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Preliminary ITC Ruling: Motorola Not In Violation of Apple's Patents

SpuriousLogic writes with a preliminary ruling in the ITC case between Apple and Motorola. Quoting eWeek: "Motorola is celebrating an initial triumph over Apple, after a U.S. International Trade Commission administrative law judge issued an initial determination (PDF) finding that Motorola Mobility has not violated any of the three patents listed in an October 2010 lawsuit Apple filed against the Droid maker. ... The determination isn't the final say ... in March, the ruling will be reviewed by a six-member ITC panel that will announce the ultimate ruling. However, according to Zacks Equity Research, it's unusual for the ITC panel, which has the power to block device imports, to contradict a judge's determination."

27 of 106 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Bribes? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It's hard to be clear about patents when the patents themselves (never mind the patent system itself) are unintelligible.

    Did a Google Streetview car run over your dog or something?

  2. seems so by unity100 · · Score: 4, Informative

    Did a Google Streetview car run over your dog or something?

    or more likely, he is one of them 4-5 shill accounts which always end up having a first post against google/pro microsoft in all relevant subjects. someone was tracking them. i guess s/he will post in this thread too.

  3. Mebbe Tim Kooks won't get the 378Million after all by Taco+Cowboy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Hope that this will be the first of many many defeats Apple will face in the future

    I've had enough of patent trolling, no matter if it comes from Microsoft or Apple

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  4. Paging Florian Mueller by symbolset · · Score: 5, Funny

    Florian Mueller to the white courtesy phone. One order of crow to go for Mr. Mueller.

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  5. Courts are becoming more efficient. by mjwx · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I remember a time where companies would get 3 or 4 years of quality FUD out of a false patent claim. All Apple got were a few months and some Florian Mueller posts. I'd be asking for my money back, at least from Mueller.

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  6. iLawyer 4G by omganton · · Score: 5, Informative

    The intellectual property lawsuits are getting out of hand. The constant litigation between Apple and [insert every other phone manufacturer] is not only holding back innovation, it's passing the costs on to the consumer. The amount of money these companies spend fighting over small print, legal wording, and patent technicalities is atrocious; in the end, we pay for their lawyers and court fees. Apple should be encouraging competition, not trying to crush it. Let the consumer decide if Motorola deserves to compete with Apple, not a court.

  7. Re:iLawyer 4G by Colonel+Korn · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The constant litigation between Apple and [insert every other phone manufacturer] is not only holding back innovation

    Really? Because I see a whole bunch of new phones at CES. Do you have any evidence that innovation is being held back, or is this just a gut "but it must be so" feeling?

    There are/were a bunch of countries with Samsung tablet unavailability because of Apple-requested injunctions. It's usually hard to point at the status quo and make a good case for what would have been if only something else had happened, so I think that's pretty solid evidence for the GP's claim.

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  8. Apple hasn't Lost Yet... by Nethemas+the+Great · · Score: 3, Insightful

    There's still plenty of time to grease some palms before the ITC makes its ruling.

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  9. ITC usually reject, but a ban isn't the only goal by ciaran_o_riordan · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Almost all applications for an ITC import ban are rejected:

    http://en.swpat.org/wiki/United_States_International_Trade_Commission

    But that's not the point. For a number of weeks or months, there's a cloud hanging over the target company and investors don't know if a device will ever be on sale in the USA. It's serious FUD, for free.

    An actual import ban would just be monopolist icing on the FUD cake.

  10. Re:Bribes? by elashish14 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Even moreso, it's Apple's goal of a means to enforce their ridiculously marked up prices and, on top of that, ensure that they're the only vendor allowing them to mark it up even higher. Even Apple knows that their pricing models are obviously unsustainable. Remember how the initial Iphone was $600? It would probably be even worse today if they had their way in the courts and crushed all of their competitors.

    Thankfully, their model is a failure.

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  11. Re:iLawyer 4G by imnotanumber · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Sure, that litigation holds back sales and marketplace competition... But "and by extent innovation"? How does litigation over an existing product in any way affect innovation regarding new products? Can you logically support that extension you're proposing?

    That is easy. How much time do you think it takes to develop a product if you have to pass several design aspects through the opinions of IP Lawyers and iterate until it is accepted?

    If the fear of litigation exists because of what happened to previous products it is natural that new products will be delayed because you have to try to design around stupid patents.

  12. Re:iLawyer 4G by mjwx · · Score: 4, Informative

    Sure, that litigation holds back sales and marketplace competition... But "and by extent innovation"? How does litigation over an existing product in any way affect innovation regarding new products? Can you logically support that extension you're proposing?

