Samsung Retaliates Against Ericsson With Patent Complaint
An anonymous reader writes "The wireless patent wars don't pause at Christmas time, keeping numerous IP lawyers (and a certain litigation watcher) busy even at this time of year. No one seriously expected Samsung to turn the other cheek when Ericsson sued it and requested a U.S. import ban against a host of Galaxy devices. The Korean electronics giant, which is increasingly competing with Ericsson in the telecoms infrastructure market, just filed an ITC complaint of its own. The title of the complaint is Certain Wireless Communication Equipment and Articles Therein. That description would apply to dozens, no: hundreds, of patent lawsuits in the world. The complaint has not been published yet, but it would be out of character for Samsung not to assert some of its patents on wireless industry standards (and maybe some others, too)." (Also at the BBC.)
FIR-*ahghakkk* Sorry about that, just had to kill the stupid side of myself. But subject says all.
patentwars.slashdot.org
or
idiotic-patents.slashdot.org
or
thermonuclear.slashdot.org
or
something else; too many articles these days about patents and such. Maybe Armageddon is at hand?
If you keep throwing chairs, one day you'll break windows....
That covers just about anything.
Even "Certain Wireless Communication Equipment and Articles Therein".
Schroedinger's Brexit: The UK is both in and out of the EU at the same time!
The title of the complaint is Certain Wireless Communication Equipment and Articles Therein. That description would apply to dozens, no: hundreds, of patent lawsuits in the world. The complaint has not been published yet,
Wrong. The referenced site, fosspatents.com has this update, in a separate blog post:
Meanwhile I've been able to download a copy of Samsung's complaint and can provide more information on the patents-in-suit and the products and technologies at issue.
and then it goes on to list the 7 patents-in-suit that Samsung is asserting against Ericsson.
If you keep throwing chairs, one day you'll break windows....
Yeah, total coincidence Samsung ignored this blatent infringement for years and only filed a lawsuit after Erricsson did first. On second thought, maybe your dictionary is broken.
retaliate (v) make a counterattack and return like for like, especially evil for evil; (and this is slashdot, where patents are evil).
Do you even lift?
These aren't the 'roids you're looking for.
Now let's see what happens when it is Samsung doing what Apple does.
There's a small flaw in your point. Samsung is defending against a patent threat by Ericsson; Samsung has never been the patent aggressor against any competitor; it has always defended by counter-suing.
Apple, on the other hand... have gone thermonuclear with no heed or regard to the consequences.
If you keep throwing chairs, one day you'll break windows....
Samsung Techwin makes the K9 Thunder self-propelled howitzer.
Yeah, total coincidence Samsung ignored this blatent infringement for years and only filed a lawsuit after Erricsson did first. On second thought, maybe your dictionary is broken.
retaliate (v) make a counterattack and return like for like, especially evil for evil; (and this is slashdot, where patents are evil).
Hairy Vagina: I question your ability to compute logic.
It's obvious that Ericsson ignored Samsung's "blatant" infringement... maybe. I think your dictionary is broken. Ericsson fired the first shot across Samsung's bow. Samsung is retaliating. /pedant
Like everyone else lawyers need to get something nice at this time of year. What better than to initiate some nice expensive legal action! With a bit of luck it will keep them going until Santa comes again.
..... lawsuite
Yay. No Samsung in the US, no Apple in Europe. A scorched Earth patent war would finally wake people up to the fact that no complex item can be made without violating thousands of patents. It's just that most industries there are few enough players that a patent war would result in more self damage. If Ford sued Toyota, Japan and others would insta-block Ford. If Boeing and Airbus had issues, France/EU and the US would block the "enemy". Airbus wants access to the US carriers, and Boeing wants access to the EU carriers, and everyone knows you can't build a complex object without violating patents, so they don't look, unless blatant, and hope for an out of court settlement.
It wasn't until the fractured phone market thought it could win the unwinnable war where this mess got enough traction to make a public stink.
We can only hope everyone sees it through and the result is world-wide bans of all mobile phones. Once the execs want their SIII, Note2, iPhone, or Blackberry and can't get it, then the people with power will start to look into the problem (that 20% of Slashdot could fix better than the current system, and 95% *think* they can solve better than the current system).
Learn to love Alaska
For those following at home, Apple and Microsoft are the "leading members" of this patent pool and Ericsson is nothing more than a usueful pawn.
Oh look an expert. Except these Ericsson patents are owned by Ericsson and not Rockstar. Totally separate
Those aren't mutually exclusive. Samsung is entirely capable of rationally deciding that retaliation maximizes near and long term value.
I... can't... brain shutting down... Patent lawsuit on Slashdot... must blame Apple... Apple not involved... does not compute... EXTERMINATE! EXTERMINATE!
http://topnews.us/content/251574-ericsson-lay-1500-employees-sweden
No wonder Ericsson desperately wants money.
Government cannot make man richer, but it can make him poorer. - Ludwig von Mises
That does not make it "totally separate" Corporate partners tend to work together to do things, such as go after their competitors.
When you cant win, ad hominem.
The title of the complaint is Certain Wireless Communication Equipment and Articles Therein. That description would apply to dozens, no: hundreds, of patent lawsuits in the world.
"The title of the complaint is 'State v. Jones'. That description would apply to dozens, no: hundreds, of criminal actions in the world."
Similar concept. The title is irrelevant, Subby. It simply identifies the general subject matter as a way of checking to see if you've got the right suit, because if you have a single digit typo in your case number, you might get "Balloon Dissection Devices" or "Olive Oil" or "Ground Fault Interrupters and Products". I'm not sure whether this was an attempt to spread FUD or simple ignorance, but either way, stop it.
There's a small flaw in your point. Samsung is defending against a patent threat by Ericsson; Samsung has never been the patent aggressor against any competitor; it has always defended by counter-suing.
There's a small flaw in your point. Apple never copied anyone's phone design. They are defending themselves against a blatantly copied phone that's infringing upon their potential marketshare, like any responsible company should do.
The cesspool just got a check and balance.
fan boi to the rescue!
I wish you had chosen a different market. wiz, one other that the Aircraft Industry.
Before Airbus started making the A300 the European market was approx 90%+ Boeing & McDonnel-Douglas
Boeing cried 'dirty tricks' when US Carrier Eastern Airlines bought some A300's. There were other spats like that over the years but they were just spats.
Now the market is approx 45% each Airbus & Boeing. the other 10% goes to the likes of Bombardier etc.
On this side of the pond EasyJet is 100% Boeing 737.
There is no restriction on the markets for each manufacturer.
Why? Simply because so much of a Boeing is made in the EU and so much of an Airbus is made in the US. Denying a market to either one of them would hurt jobs locally.
Please do some elemental research before posting such silly comments. I've been working in the Aircraft Industry almost all the time since 1969 when I started out building B-727 Flight Simulators.
I like it how "blatantly copied" devices fool juries all around the world and Apple has to resort to stuff like "blatantly bounces when scrolled".
I'm sure you didn't even know word "blatantly" until Apple started pushing it in their press-releases and I'm sure you still don't know it doesn't mean "has a passing chance to match a rather vague design patent, which even Apple devices don't follow"
I believe the easiest way that 95% would be able to improve the current system would be simply to state "not this", and it would be an improvement no matter what comes of it.
This is definitely right up there with Apple suing Samsung when Samsung makes their screens and leases them patents. Obviously backlash was coming! You know what they always say: Those in glass houses shouldn't throw cell phones.
Apple invented the touch screen phone shaped like a rectangle with round corners? I'de like to direct your attention to the IBM Simon (1993), the Ericsson P800 or the OS XDA Flame. Oh, I'm sorry, I forgot that there were no phones or mp3 players before apple invented them.
The whole patent systems needs a rework to bring it up to speed with today's technology. Asking that they get it ready for tomorrow's is wishful thinking at best.
Dear aunt, let's set so double the killer delete select all
I didn't know that Ericsson still made phones. I can't remember seeing one in ages, and who would want one? I don't know if I've ever known anyone to have an Ericsson phone, come to think of it.
1: "Hey, I got a new cell phone for Christmas."
2: "Oh, what did you get?!"
1: "An Ericsson model X!"
2: "Oh. That's....... nice..."
Then again, when Nokia partnered with Microsoft, I didn't know they still made phones either. I imagine 9gag is keeping them afloat, and the four people on the planet that are still delusional about Windows Mobile.
You can view the Complaint and all of the exhibits here:
https://www.docketalarm.com/cases/International_Trade_Commission/337-2926/Certain_Wireless_Communication_Equipment_and_Articles_Therein/499826/1/
Disclosure: this is my site.
Fast Federal Court and I.T.C. updates
Nevermind that Samsung and Apple were suing each other at the same time.
Like getting their home country to pass protectionist trade laws, getting the Galaxy banned for two years in the United States? Oh wait, that was South Korea banning the iPhone.
Haterz gotta hate.
Easyjet is all Airbus
Rynair is all Boeing
The Simon looks like a brick with a monochrome LCD panel - probably nice, but low res, and not touch screen - it was 1993 after all. The P800 was a flip phone, with extremely limited functionality in comparison with an iphone or any modern smartphone. The OS XDA Flame came out after the announcement/demo of the iPhone. Regarding MP3 players, yes, there were MP3 players prior to Apple's ipod. Many, in fact. Now ask yourself why Apple took over the market with a higher priced device with a niche platform (recall the initial ipods were firewire - only common on macs) Thanks for playing.
All that said, I fully agree with the statement on the patent system. It is broken. Does it need fixing? Or should it just abide by the original limitations? (Hint - you couldn't patent artistic designs, general ideas, physical or natural elements/laws, business processes, etc)
The cesspool just got a check and balance.