Newsletters
News & Information for Technology Purchasers NewsFactor Sites:       NewsFactor.com     Enterprise Security Today     CRM Daily     Business Report     Sci-Tech Today  
   
Home Enterprise I.T. Cloud & Virtualization Applications Unified Communications More Topics...
Commvault Simpana® 10
Protect, manage, access, and
realize the untapped value of data.

www.commvault.com
Mobile Tech
Introducing Simpana® 10 software
Average Rating:
Rate this article:  
Judge Rejects Apple
Judge Rejects Apple's Quest for U.S. Ban on Samsung Devices

By Adam Dickter
December 18, 2012 4:01PM

    Bookmark and Share
"This decision is a huge success for Samsung, strategically speaking," said analyst Neil Shah. "Avoiding permanent injunction is [more important] than the billion-dollar damages penalty, which is a drop in the ocean for cash-rich market leader Samsung." Shah said the decision costs Apple "long-term leverage over Samsung here in its home-turf."
 



Yes, Samsung ripped off Apple's patents when it made some of its smartphones. No, that doesn't mean it should be banned in the United States. That's the mixed verdict from Judge Lucy Koh of U.S. District Court in Northern California in the latest stage of the complex legal battle of the tech titans.

Koh evidently found it hard to swallow the idea that Apple -- one of the world's most profitable companies -- would suffer irreparable harm from the sale of 26 Samsung devices the Cupertino-based giant wants struck from store shelves. Koh had previously declined to issue an injunction against the devices being sold at the start of the trial. The vast majority of the products are no longer on the market.

$1 Billion Fine Looms

Among the devices are Samsung's Galaxy S 4G Relevant Products/Services, Galaxy S II (AT&T Relevant Products/Services), Galaxy S II Skyrocket, Galaxy S II (T-Mobile), Galaxy S II Epic 4G, Galaxy S Showcase, Droid Charge (Verizon) and Galaxy Prevail, according to USA Today. Koh granted an injunction against Samsung's Galaxy Tab 10.1 tablet Relevant Products/Services but lifted it in October after a jury decided Samsung had not infringed on an Apple tablet patent in question.

South Korean-based Samsung is appealing the jury's verdict on the other devices but may have to pony up a $1.05 billion judgment, which is relatively small change for both companies. Now the world's top mobile Relevant Products/Services phone maker, Samsung raked in $5.97 billion in net profit in the third quarter of this year alone.

The jury had dismissed a Samsung countersuit against Apple, related to iPhone and iPod touch technology, although a South Korean court ruled that both companies violated each other's patents.

With sales of its Galaxy brand devices soaring, Samsung was obviously pleased to maintain access to the important U.S. consumer market as holiday sales ramp up. (Sales of the new flagship Galaxy S III actually spiked shortly after the August verdict, an analyst said, possibly out of concern it might be included in the ban.)

"We are pleased that the judge today denied Apple's move to limit consumer choice, and restrict fair competition in the marketplace," a spokeswoman told us.

But it ain't over till it's over. Samsung and Apple will face off in yet another battle in the same court sometime next year in a suit filed by Apple in August aimed at the Galaxy S III smartphone. In something of a goodwill gesture, Samsung this week dropped its request for a ban of related Apple devices in some European countries "in the interest of consumer choice."

More Battles Ahead

"This decision is a huge success for Samsung, strategically speaking," senior wireless Relevant Products/Services analyst Neil Shah of Strategy Analytics told us Tuesday. "Avoiding permanent injunction is [more important] than the billion-dollar damages penalty which is a drop in the ocean for cash-rich market leader Samsung."

Shah said the decision costs Apple "long-term leverage over Samsung here in its home-turf, one of the premium smartphone markets in the world."

But despite Samsung's move to withdraw injunction requests against Apple in Europe, the U.S. rival "won't sit still," Shah said. "This is far from over."
 

Tell Us What You Think
Comment:

Name:

Ron Bor:

Posted: 2012-12-19 @ 3:15am PT
Apple fears Sumsong.



