ITC judge rules against InterDigital in first round of 3G patent case (update)

After two long years, the International Trade Commission has finally come to a decision in favor of Huawei, Nokia and ZTE in a 3G patent case brought by InterDigital in 2011. According to an ITC judge, the three phone manufacturers did not violate the seven InterDigital-owned patents that covers various WCDMA and CDMA2000 technologies used to make their devices. InterDigital even went so far as to request the ban of US sales of these devices pending a decision. The Philadelphia-based company filed a similar complaint against LG, which chose a settlement instead of going through the courts but it argued it had a right to arbitration based on a previous licensing agreement and was taken out of the case (see update below). Still, this is just a preliminary ruling; the final decision of the case is expected in October.

Update: The story initially said LG chose a settlement instead of going through the courts, which is incorrect. We learned from InterDigital that while LG was in the original case, the ITC took the Korean company out once LG said it had a right to arbitration. However, the Court of Appeals of the Federal Circuit ruled earlier in June that the ITC has made a mistake in excluding LG. So, LG could still face the initial charges brought to it by InterDigital.

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Source: Reuters

InterDigital files ITC complaint against Huawei, Nokia, Samsung and ZTE, requests sales ban

InterDigital is at it again. The company may have lightened its patent load last summer with a little help from Intel, but it apparently still has plenty of ammunition left to fire at four new targets: Huawei, Nokia, Samsung and ZTE for selling “certain 3G and 4G wireless devices… that infringe up to seven of InterDigital’s U.S. patents.” At risk is a suite of 3G and 4G products from USB modems to laptops and covering phones and tablets in between. The specific models aren’t listed in InterDigital’s release, but the company is asking the United States International Trade Commission to block the import and sale of them all. This isn’t the first time Samsung, Nokia or Huawei have come to blows with InterDigital — the former settled back in 2008, the latter filed its own lawsuit and Nokia has more than a few battle scars already — and something tells us it won’t be the last. One company that should stay out of the crosshairs? RIM. The House of BlackBerry just extended its patent licensing deal and can now rest easy.

Update: You can also add Sony to the list of companies who have paid up.

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Via: Phone Scoop

Source: InterDigital, BusinessWire

InterDigital wins appeal in never-ending Nokia patent battle

Interdigital

We’ll leave labeling of InterDigital to the individual — whether you prefer patent troll or non-practicing entity, the semantics don’t concern us. What does concern us, however, is the IP firm’s ongoing legal battle with Nokia, and its recent victory over the Finnish manufacturer in the US Court of Appeals. The ruling reverses a previous decision handed down by the ITC that found Nokia did not violate InterDigital’s patents, but the trio of judges hearing the appeal disagreed. The claims in question relate to 3G radios and networks — the same patents that the firm used to target ZTE and Huawei. It doesn’t appear that there will be any immediate repercussions for Nokia, either in the form of import bans or settlement fees. The Windows Phone champion is considering its next move, which may involve appealing the appeal.

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InterDigital wins appeal in never-ending Nokia patent battle originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 02 Aug 2012 09:48:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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