The Financial Express (Delhi Edition)

Apple’s loss in Chinese patent fight seen emboldenin­g rivals

The latest case may take up to four years to wend its way through appeals system

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APPLE’S loss in a Chinese patent dispute may spell more legal trouble ahead as fast-rising local rivals get bolder in taking on the world’s largest technology company.

The Beijing Intellectu­al Property Office ruled last week that some Apple devices violate the design patents of little-known Chinese smartphone vendor Shenzhen Baili. While the iPhone maker appealed to keep its best-selling gadgets on the market, it could face a rising tide of lawsuits and a threat to its sales if the ruling creates a precedent, according to Counterpoi­nt Research.

The ruling is the latest headache for Apple in China, where it already faces aggressive rivals and a slowing economy in its biggest market outside the US. The nation’s patent and intellectu­al property laws are murky and courts have already ruled against the company over the name of iconic products such as the iPhone.

Baili is just one of scores of smartphone brands trying to cash in on the country’s mobile boom. Legitimate lawsuits are on the rise as Chinese companies build up their intellectu­al property through research and developmen­t, said James Yan, Beijing-based research director at Counterpoi­nt. Apple should sell about two to three million units of the iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus in each of the second and third quarters in China, about 30% of overall sales, Counterpoi­nt estimates.

“Chinese makers have been building their own IP pools over the past years and are able to somehow fight against industry giants,” he said. “Apple isn’t willing to publicly lose a nIP case inChina and the best option for them is to offer settlement fees.”

Xiaomi and Huawei Technologi­es are among those that have bulked up their patent portfolios, through deals with foreign companies, acquisitio­ns or intense research. Beijing-based Xiaomi alone applied for more than 3,700 patents in 2015 and this month struck a deal for nearly 1,500 patents with Microsoft. In May, Hua wei filed a patent lawsuit against Samsung Electronic­s in the US and China.

Apple representa­tives in China didn’t respond to multiple e-mails seeking comment and phone calls were directed to voice-mail. Kristin Huguet, an Apple spokeswoma­n, last week said the company had appealed the ruling and its products are available for sale in China.

The defeat is striking also because Apple aggressive­ly defends its technology patents, most notably in a series of lawsuits across four continents against arch-foe Samsung. The iPhone in particular is credited with pioneering the modern smartphone revolution.

It’s another sign that Chinese officials are scrutinizi­ng the company more closely and comes as Apple — already trying to reverse a slowdown in iPhone sales — prepares to roll out the next version of its iconic device.

China shut Apple’s book and movie service in April for violating foreign publishing regulation­s, and last month a Beijing court ruled that a little-known accessorie­s maker could use the IPHONE label for a range of wallets and purses. In 2012, Apple paid $60 million to Proview Internatio­nal Holdings to settle a dispute over the right to the iPad name. And billionair­e Carl Icahn said in April he unloaded his position in the company because of concerns about its relationsh­ip with China.

In the face of such obstacles, Apple has made efforts to remain on good terms with the Chinese government, including a visit by chief executive officer Tim Cook in May that coincided with a $1 billion investment in the country’s biggest carsharing service, Didi Chuxing Technology. In 2013, Cook apologised after state media accused Apple of shoddy customer service and inadequate warranties.

Apple should really have caught the potential patent violation before it reached the courts, said Benjamin Bai, the head of Allen & Overy’s IP practice.

“They should’ve found the patent and dealt with it this should never be a surprise,”” said Bai, who previously had Apple as a client at his former firm. But “there are a lot more things Apple can do to get out of this mess. You pay license fees and settle this mess. The second is to appeal and in the meantime try to invalidate the patent.”

Time is on Apple’s side. The case could take as long as four years to wend its way through the appeals system, said Ted Chwu, an intellectu­al property specialist at Bird and Bird. This would render the iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus models obsolete by the time a final decision emerges. But the larger danger may come from elsewhere: Apple could face stronger cases and bigger potential damages as its rivals grow savvier on the nuances of Chinese IP litigation.

“It’s all part of the process whereby Chinese companies, Chinese patentees and Chinese litigants get more experience­d in how to use the various forms of IP enforcemen­ts properly,” Chwu said. Bloomberg

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