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Ars Technica -
10 hours and 45 minutes ago
Though Apple both publicly and privately warned
smartphone makers that it wouldn't tolerate its intellectual property being infringed upon, the
company made its first move against Taiwan-based HTC earlier this month with a federal lawsuit and a
complaint to the
International Trade Commission. HTC says it doesn't plan to give up without a fight.
"HTC disagrees with Apple's actions and will fully defend itself," HTC Corporation CEO Peter Chou
said in a statement. "HTC strongly advocates intellectual property protection and will continue
to respect other innovators and their technologies as we have always done, but we will continue
to embrace competition through our own innovation as a healthy way for consumers to get the best
mobile experience possible."
HTC cited the company's numerous firsts to market as proof of its innovation, including selling
the first Windows Mobile smartphone in 2002 and the first Android smartphone in 2008. (It also
lays claim to the "first gesture-based smartphone" released in June 2007, but that's also the
same month that Apple released the original iPhone.) It also noted that Fast Company and
MIT Technology Review has both recently named HTC as one of the top innovative companies
globally.
The company is confident that its own patent portfolio will prove useful in its defense. "We've been in business
since 1997 and a pioneer in the smart phone space," HTC America VP Jason Mackenzie told
Forbes. "We absolutely have our share of patents."
However, Deutsche Banks analyst Chris Whitmore noted recently that Apple has amassed a
much larger patent portfolio than HTC, or even Google, whose Andriod operating system is believed
to be the real target of Apple's legal ire. Since 2000, Apple has been awarded over 3,000
patents, compared to Google's 316 and HTC's 58. Prior to the launch of the iPhone, HTC actually
filed zero patents with USPTO. Sheer numbers don't guarantee a slam dunk for Apple, but they do
certainly give Apple a much larger cache of ammunition to draw from.
Many have criticized Apple for "competition by litigation" by filing complaints against HTC, but
as The New York Times recently reported, lawsuits not at all
uncommon in the mobile space. Apple believes it has a right and duty to protect its own
innovations, apparently just as other companies in the mobile space do. "We think competition is
healthy, but competitors should create their own original technology, not steal ours," Apple CEO
Steve Jobs said earlier this month.
Furthermore, Microsoft VP and deputy general counsel Horacio Gutierrez said the lawsuits are
merely a sign that the modern smartphone market is still in its early stages, and that this
particular lawsuit
won't stifle innovation as some believe. "The smartphone market is still in a nascent state;
much innovation still lies ahead in this field," he wrote in an analysis of Apple's patent
litigation. "In all nascent technology markets, there is a period early where IP rights will be
sorted out."
Unless Apple and HTC come to an out-of-court settlement, we could be waiting until at
least 2012 to hear a decisions from either the ITC or US district court on the matter.
Read the comments on this post


|
Gear & Gadgets Section - Ars Technica -
10 hours and 45 minutes ago
Apple both publicly and privately warned
smartphone makers that it wouldn't tolerate its intellectual property being infringed upon, and
the company made its first move against Taiwan-based HTC earlier this month with a federal lawsuit and a
complaint to the
International Trade Commission. HTC says it doesn't plan to give up without a fight.
"HTC disagrees with Apple's actions and will fully defend itself," HTC Corporation CEO Peter Chou
said in a statement. "HTC strongly advocates intellectual property protection and will continue
to respect other innovators and their technologies as we have always done, but we will continue
to embrace competition through our own innovation as a healthy way for consumers to get the best
mobile experience possible."
HTC cited the company's numerous firsts to market as proof of its innovation, including selling
the first Windows Mobile smartphone in 2002 and the first Android smartphone in 2008. (It also
lays claim to the "first gesture-based smartphone" released in June 2007, but that's also the
same month that Apple released the original iPhone.) It also noted that Fast Company and
MIT Technology Review have both recently named HTC as one of the top innovative
companies globally.
The company is confident that its own patent portfolio will prove useful in its defense. "We've been in business
since 1997 and a pioneer in the smart phone space," HTC America VP Jason Mackenzie told
Forbes. "We absolutely have our share of patents."
However, Deutsche Banks analyst Chris Whitmore noted recently that Apple has amassed a
much larger patent portfolio than HTC, or even Google, whose Andriod operating system is believed
to be the real target of Apple's legal ire. Since 2000, Apple has been awarded over 3,000
patents, compared to Google's 316 and HTC's 58. Prior to the launch of the iPhone, HTC actually
filed zero patents with USPTO. Sheer numbers don't guarantee a slam dunk for Apple, but they do
certainly give Apple a much larger cache of ammunition to draw from.
Many have criticized Apple for "competition by litigation" by filing complaints against HTC, but
as The New York Times recently reported, lawsuits are not at all
uncommon in the mobile space. Apple believes it has a right and duty to protect its own
innovations, apparently just as other companies in the mobile market do. "We think competition is
healthy, but competitors should create their own original technology, not steal ours," Apple CEO
Steve Jobs said earlier this month.
Furthermore, Microsoft VP and deputy general counsel Horacio Gutierrez said the lawsuits are
merely a sign that the modern smartphone market is still in its early stages, and that this
particular lawsuit
won't stifle innovation as some believe. "The smartphone market is still in a nascent state;
much innovation still lies ahead in this field," he wrote in an analysis of Apple's patent
litigation. "In all nascent technology markets, there is a period early where IP rights will be
sorted out."
Unless Apple and HTC come to an out-of-court settlement, we could be waiting until at
least 2012 to hear a decision from either the ITC or US district court on the matter.
Read the comments on this post


