Bangkok Post

Qualcomm seeks iPhone import ban

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Chipmaker Qualcomm Inc will ask the US Internatio­nal Trade Commission to bar Apple Inc from selling some iPhones and iPads in the United States that use chips made by competitor Intel Corp on the grounds that the devices infringe on six Qualcomm patents.

In a request that would broaden its legal battle with Apple, San Diego-based Qualcomm said it would ask the ITC to ban imports of the infringing Apple devices.

A related lawsuit was filed in federal court in California on Thursday to request monetary damages.

Qualcomm, which also supplies chips to Apple, said the six patents helped devices perform well without draining the battery.

Apple referred reporters to its earlier comments on the dispute with Qualcomm, which accuse Qualcomm of unfairly imposing what Apple calls a “tax” on Apple devices using Qualcomm chips.

In its complaint to the ITC, Qualcomm asked the body to ban “iPhones that use mobile baseband processors other than those supplied by Qualcomm’s affiliates.”

Qualcomm did not name Intel, but Intel began supplying chips for some iPhones starting with the iPhone 7.

Qualcomm has not alleged that Intel chips violate its patents but claims that the way Apple implements them in the iPhone does. Intel declined comment.

Stacy Rasgon, an analyst with Bernstein, said ITC cases typically took 16 months to conclude and the case was unlikely to affect Apple’s 10th anniversar­y iPhone launch expected this autumn.

“I doubt this puts a lot of immediate pressure on Apple,” she said.

There has been long-running tension between Qualcomm and Apple over Qualcomm’s practice of taking a cut of the total price of the phone in exchange for “modem” chips that help phones use wireless networks data plans.

The ITC is a popular venue for patent disputes because it handles cases relatively quickly and can more easily bar an infringing product from the US market than federal courts.

Animosity between the two companies burst into the open in January, when the US Federal Trade Commission filed a lawsuit against Qualcomm and accused it of using “anticompet­itive” tactics to maintain its monopoly on a key semiconduc­tor used in mobile phones.

The FTC, which enforces antitrust law along with the Justice Department, said that Qualcomm used its dominant position as a supplier of certain chips to impose “onerous” supply and licensing terms on cellphone manufactur­ers and to weaken competitor­s.

Days later, Apple sued Qualcomm for $1 billion, accusing it of overchargi­ng for chips and withholdin­g promised rebates.

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