    You mean besides the direct effect of asking for an injunction on any product that even might be better, simply because it competes.

    Well it's designed to raise the cost of entry by increasing the risks. Smaller companies that can afford to be more innovative then Apple have a huge disincentive to release new products out of the fear of an expensive law suit that they would be unable to fight.

    Reduction in innovation is a direct result of reduction in competition. Attempting to stop competition from releasing new products reduces the new technologies available on the market.

    Not to mention the fact that the injunctions against the Galaxy Tab were because judges thought Samsung wasn't innovating

    Wrong. The German injunction was over a design patent. Not an innovation and that was overturned. The Australian injunction was voluntary. Samsung agreed to it and the first Judge, Justice Anabelle Bennett's major complaint was against Samsung's Lawyers, not a judgement on the technology itself. This judgement was overturned by a full bench of the Federal court AND a full bench of the High court. This is a very clear indication that the injunction was wrong.

    So when you learn the truth, they actually are good examples. Apple are using litigation to stop competition because they are unable to compete. As I said before, just because they aren't very good at it doesn't make it OK.

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  13. Re:iLawyer 4G by cdrudge · · Score: 3, Informative

    I honestly don't have a clue how HTC survives

    Because they are the leading smartphone manufacturer in the US (at least as of Q3 last year). That doesn't reflect worldwide numbers or revenue generated, but it's nothing to sneeze at either. My last 3 phones have been HTC and I'll continue to buy their phones. Their damn good phones, affordable, and are often hacker-friendly(er).

  14. Re:Motorola is in the cable industry and they can by symbolset · · Score: 5, Funny

    I hear Motorola invented this "cellular phone" thing that might prove popular some day. You should look it up on Wikipedia. But not Wednesday. Wednesday Wikipedia will be down.

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  15. Re:Bribes? by siddesu · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Newton resolved this flamewar coupla hundreds of years ago, apparently said something about standing, shoulders, giants. And it was not Apple's Newton, mind you.

  16. Re:Mebbe Tim Kooks won't get the 378Million after by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Apple, unfortunately, escalated the patent cold war which turned them into a target for all other companies as pre-emptive defense.

    Microsoft, despite its bluster, hasn't been willing to take an active role in suing other corporations, and is instead resorting to a less profitable extortion which keeps them in the black without dangerous risk. The companies they're dealing with also aren't willing to be the first to go into court about this and just pay off Microsoft.

    Sure, Microsoft might be able to win in court for greater profits compared to their current extortion fees, but that also has the risk of backfiring as it did for Apple. Microsoft isn't willing to run the risk whereas Apple, in their arrogance, tried to prevent their competition from taking the field. And now Apple is paying for it.

    I expect Apple to keep taking the hits for the next few years while Microsoft continues playing "nice" until a smaller company, with arrogant stupidity, decides to poke the sleeping lion. After which Microsoft will slaughter them and hang them out to dry before going back to playing nice with everybody else.

    Of course, unless Microsoft actually creates something new enough to bring in the big bucks, they're going to slowly waste away while dragging everyone else down with them thanks to their chokehold on patents.

  17. Motorola should sue Apple back by walterbyrd · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Suing Apple right out of business would be great. Although I'm sure that's too much to ask for.

    I used to like Apple, before Apple became a thuggish, IP scam company.

  18. Typical Apple zealot by walterbyrd · · Score: 5, Funny

    Apple is always right. Evidence, and logic, are irrelevant.

  19. Re:Bribes? by Runaway1956 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It's clear to a shill that patents were violated.

    Problem is, software patents are an oxymoron. Software is properly copyrighted, not patented. Until you can understand that point, we'll probably not agree on anything else.

    If we ever get past that point, then we'll begin by discussing the concept of a squarish box with rounded corners that don't snag and cut you or your clothing, one face of which is the display, taking up all the room possible on that face. Good grief, there are patents aplenty for real innovation. Patents were never meant to stifle innovation. What did you want Motorola and the rest to do - make a spherical device instead of squarish?

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  20. Apple does not innovate period by walterbyrd · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The iPhone was a huge success, and that's great. But it does not mean that Apple invented the smart phone. And it certainly does not mean that Apple invented every technology included in an iPhone - such as color icons.

    That is something that Apple, and Apple zealots, pretend they don't understand.

  21. Re:Do you think Apple gives a shi*? by walterbyrd · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If Apple doesn't care, then why is Apple constantly patent scamming?

    BTW: I think you got the roles reversed. This is not about Apple being sued, it's about one of Apple's scam lawsuits failing.