Salesforce.com is the market and technology leader in Software-as-a-Service. Its award-winning CRM solution helps 82,400 customers worldwide manage and share business information over the Internet. Experience CRM success. Click here for a FREE 30-day trial.


 Mobile Tech
1.   Why Google's Project Loon is Smart
2.   Authorities Want Phone 'Kill Switch'
3.   Small Business Gets Mobile Ad Boost
4.   Apple Bides Time, But Markets Moving
5.   MS Office 365 for iPhone Hits Market


advertisement
Verizon, Samsung Look Beyond 4G LTE
AWS to give Verizon a capacity boost.
Average Rating:
Authorities Want Phone 'Kill Switch'
One-third of thefts said to be phones.
Average Rating:
Small Business Gets Mobile Ad Boost
Online marketing adapted for mobile.
Average Rating:
Product Information and Resources for Technology You Can Use To Boost Your Business

Enterprise Hardware Spotlight
Samsung Offers Tiny, Superfast PCIe SSDs for Ultrabooks
Solid-state drives are continuing their march forward. On Monday, Samsung Electronics announced it has started to mass produce the first PCI-Express 3.0 SSDs for the new wave of Ultrabooks.
 
Amazon.com Joins 3D Printer Craze, Enabling Wide Availability
Commercially available 3D printers have recently moved from being expensive hobbyist devices to being pricey but accessible consumer and manufacturing machines. And now, Amazon.com will sell 3D printers & supplies online.
 
New Facebook Data Center Uses All Home-Grown Servers
Facebook has opened its new data center in Lulea, Sweden. The data center is a first in two ways: the first in Europe and the first to be equipped with all Facebook-designed, Open Compute servers.
 

Mobile Enterprise Spotlight
Why Google's Project Loon is Smart Business
Google is once again proving that it's much more than a search engine or even a mobile-device company, with Project Loon. The initiative aims to bring "balloon-powered Internet" to isolated areas of the world.
 
Authorities Want Smartphone 'Kill Switch' To Fight Thefts
Law enforcement authorities are calling on the smartphone industry to adopt "kill switch" technologies that would deter theft by squeezing the market for selling stolen devices, which would be worthless if "bricked."
 
Small Business Gets Boost from Mobile Marketing
Aside from the requisite e-commerce tricks, small businesses are turning their attention to the mobile arena to engage social media-savvy customers, as mobile marketing tools offer more channels.
 

Enterprise Technology Spotlight
New Facebook Data Center Uses All Home-Grown Servers
Facebook has opened its new data center in Lulea, Sweden. The data center is a first in two ways: the first in Europe and the first to be equipped with all Facebook-designed, Open Compute servers.
 
Cisco Telecom Router Ready for Internet Traffic Flood
The Carrier Routing System-X unveiled by Cisco for the telecommunications industry is a 400 Gbps per slot system that can be expanded to nearly 1 petabit per second, enough to deal with the coming flood in demand.
 
HP's IT in a Box Targets SMBs by Using Google Apps
Hewlett-Packard is partnering with Google on HP SMB IT in a Box, which it bills as a "one-stop shop" solution for small and medium business customers. The move is likely to ruffle Microsoft's feathers.
 

Navigation
NewsFactor Network
Home/Top News | Enterprise I.T. | Cloud & Virtualization | Applications | Unified Communications | Mobile Tech | Hardware | Business Intelligence
World Wide Web | Network Security | Data Storage | Small Business | Microsoft/Windows | Apple/Mac | Linux/Open Source | Personal Tech
Press Releases
NewsFactor Network Enterprise I.T. Sites
NewsFactor Technology News | Enterprise Security Today | CRM Daily

NewsFactor Business and Innovation Sites
Sci-Tech Today | NewsFactor Business Report

NewsFactor Services
FreeNewsFeed | Free Newsletters | XML/RSS Feed

About NewsFactor Network | How To Contact Us | Article Reprints | Careers @ NewsFactor | Services for PR Pros | Top Tech Wire | How To Advertise

Privacy Policy | Terms of Service
© Copyright 2000-2013 NewsFactor Network. All rights reserved. Article rating technology by Blogowogo. Member of Accuserve Ad Network.