "It is especially important that one of the world's largest and most powerful companies respects the intellectual property rights of smaller companies and complies with ITC orders when it is caught infringing."

As a longer-term measure, Bloomberg's Mark Gurman recently reported that Apple is preparing a software update that would adjust the Blood Oxygen app's algorithms, in an attempt to avoid Masimo's patented technology. It's unclear if this effort will be successful, and the legal battle between Apple and Masimo is likely far from over.

Update: In a press release, Masimo CEO Joe Kiani shared the following statement in response to Apple's motion for stay being denied.

"The Federal Circuit's decision to lift the temporary stay is a victory for the integrity of the American patent system and the safety of people relying on pulse oximetry," said Kiani. "It affirms that even the largest and most powerful companies must respect the intellectual rights of American inventors and must deal with the consequences when they are caught infringing others' patents."

Masimo said it previously released a study showing that the Apple Watch's blood oxygen sensing feature "missed over 90% of potentially life-threatening events," while touting the effectiveness of its own Masimo W1 health watch.

Article Link: Apple Watch Sales Ban Reinstated in U.S. Effective Tomorrow
 
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The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit today lifted the temporary stay of the Apple Watch import and sales ban. The interim stay will be lifted as of January 18 at 2 p.m. Pacific Time.
Anyone got the details on why the ban was lifted by the U.S. Court of Appeals?
 
So what's it gonna be Apple? Are you gonna actually pay Masimo? Or are you actually gonna sell your customers a gimped Apple Watch?
I think this is effectively answered by yesterday’s news about the “alternative payments screen” and the continued cut Apple is going to take.
 
Looks like Apple either needs to disable the Blood Oxygen sensor or pay Masimo for their patent.
well, the first one they already have as a "fix" according to stories earlier in the week, the 2nd one will take a lot of time given the history of this case, so ...
 
I wonder if they'll disable the Blood Oxygen sensor for all watches with this feature, or just those being sold going forward. I don't even know if it's possible to make the distinction, so a blanket disabling it is!
 
So what about future apple watches (assuming there will be). Will they not have O2?

Does that mean older apple watches will be better than the new ones?

Will this prompt apple to update the older ones to remove O2 functionality, thereby breaching many consumer protection laws?

Clearly apple's legal team are are bunch of hicktown cowboys and won't hesitate to break laws all over the world.

Or could it be the end of the apple watch altogether?
 
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so the appeals court ruled in favor of the ITC ... so what are Apple's options?
a. stop selling AW9 and Ultra 2 all together
b. apply their "fix" which basically removes SpO2 altogether

in my mind it's b.
Edit: there is c. Settle with Masimo

But this is far from over, Apple will now focus on getting the remaining 2 patents invalidated while also working on non-infringing sensors/algorithms for the next gen watches
 
The sales ban would make sense if Apple was a direct competitor to Masimo.

But nobody who wants an actual medical-grade blood oxygen sensor is going to buy an Apple Watch over a Masimo device. They’re operating in entirely different markets.

Sure, if Apple’s sensor uses Masimo’s patented tech, then they should pay a license fee. But a sales ban doesn’t help anyone. Apple selling a Watch has no impact on Masimo’s medical device sales.
 
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