  22. Re:iLawyer 4G by Anthony+Mouse · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Except that, on the other side of the litigation, those lawsuits are protecting profits and ability to recoup R&D investment. The lawsuits reduce the incentives to make marginally innovative products or direct copies, as in the Samsung suits, but increase the incentives to make highly innovative products. The greater the innovation, the more likely to defend an infringement suit.

    There is a whole list of flaws in your argument:

    For one thing, no amount of innovation can eliminate or even substantially reduce the likelihood of litigation -- litigation comes from vague, numerous, overbroad patents. I assume the original iPhone was sufficiently innovative for your tastes, but that didn't stop them from getting sued by then-incumbents. As that example proves, creating a more innovative product may increase your chances of getting sued, because if the new product starts taking over the market then the incumbent players may turn to litigation out of desperation.

    The sort of "innovation" you're talking about -- the kind that comes through a team of lawyers telling the engineers what they have to design around -- is nothing like the innovation that anybody wants to promote. It is nothing but a highly wasteful effort at reinventing the wheel. It directs the finite time and effort of engineering talent to doing the same thing in a slightly different way, rather than putting it toward actually doing something new.

    In addition to that, the alleged increase in innovation on the part of the company initiating the litigation is nowhere in evidence. Apple continues to remain highly profitable notwithstanding the alleged copying, so there is no want for revenues to fund future R&D. More than that, the competition is what requires them to actually continue producing new innovative products -- if a company can keep its competitors' products off the market with patents then it doesn't need to spend anything more on its own R&D until the patents expire. Competitors continually producing better products mean that everyone has to keep R&D fully funded in order to stay ahead of the curve -- it forces innovative companies to stay innovative rather than innovating once and then litigating forever after.

  23. Re:Bribes? by PopeRatzo · · Score: 5, Funny

    How much Google paid for the judge for his "honest" ruling?

    Did you really register as a Slashdot user just to post that?

    I see that you registered your account when the story went "red" and made some random comment in another story while you were waiting for the Apple story to turn "green", so you could be the first post. This is well-known sock-puppet troll behavior. Around here we tend to not look so kindly on people who are paid trolls.

    Which of the "New Media Strategies" companies do you work for, "HankMoody"? Don't they train you guys to do a little better job of setting up your sockpuppet accounts?

    Are you going to make the Slashdot community embarrass you and your bosses or will you just come clean? Tell us who you work for and we'll go easy on you.

    Look, we all know that it's hard to find a job these days, and a lot of people are doing all sorts of demeaning things to put a little bread on the table. I'm not unsympathetic to your situation, but you've got to understand that when paid shills like yourself start to overrun an online community, it corrupts everything. People no longer feel comfortable discussing serious topics when the user base is seeded with shills.

    If you're effort is to undermine a thread about sleazy Apple behavior, when you post as a shill it just makes people hate Apple all that much more. And once you're outed, you're placed on a permanent pay-no-mind list and then your work is for nothing. We realize that you're only here to disrupt the free exchange of honest opinions and all of your efforts backfire. At worst you'll be outed and your minimum wage job as an internet shill will be over. It's happened before.

    Now I'll ask again: Which of the new media strategies companies do you work for? Think carefully before you answer. Accept the fact that this "HankMoody" account is burned up. Your cover is blown. It's over. Might as well come clean. We'll be watching for you now, HankMoody.

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  24. Re:iLawyer 4G by Anthony+Mouse · · Score: 3

    It is becoming apparent that the reason you think as you do is that you have no idea how patents work.

    Do you honestly not understand that a product can simultaneously be highly innovative and allegedly infringe a third party's patent? Hint: Nothing is 100% new. Everything builds on what came before. You can have a product with a thousand innovative features and all it takes is a single one more that happens to have already existed and been patented by a third party to have it declared as infringing and removed from the market.

  25. Re:Mebbe Tim Kooks won't get the 378Million after by elashish14 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    To be honest, MS played the patent game a lot smarter than Apple did. MS just makes vendors pay to shut up, even though (true to form), they are utter sleezebags about it. Apple on the other hand was totally out of their minds when they developed their legal strategy (perhaps, once again, true to form). Did Steve Jobs really think he could sue other phone manufacturers out of existence? Did they actually think that they would be the only ones that should be allowed to make smartphones? His ego always was his downfall.

    In any case, now I'd like to see someone do something about MS. Another Software Tax is a bad precedent for the industry...

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  26. Re:Bribes? by elashish14 · · Score: 5, Informative

    Slide to unlock

    Showing pictures on a phone

    Placement of status buttons and progress bars (on a phone)

    These are all software implementations, not algorithms. They should all be thrown out as patents.

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  27. Re:iLawyer 4G by HJED · · Score: 3, Insightful

    No, because that's not an invention. It might be reasonable as a trade mark however.

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