A big devilish smile on my face ....

Posted:
in General Discussion edited January 2014


Since 2007, Samsung had this evil smile while making $$ copying Apple....


 



 


It's our turn now!


 


http://www.macrumors.com/2013/08/05/samsung-loses-1-billion-in-market-value-after-u-s-veto-on-apple-ban-files-appeal-against-patent-ruling/

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 3


    After the success of the 3G/3GS/4, Samsung made the unilateral decision to invalidate the contract that Infineon had for the patents, and then asked Apple for a crazy amount (2.4 or 2.7% depending on where you read it) for each phone sold, and that was to be determined against the ENTIRE cost of the phone (almost $16 for a 16GB model!)! imageimage

  • Reply 2 of 3

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by wohjion12 View Post


    After the success of the 3G/3GS/4, Samsung made the unilateral decision to invalidate the contract that Infineon had for the patents, and then asked Apple for a crazy amount (2.4 or 2.7% depending on where you read it) for each phone sold, and that was to be determined against the ENTIRE cost of the phone (almost $16 for a 16GB model!)! imageimage



    100% true and shameful.

  • Reply 3 of 3
    kdarlingkdarling Posts: 1,640member

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by wohjion12 View Post


    After the success of the 3G/3GS/4, Samsung made the unilateral decision to invalidate the contract that Infineon had for the patents,



     


    Perhaps you're thinking of Qualcomm.


     


    Infineon chips never had a license contract for Samsung's patents, until Intel bought the company in January 2011.


     


    E.g. as noted last year, in a case in the Netherlands..


     


    "The court did not find Samsung's patent rights to be exhausted with respect to baseband chips Apple purchased from Infineon until January 2011.


     


    "Concerning baseband chips Apple subsequently purchased from Intel (which acquired Infineon's mobile baseband chip division), the court granted Apple leave to make a case for patent exhaustion based on an analysis under U.S. law. "

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