US judge tosses Apple suit against Motorola

ПОДЕЛИТЬСЯ

US judge tosses Apple suit against Motorola Photo courtesy of japostei.com

A federal judge on Monday tossed out an Apple lawsuit accusing Google-owned Motorola Mobility of trying to charge the iPhone maker too much for licenses to essential technology for mobile devices, AFP reports. US District Court Judge Barbara Crabb dismissed the case after a week of pre-trial legal wrangling that evidently convinced her that the matter was headed for prolonged litigation instead of earnest resolution. Apple filed suit against Motorola Mobility early last year after Motorola claimed it was due 2.25 percent royalty on sales of devices powered by iOS software, using patented Wi-Fi and video technology. Apple argued that the price was too high because the technology was in a category considered industry-essential and therefore had to be licensed under terms that are "fair, reasonable, and nondiscriminatory" (FRAND). Crabb sided with Apple regarding the FRAND status of the Motorola technology but dismissed the case on Monday, when the trial was to begin, after Apple placed conditions on whether it would accept license terms set by the judge. "The case cannot proceed to trial on the remaining issue; case dismissed," Crabb wrote in her ruling. Apple can appeal the judge's decision. Motorola Mobility said in a statement, ""We're pleased that the court has dismissed Apple's lawsuit with prejudice. Motorola has long offered licensing to our extensive standards-essential patent portfolio at a reasonable and non-discriminatory rate in line with industry standards. We remain interested in reaching an agreement with Apple." Apple did not respond to an AFP request for comment.

ПОДЕЛИТЬСЯ
A federal judge on Monday tossed out an Apple lawsuit accusing Google-owned Motorola Mobility of trying to charge the iPhone maker too much for licenses to essential technology for mobile devices, AFP reports. US District Court Judge Barbara Crabb dismissed the case after a week of pre-trial legal wrangling that evidently convinced her that the matter was headed for prolonged litigation instead of earnest resolution. Apple filed suit against Motorola Mobility early last year after Motorola claimed it was due 2.25 percent royalty on sales of devices powered by iOS software, using patented Wi-Fi and video technology. Apple argued that the price was too high because the technology was in a category considered industry-essential and therefore had to be licensed under terms that are "fair, reasonable, and nondiscriminatory" (FRAND). Crabb sided with Apple regarding the FRAND status of the Motorola technology but dismissed the case on Monday, when the trial was to begin, after Apple placed conditions on whether it would accept license terms set by the judge. "The case cannot proceed to trial on the remaining issue; case dismissed," Crabb wrote in her ruling. Apple can appeal the judge's decision. Motorola Mobility said in a statement, ""We're pleased that the court has dismissed Apple's lawsuit with prejudice. Motorola has long offered licensing to our extensive standards-essential patent portfolio at a reasonable and non-discriminatory rate in line with industry standards. We remain interested in reaching an agreement with Apple." Apple did not respond to an AFP request for comment.
Tengrinews
Читайте также
Join Telegram
Kazakhstan and Japan sign 14 documents
Kazakhstan celebrates Independence Day
Dollar resumes slide in Kazakhstan
Astana Airport has addressed passengers
Interior Ministry warns Kazakhstanis
Tokayev to visit Ashgabat

Exchange Rates

 517.57  course up  606.65  course up  6.43  course down

 

Weather

location-current
Алматы

 

Редакция Advertising
Социальные сети