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Nokia sues Apple again over patents

Tue Mar 29, 2011 6:51 AM EDT
world-news, business, technology, united-states, eu, apple, nokia, finland
Matti Huuhtanen, Associated Press
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HELSINKI — Nokia is suing Apple in the United States for allegedly infringing patents in its mobile phones, portable music players, tablets and computers, the Finnish company said Tuesday.

The complaint, filed with United States International Trade Commission, ITC, is the latest in a string of lawsuits by Nokia and comes as the world's largest handset maker struggles to keep up with smartphone rivals such as Apple Inc.

Apple and Nokia Corp. have been locked in a long-running legal battle over patent claims, with each side accusing the other of infringing on patents that cover features such as swiping gestures on touch screens and the built-in "app store" for downloading updated programs.

The major phone makers — including Apple, Nokia, Microsoft, Motorola and Taiwan's HTC — are increasingly turning to patent litigation as they jockey for any edge to expand their share of the rapidly growing smartphone market. Companies such as Nokia are also seeking to protect their business as the popular iPhone encroaches on the rest of the industry.

The lawsuits cover all aspects of basic phone use, from technology used to synchronize email, calendars and contacts, to methods to extend battery life.

Although these legal disputes generally don't stop products from reaching consumers, litigation can be used to extract licensing fees from competitors. It can also help distract rivals and even discourage them from entering a particular market.

Nokia said the seven patents in the new complaint relate to its "pioneering innovations" that Apple allegedly is using "to create key features in its products, including in multitasking operating systems, data synchronization, positioning, call quality and the use of Bluetooth accessories."

Last week, the United States International Trade Commission found no violation in an earlier complaint. Nokia said it "is waiting to see the full details of the ruling before deciding on the next steps in that case."

Last year, Nokia Corp. also sued Apple Inc. in Britain, Germany and the Netherlands for allegedly infringing its patents with technology used in the iPhone, iPad and iPod Touch.

Those followed earlier lawsuits by Nokia claiming that a broad swath of Apple products violate its patents. Apple had earlier responded with its own infringement claims against Nokia.

"Our latest ITC filing means we now have 46 Nokia patents in suit against Apple, many filed more than 10 years before Apple made its first iPhone," said Paul Melin, vice president of intellectual property at Nokia.

"Nokia is a leading innovator in technologies needed to build great mobile products and Apple must stop building its products using Nokia's proprietary innovation."

The legal disputes come amid increasing competition in the fast-growing smartphone market. Tech companies are scrambling to win over the growing number of consumers buying handsets that come with email, Web surfing and scores of apps for checking the weather, updating Facebook and other tasks.

Nokia has been struggling against stiff competition, especially from the iPhone and Research in Motion's BlackBerry.

Nokia said that during the past two decades it has invested some euro43 billion in research and development to build "one of the wireless industry's strongest and broadest IPR portfolios," which includes more than 10,000 patent families.

In addition to the two ITC complaints, Nokia said it has filed cases on the same patents and others in Delaware, and has further cases proceeding in Mannheim, Dusseldorf and the Federal Patent Court in Germany, the UK High Court in London and the District Court of the Hague in the Netherlands. Some of them will come to trial in the next few months.

Nokia stock closed almost unchanged at euro6.17 ($8.68) on the Helsinki Stock Exchange.

____

Online:

http://www.nokia.com

© 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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  • Public Discussion (4)
missrighteous

Nokia - sore losers!

  • 1 vote
Reply#1 - Tue Mar 29, 2011 11:35 AM EDT
Pacific Northwest Blogger

Apple already has several anti trust investigations underway from several states, the justice department and other nations. When the states got involved it became real for Apple. The likelihood that they will be found in violation and behaved in monopolistic behavior keeps increasing.

Time to sell those Apple stocks, but don't look to Google, they have the same issues with anti trust from states and other nations - neither company received the ethical corporation award last year, but Microsoft did for modifying their behavior. Perhaps both Apple and Google will have to learn the hard way like Microsoft did.

  • 1 vote
Reply#2 - Tue Mar 29, 2011 2:45 PM EDT
missrighteous

My dear friend, it's not about who thought of it first, it's about who was smarter and better adapted it to the consumers. Apple is a genius company that sells to the client what HE or SHE wants. Not what they have. Nokia might have thought of the 'base' for the apparatus, but they stalled and failed at marketing. Apple took the next step. Nothing wrong with that. And if we, as consumers, like to receive what we WANT, not what we are OFFERED, we should not be looking for Apple to be sued.

  • 1 vote
#2.1 - Thu Mar 31, 2011 11:10 AM EDT
FecklessTechGuy

PNB, all corporations, from GE to Exxon to Microsoft, to Google have a spate of anti-trust, patent and other Ip suits happening all the time - this is certainly not unique to Apple, Nokia or any of the other competitiors in the technology space. It is difficult to ascertain where in fact you have gotten the assertion that Apple is applying monopolistic practices. They have only one market in which they are the majority player and that is in the electronic music device category. All other categories have them in anywhere from 3rd to bottom of the barrel in terms of marketshare.

Microsoft has been impacted by and will eventually succumb to its own toxic internal corporate culture, which has completely unmanned its attempts to continue to lead in technology. Its sole saving grace is the strength of its hold in the corporate space via Windows technology and Office. It is slowly eroding away its foothold in consumer electronics (the sole possible exception would be the XBox/Kinnect systems), and has been amazingly unsuccessful in scaling its OS for the ultralight tablet category - to the point that HP (for example) went out and shopped for Palm to use that OS for its future tablet AND PC devices on WebOS. With ChromeOS on the horizon, and Microsoft stumbling over its own feet with .Net/Cloud, they are not well positioned to stop the incursions into its holdings. Even the partnership with Nokia has recalled the other failed partnerships that Microsoft had in the past, with Motorola, Palm and Nortel (which gutted all three of those companies), and Novell, Xandros, Erickson, Sony, Samsung and Yahoo as others equally dismal in results.

Finally, your call to sell Apple stock in light of these Nokia charges I hope is tongue-in-cheek, as APPL is one of the stock currently buoying up the tech sector, and outperforming almost all other tech companies in terms of market valuation and a score of other benchmarks.

  • 2 votes
#2.2 - Thu Mar 31, 2011 12:35 PM EDT
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