The Sunday Guardian

Qualcomm Inc wants to get iPhone sales banned in China

- ADAM JOURDAN, MATTHEW MILLER

Qualcomm Inc wants to hit Apple Inc where it hurts most: iPhone sales in China —one of its biggest global markets where most of its flagship smartphone­s are made.

The US chipmaker’s legal gambit to ban sales and manufactur­ing of iPhones could cripple global supply of Apple’s most important product, legal experts say, but many believe Qualcomm faces a stiff battle to get there.

Instead, Qualcomm may be looking to frustrate the tech giant through a lengthy legal fight that could last years in China as it seeks to gain leverage in the firms’ global standoff over royalty payments it demands, intellectu­al property lawyers said.

Qualcomm said this week it had filed the suits in Beijing’s intellectu­al property court, claiming patent infringeme­nt against Apple. If successful Apple could be blocked from selling or manufactur­ing some iPhones in China.

The two firms are fighting on multiple fronts around the globe from the United States to Europe and Asia, but the China case is particular­ly thorny because the iPhone is almost entirely made in the country by contract manufactur­er Foxconn.

“Effectivel­y - if they get an injunction - you would have a worldwide injunction that would block (Apple) exports from China,” said Erick Robinson, director of patent litigation for Beijing East IP and a former director of patents for Qualcomm.

“China is still unpredicta­ble and Apple has a ton to lose.”

Apple has antitrust suits against Qualcomm in the United States as well as nearly a dozen in the United Kingdom, Japan, China and Taiwan alleging that Qualcomm is charging unfair prices for its technology.

In return, Qualcomm is seeking injunction­s against Apple in the United States with complaints to the Internatio­nal Trade Commission as well as filing complaints in Germany. Now it has set it sights on China.

But putting Apple away in China is a tough act, lawyers said.

Apple suppliers employ hundreds of thousands of people in China, so authoritie­s may be wary of hitting jobs with a ban on production.

More to the point, lawyers said it was unlikely either firm would allow the case to get to an injunction, speculatin­g that Qualcomm’s main aim was to increase its leverage over Apple at the negotiatin­g table over any final settlement.

A Shanghai-based intellectu­al property lawyer said it would take “a year or two” to get to the point where the threat of injunction was imminent, but that eventually it would get “too close for comfort”.

”The consequenc­es are just dire if (an injunction) were to actually happen, the lawyer, who asked not to be named because Qualcomm and Apple were clients of his firm, said.

“That is very significan­t leverage Qualcomm would have over Apple.”

The chipmaker has not made public which iPhone models would be included, but Christine Trimble, a spokeswoma­n for Qualcomm, said it would cover the iPhone 7. The patents include power savings technologi­es and Apple’s Force Touch feature in newer iPhones.

“The patents we’re asserting in these complaints are non-cellular wireless technologi­es that Apple uses in its iPhones,” Trimble told Reuters.

“The patents are a few examples of the many Qualcomm technologi­es that Apple is using without paying Qualcomm.”

Apple, which has said previously it pays fair and reasonable rates for the patents it uses, said Qualcomm’s claim is “meritless.”

“Regulators around the world have found Qualcomm guilty of abusing their position for years. This claim is meritless and, like their other courtroom maneuvers, we believe this latest legal effort will fail,” said a Apple spokeswoma­n in Shanghai.

Chinese regulators fined Qualcomm $975 million in 2015 over antitrust violations. Taiwan’s Fair Trade Commission said last week it would fine the firm $774 million over similar issues.

Lawyers said Apple would likely file more unfair competitio­n or anti-trust cases against Qualcomm in Chinese courts, or seek to get the relevant patents invalidate­d by the Chinese patent office.

The iPhone maker could also seek to have the patent cases held up by the Beijing IP court while the patent invalidati­on decision was being made. The cases would then go through a series of hearings at the Beijing court before any injunction.

“Given the known circumstan­ces and the parties, an injunction is unlikely to be forthcomin­g in this type of situation,” said Elliot Papageorgi­ou, head of intellectu­al property at Clyde & Co China.

Last year, a Beijing court banned Apple’s iPhone 6 and 6 Plus models, saying they were too similar in design to the Shenzhen Baili 100C smartphone. The ruling was overturned this year in favor of Apple.

Injunction requests, often used to boost leverage in negotiatio­ns, have not proved hugely effective in patent litigation­s, however. By the time a court makes a ruling on such cases, the products involved in the suit often become outdated and defending firms introduce new models that do not use disputed patents.

“The reality is both parties should get together and avoid mutually assured destructio­n,” said Beijingbas­ed Robinson, who estimated it would be 18 months before any potential injunction.

“Apple has been giving Qualcomm trouble in the United States and in China; Qualcomm has the patent portfolio to completely block the manufactur­ing chain for Apple if that’s what they want to do.” REUTERS

The iPhone maker could also seek to have the patent cases held up by the Beijing IP court while the patent invalidati­on decision was being made. The cases would then go through a series of hearings at the Beijing court before any injunction. “Given the known circumstan­ces and the parties, an injunction is unlikely to be forthcomin­g in this type of situation,” said Elliot Papageorgi­ou, head of intellectu­al property at Clyde & Co China.

 ??  ?? Apple could be blocked from selling or manufactur­ing some iPhones in China.
Apple could be blocked from selling or manufactur­ing some iPhones in China.

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