China's ZTE and Huawei Join the German Patent Fray
An anonymous reader writes "Germany has pretty much become the new Eastern District of Texas, the world's most popular patent battleground. After Apple, Samsung and Motorola, the Chinese are now going to Germany as well to sort out their domestic patent squabbles. Huawei and ZTE, arguably the People's Republic's leading wireless tech companies, started suing each other in April last year. On Friday the Mannheim Regional Court held a Huawei vs. ZTE hearing, reports a local patent watcher. Huawei says ZTE infringes a 4G/LTE handover patent and wants its rival's base stations and USB modem sticks banned in Germany. More clashes between the two are coming up in the same court and in other places in Europe, including France."
Agree, but how about submitting something interesting, then? For example...
http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2012/12/google-maps-for-ios-may-violate-european-data-protection-law/
Anyone else find it ironic that Huawei is going after another firm for infringement after the number of articles about Huawei stealing and/or reverse-engineering competitors equipment in order to compete with them?
ZTE is state owned. Huawei is officially private, but the Chinese government is still certainly a major influence on the company, enough that the US government is concerned about espionage. This is akin to the time Fox News threatened sue another Fox division over a parody of their copyrighted ticker style. Except in the Fox case, someone higher up the chain quickly took notice and told the offending executive to knock it off and play nice with their ally before it went to court.
They're even copying our frivolous patent lawsuits now! They learn quick...
Maybe the world wouldnt be so bad without patents.Discuss.
Two companies from the same foreign country suing each other for patents? Tell them to fuck off and sort it out in their own court.
The reason is quite simple: German law does not allow for the prior art defense. Even when the accused party can prove that the patent is invalid due to prior art, it is nevertheless found guilty of infringement. AFAIK this is a speciality of German patent jurisdiction that makes it very attractive to sue in Germany (more precisely: in Duesseldorf) for patent infringement.
Summary godwined in first sentence.
'When the Going gets Weird, the Weird turn Pro.' - Hunter S. Thompson