The Asian Age

Apple, Google call a patent truce

- — AFP

San Francisco: Google and Apple, the two technology titans behind the world’s top smartphone platforms, called a truce on Friday in a long- running patent war. “Apple and Google have agreed to dismiss all the current lawsuits that exist directly between the two companies,” the companies said.

Google and Apple, the two technology titans behind the world’s top smartphone platforms, called a truce on Friday in a longrunnin­g patent war. “Apple and Google have agreed to dismiss all the current lawsuits that exist directly between the two companies,” the companies said in a joint statement.

“Apple and Google have also agreed to work together in some areas of patent reform.”

The companies made it clear that the detente does not include licensing their technology to each other.

Motorola filed a patent lawsuit against Apple in US federal court four years ago, prompting the iPhone maker to fire back with a patent suit of its own. Litigation spread to more than a dozen other courts.

“The parties have entered into a second- class settlement from a position of mutual weakness,” wrote intellectu­al property analyst Florian Mueller at fosspatent­s. Com.

“They had to recognise that under the procedural circumstan­ces their patents were not strong enough to give either party decisive leverage over the other, at least not anytime soon,” Mueller wrote.

Google took on the legal wrangling when it bought Motorola Mobility in 2012 in what was seen at the time as a move to use its patents for defending Android operating software in the increasing­ly litigious smartphone and tablet markets.

Early this year, Google agreed to sell Motorola Mobility to China- based computer giant Lenovo. The sale has yet to be completed.

California- based Apple has been battling smartphone competitor­s in courts around the world, accusing rivals using Google’s Android software of copying features from its popular mobile devices.

The legal truce between Apple and Google does not take the pressure off South Korea- based Samsung, which has been a prime legal target for the maker of iPhones and iPads.

Japan’s intellectu­al property high court has ruled that Samsung could claim 9.96 million yen ($ 98,000) from its US arch- rival for use of Samsung’s data transmissi­on technology, found to have been used in Apple’s iPhone 4 and iPad 2. And early this month in Silicon Valley, jurors at a different patent trial held the line on its $ 119.6 million damages award to Apple in a patent battle with Samsung.

While the amount of the award is huge, it is a fraction of the more than $ 2 billion Apple had sought at the outset of the trial against is South Korean competitor in the hot smartphone and tablet computer market.

Jurors agreed that Samsung violated three of five Apple patents at issue in the two- month trial.

Samsung lawyers maintained that the legal onslaught emerged from a “holy war” Apple declared on Google- made Android software used to power smartphone­s.

The argument evidently struck a chord with members of the panel.

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