Who is the apple the biggest enemy today?Samsung or Google?In fact, apple biggest enemy is the Delay.
Apple has spent nearly three years fighting its rivals in a global
smartphone patent war. Now, setbacks in two key US court cases are
laying bare why a drawn-out battle could be bad news for the iPhone
maker.
Judge Richard Posner in Chicago federal court recently canceled
Apple’s long-awaited trial against Google Inc’s Motorola Mobility
division, which makes devices powered by the Internet search company’s
Android mobile operating system. The trial had been set to start this
week.
Then in an order late on Monday, US District Judge Lucy Koh in San
Jose, California, effectively dashed Apple’s hopes of stopping the
launch of Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd’s new Galaxy S III smartphone,
which also runs on Android. Koh had said Apple’s push to get a court
order blocking the June 21 launch would overload her calendar, given
Apple’s high-stakes trial over other Samsung devices set for July that
she is overseeing.
The latest decisions don’t doom Apple’s courtroom efforts — the
company can appeal Posner’s ruling, while Koh’s directive had nothing to
do with the merits of the Samsung case about to go to trial, or the
legal arguments for an injunction on the new Samsung smartphone moviles baratos android.
But delays in moving its cases through the courts is a blow to Apple’s
efforts to get quick and favorable rulings that it hopes would give it
an edge in the marketplace for mobile devices.
Apple has waged the international patent war since 2010, part of its
attempt to limit growth of Android, which last year established its
dominance as the world’s best-selling mobile operating platform. Apple’s
opponents, meanwhile, say the iPhone maker is trying to use patents to
avoid competing solely in the market.
A clear victory in one of the US legal cases could strengthen Apple’s
hand in negotiating cross-licensing deals outside court, where companies
agree to let each other use their patented technologies.
“The stalemate is much more of a victory for the accused infringers
than it is for Apple,” said Brian Love, a professor at Stanford Law
School who studies patent litigation.
Apple spokeswoman Kristin Huguet reiterated a previous statement,
saying the blatant copying of its devices was wrong. Google spokesman
Jim Prosser said the rise of patent litigation is due to too many vague
software patents, and that Google’s success makes it an attractive
target. A Samsung representative declined to comment.
Apple is not the only smartphone combatant that has faced setbacks in
litigation over its technology. Last month, Oracle Corp. came up empty
in a trial against Google, a case where Oracle’s damages estimates
ranged up to $6 billion.
US District Judge William Alsup in San Francisco rejected Oracle’s
copyright claims on parts of the Java programming language. The
enterprise software company said it would appeal.
Apple is in a pitched battle with its competitors over who can develop
the most innovative smartphone features. In an attempt to help keep
Android at bay, the company announced new features for its
voice-activated Siri software at its annual developer’s conference.
The company’s first lawsuit in its global patent fight was against
smaller competitor HTC Corp. in a Delaware federal court in March 2010.
Apple also filed an action against HTC before a US trade panel, which
has forced delays in sales of some HTC smartphones and moviles baratos.
Michael Yoshikami, chief executive of Destination Wealth Management,
says HTC stock has suffered due to adverse court rulings. But for a
larger player like Apple, the patent battle is important but not for its
share price. Rather, it is used for a short-term edge in the land grab
for smartphone android sales, said Yoshikami, whose fund holds Apple shares.
In a move that was widely seen as a preemptive strike against an
imminent Apple lawsuit, Motorola sued Apple in October 2010 in Chicago,
and Apple filed its own claims against Motorola the same month. That
case landed before Posner, who issued a series of pre-trial rulings that
eliminated nearly all of Motorola’s patent claims against Apple from
the prospective trial, while maintaining more of Apple’s claims against
Motorola.
That meant Apple had more to gain in the trial, which was set to start
on Monday. But in an order last week, Posner scrapped the trial after
finding that neither side could prove damages. Apple had sought an
injunction barring the sale of Motorola products, but Posner said that
would be “contrary to the public interest.”
Nick Rodelli, a lawyer and adviser to institutional investors for CFRA
Research in Maryland, rated Posner’s decision an “incremental negative”
for Apple. However, Rodelli doesn’t think it will stand up on appeal,
saying in part that Posner improperly denied Apple a hearing on its
right to an injunction.
Yet Stanford’s Professor Love said that Posner’s ruling, and the delay
it causes in Apple getting the case to trial even if it wins an appeal,
will reduce Apple’s leverage during any potential licensing talks.
In the Samsung lawsuit, filed last year in California, the iPhone
maker says Samsung “slavishly” copied the iPhone and iPad. Samsung
denies the claims and countersued.
The trial centers around Apple’s claims against multiple Samsung
phones, as well as a Galaxy tablet. But those products are not the most
pressing worry for Apple at the moment: Samsung’s Galaxy S III phone is
set to launch in the US on June 21, and Apple fears blockbuster sales.
But courts don’t move as quickly as new technology. At a court
hearing last week, Apple attorney Josh Krevitt complained that Samsung
is able to release new phones before the legal system has time to
address their patent violations.
“Samsung is always one step ahead, launching another product and another product,” Krevitt said.
Koh recently said Apple could ask for a temporary restraining order
against the Galaxy S III phone, but that would likely delay the trial
over a Galaxy tablet and other moviles baratos android.
In her order on Monday, the judge said Apple would have to request a
new hearing date if it wanted to stop sales of the Galaxy S III phone.
That likely would not take place before the phone’s scheduled launch.
Apple has not said what its next move will be.
Court-ordered mediation between the CEOs of Apple and Samsung did not
produce a settlement in the wide-ranging litigation. Barring a last
minute agreement, the trial is slated for July 30.
Apple cannot afford to get bogged down in its global legal campaign
against Android, said Paul Berghoff, a Chicago-based patent attorney
with McDonnell Boehnen Hulbert & Berghoff who is not involved in the
litigation.
I think that if Apple’s goal still is the Steve Jobs holy war, then the status quo is not in their benefit.
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