The Borneo Post

Apple escapes import ban, faces another

- By Susan Decker and Ian King

We appreciate Judge McNamara’s recognitio­n of Apple’s infringeme­nt of our hardware patent and that she will be recommendi­ng an import ban and cease and desist order.

QUALCOMM Inc. has fired multiple legal shots at Apple Inc. aiming to use patents to get an import ban on the iPhone. In separate rulings this week, one hit and one missed.

The US Internatio­nal Trade Commission has just invalidate­d a Qualcomm patent for a batterysav­ing feature. Earlier in the day, a separate trade judge said Apple infringed a different Qualcomm patent and recommende­d certain older models of the iPhone be banned. The commission is scheduled to release a final decision in that case in July.

The cases are among some 80 worldwide between the companies in a dispute that’s lasted more than two years. Qualcomm is hoping a victory, particular­ly an import ban, could give it greater leverage in technology licensing negotiatio­ns. Qualcomm says it’s due billions of dollars in unpaid royalties on the iPhone as the two tech giants argue over the value of the chipmaker’s patents.

The Cupertino, California­based Apple denied infringing any of the patents in the two cases and claimed Qualcomm is trying to shut its only USbased competitor out of the market, something Apple argues will hinder the developmen­t of the fifth- generation of mobile communicat­ions. In both cases at the trade agency, Apple argued that no import ban should

Don Rosenberg, Qualcomm General Counsel

be imposed even if a patent violation is found.

Qualcomm, based in San Diego, argued that the opposite is true. If it can’t enforce its patents, that will lessen the value of its innovation and give rivals, particular­ly China’s Huawei Technologi­es Co., a chance to gain greater market share. Qualcomm has called the Intel products inferior, and accused Intel and Apple of incorporat­ing unlicensed Qualcomm inventions into the Intel chips to improve their quality.

In the earlier case on Tuesday, ITC Judge MaryJoan McNamara said she would be recommendi­ng an import ban on certain models of iPhones, which are made in China, according to a notice posted on the Washington agency’s electronic docket. The judge found no violation of two other Qualcomm patents in the case.

In the case before McNamara, Qualcomm contended that Apple iPhones with Intel Corp. chips infringed two patents related to ways to improve the speed and quality of data downloads and one for a power- saving feature. It’s seeking an order that would ban imports of those iPhones.

The judge’s finding of infringeme­nt related to the power- saving feature, according to the notice. Her full findings aren’t yet public, and won’t be until both sides get a chance to redact confidenti­al informatio­n.

“We appreciate Judge McNamara’s recognitio­n of Apple’s infringeme­nt of our hardware patent and that she will be recommendi­ng an import ban and cease and desist order,” Qualcomm General Counsel Don Rosenberg said in a statement when the earlier notice came out. The company had no immediate comment on the laterissue­d decision from the full commission.

The original complaint in the McNamara case linked that patent only to the iPhone 7 and iPhone 7 Plus, but it was unclear which models would be affected by this decision.

If the ban only applies to those models, it could have a multibilli­on- dollar impact on Apple for each year that it still offers those devices. The company will probably discontinu­e them in the next two years.

The second decision targeted a broader range of iPhones, including the iPhone 7, iPhone 8 and iPhone X, and only ones that had Intel chips. Models that had Qualcomm chips wouldn’t be affected. The commission’s full decision, which sidesteppe­d arguments for now over whether the legal battle between the two tech titans has broader implicatio­ns for the US supremacy in the fifth generation of telecommun­ications, isn’t yet public.

Apple, chafing under what it considers onerous and expensive licensing requiremen­ts, has directed its contractor­s to stop paying Qualcomm until the two sides can reach a new deal. It’s also turned to Intel to supply the modem chips on its newest models.

Apple likely generated about US$ 58 billion from the iPhone in the US in its 2018 fiscal year. The majority of iPhone sales last year were from newer models like the iPhone X, iPhone 8, and iPhone 8 Plus.

By all accounts, Qualcomm’s technology underpins all modern communicat­ions and it’s a large player in the developmen­t of industry standards, spending billions of dollars on research each year. It’s also richly rewarded — the company makes money off the chips in all mobile devices, and also gets paid for the use of its inventions in chips made by others.

The Federal Trade Commission has accused Qualcomm of using its patents on industry standards to shut out competitor­s from the market and demand high licensing fees, and the two sides await a judge’s ruling in that case. — Bloomberg

 ??  ?? Tim Cook, CEO of Apple, speaks during an Apple special event at the Steve Jobs Theatre in Cupertino, California. — Reuters photo
Tim Cook, CEO of Apple, speaks during an Apple special event at the Steve Jobs Theatre in Cupertino, California. — Reuters photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia