Slashdot Mirror


Apple Wins $120 Million From Samsung In Slide-To-Unlock Patent Battle (theverge.com)

Apple has finally claimed victory over Samsung to the count of $120 million. "The Supreme Court said today that it wouldn't hear an appeal of the patent infringement case, first decided in 2014, which has been bouncing through appeals courts in the years since," reports The Verge. From the report: The case revolved around Apple's famous slide-to-unlock patent and, among others, its less-famous quick links patent, which covered software that automatically turned information like a phone number into a tappable link. Samsung was found to have infringed both patents. The ruling was overturned almost two years later, and then reinstated once again less than a year after that. From there, Samsung appealed to the Supreme Court, which is where the case met its end today. Naturally, Samsung isn't pleased with the outcome. "Our argument was supported by many who believed that the Court should hear the case to reinstate fair standards that promote innovation and prevent abuse of the patent system," a Samsung representative said in a statement. The company also said the ruling would let Apple "unjustly profit" from an invalid patent.

1 of 72 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Time to give credit where credit is due by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    Apple invented many of the features in smartphones that we take for granted.

    Like Cut & Paste. Oh wait, the first iPhone lacked cut & paste which was present on Windows Mobile, PalmOS, and other phones that predate the iPhone.

    Ok. Well Apple surly invented having apps on your phone. Because the first iPhone had the App Store. Oh wait, the initial iPhone did not allow native apps to be installed on the phone, only browser-based apps that required the phone to be online were permitted. Yet feature phones from Samsung, LG, Kyocera, Nokia, RIM and others had carrier-oriented app stores for ring tones and in some cases applications. And of course there were several third party PalmOS markets for Treo phones.

    Apple's key innovation is branding of the industrial design. This is an old play by Apple, they did this with the both trademark and copyright litigation against other GUI vendors for copying their Macintosh GUI in the 80's. That Apple is using the patent system is hardly a different tack than the use of other legal loopholes to squelch competitors.