German Court Leans in Motorola?s Favor in iCloud Infringe, Could cost Apple $2.7bill

Posted:
in iPhone edited January 2014
Didn't see anything on this posted further, so...



Quote:

Motorola has filed a suit in a German court claiming elements of Apple’s iCloud service infringe upon patents held by company. Namely, the patents concern email and data sync between Apple’s cloud service and their mobile devices. The judge presiding over the case has not come to any ruling for the moment, but seems to be leaning in Motorola’s favor. Apple requested $2.7 billion in collateral should the final verdict agree with Motorola’s initial claims. In the German court system, this collateral is paid by the winning party to defer any lost revenue during the appeals process. Should Apple win an appeal (a stage the case has not even reached), they keep the money to cover damages. If they lose the appeal process, Motorola should see the money back



The sum may never be placed on the table. The judge questions if Apple would really incur such losses, and believes there are alternative ways to offer the cloud services without infringing on the patents of Motorola. The trail will go to court in February of 2012



Source: Eletronista





If Apple has to pay the $2.7 billion, will this affect any future lawsuits?



Can't companies just pay each other and skip the lawsuits?

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 2
    gatorguygatorguy Posts: 24,176member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by linkgx1 View Post


    Didn't see anything on this posted further, so...









    If Apple has to pay the $2.7 billion, will this affect any future lawsuits?



    Accoding to German law, Apple may have had the right to demand Moto post bond of $2.7 billion until the final judgement was made. Apple wasn't going need to post a bond. The judge wasn't convinced by any of Apple's arguments, so that $2.7 billion bond request isn't in the picture now.
  • Reply 2 of 2
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Gatorguy View Post


    Accoding to German law, Apple may have had the right to demand Moto post bond of $2.7 billion until the final judgement was made. Apple wasn't going need to post a bond. The judge wasn't convinced by any of Apple's arguments, so that $2.7 billion bond request isn't in the picture now.



    I find it funny how in one country they violate law and in another they don't. How much does Germany bring Apple anyways?
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