|
BusinessWeek Online -- -
11 hours and 14 minutes ago
VirnetX Holding Corp., which won a $105.8 million jury verdict this week against Microsoft Corp.,
filed a new complaint seeking additional cash from the software maker over use of the inventions.
|
Engadget -
11 hours and 21 minutes ago
 They're easily missed about the mass of Apple patent applications revealed each
year, but the company has filed a few regarding projectors (pico projectors, specifically), and the
latest one to be published has now offered a few more details on how they might all fit together.
That application boasts the rather broad title of "projector system and methods," and basically
describes a setup that would let various devices (including a laptop or phone) remotely interact
with a projector, which could itself be built into a device like a phone. To do that, each device
in question would be equipped with a sensor of some sort that would be able to receive data from
the projector, and even allow you to do fairly advanced things like calibrate the projector
remotely. The application further goes on to detail how the system could accommodate multiple
clients -- letting folks overlay multiple images on a single presentation, for example -- and it
would apparently be able to receive and broadcast audio between multiple clients as well. Does this
mean you'll soon be able to control your pico projector-equipped iPhone from your sensor-equipped
MacBook? Probably not, but it may not be quite as far fetched as some of Apple's other
patent
applications.
Apple patent application offers more evidence of projector plans originally appeared on
Engadget on Thu, 18 Mar 2010 14:24:00 EST. Please see our
terms for use of feeds.
Permalink PicoProjector-info
| Patent Application,
Patently Apple | Email this | Comments

|
iLounge | All Things iPod, iPhone, iTunes and beyond -
12 hours and 2 minutes ago
A newly-published Apple patent application suggests the company is working on a location-based
social networking service referred to as “iGroups.” The application describes a system
through which multiple iPhone, iPad, or iPod touch users at an event, meeting, or other gathering
could exchange information automatically by having their devices exchange encrypted,
location-tagged “tokens,” which would then be sent to a trusted... 
|
Read/WriteWeb -
12 hours and 2 minutes ago
Based on a
patent filing that was published by the USPTO today, Apple
could soon enter the location-based social networking market. The
patent, which was filed in September 2008, describes a scenario where a group of users with
mobile devices like the iPhone come together at an event like a concert, wedding, political rally
or trade show. Normally, you would have to collect personal information from all the attendees
you meet and then transfer this data manually into your existing social network if you want to
stay in touch with them. Apple's patent, however, describes a system where all of the devices in
a specific location can automatically become part of a new social network based on their
location. The patent filing refers to this service as iGroups.
Sponsor
This could, for example, allow event organizers to provide attendees with additional content and
services during the event and after it is over. The exchange of this information would be
brokered by trusted devices at the event and information about the social network can be stored
in the cloud and exchanged with other services.
Turning Ad Hoc Networks into Permanent Social Networks
As Apple notes in the patent ("Group Formation Using Anonymous Broadcast Information "),
technologies like Bluetooth personal area networks allow modern cell phones to easily create ad
hoc networks, but it is virtually impossible to recreate this network at a later time for users
to continue their discussions or exchange additional content.
In a very detailed example, Apple's patent describes how iGroups could automatically detect that
a group of users is in or around a specific location (in the example, this event is Apple WWDC
2008). The iGroups service could then invite all the attendees to join this group and create a
permanent social network for everybody who was in attendance and opts in to the group.
Will Apple Actually Do Anything With This Patent?
This, of course,
isn't Apple's
first patent for a location-based service. As with all of Apple's patents, it remains to be
seen if the company will actually release any product based on this filing. Given Apple's
position in the mobile market, however, it wouldn't come as a surprise if the company decided to
turn some of these patents into actual product.
Discuss


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CNET News.com -
12 hours and 15 minutes ago
A patent filed for a social-networking service called iGroups would allow iPhone and other
mobile-device users to stay in touch and share location updates.
|
PhoenixJP.News -
12 hours and 49 minutes ago
President Obama is proving to be a fan of potentially draconian patent and copyright law. Make the
contents and the talks public, and protect fair use! Please!
|
InformationWeek RSS Feed -
13 hours and 8 minutes ago
The International Trade Commission complaint says Cablevision's set-top boxes infringe five Verizon
patents pertaining to video downloading and social networking features.

|
Gizmodo -
13 hours and 46 minutes ago
|
Gizmodo -
13 hours and 46 minutes ago
|
MacNN | The Macintosh News Network -
14 hours and 10 minutes ago
 The US Patent Office on Thursday published an Apple patent application detailing
social networking technology using proximity-based communication via Wi-Fi and Bluetooth. The
background description suggests the technology could be used to automatically share contact
information between devices, rather than requiring manual entry into web-based networking
services....

|
paidContent.org -
14 hours and 46 minutes ago
Two weeks after Apple filed suit against HTC for infringing on 20 Apple
(NSDQ: AAPL) patents related to the device, underlying architecture and hardware,
the Android-and-Windows-Phone-maker has issued a formal response from its North American
headquarters in Seattle.
HTC’s CEO Peter Chou said: “HTC disagrees with Apple’s actions and will fully
defend itself. HTC strongly advocates intellectual property protection and will continue to
respect other innovators and their technologies as we have always done, but we will continue to
embrace competition through our own innovation as a healthy way for consumers to get the best
mobile experience possible.”
|
paidContent.org -
14 hours and 46 minutes ago
Two weeks after Apple filed suit against HTC for infringing on 20 Apple
(NSDQ: AAPL) patents related to the device, underlying architecture and hardware,
the Android-and-Windows-Phone-maker has issued a formal response from its North American
headquarters in Seattle.
HTC’s CEO Peter Chou said: “HTC disagrees with Apple’s actions and will fully
defend itself. HTC strongly advocates intellectual property protection and will continue to
respect other innovators and their technologies as we have always done, but we will continue to
embrace competition through our own innovation as a healthy way for consumers to get the best
mobile experience possible.”
|
CNET News.com -
16 hours and 8 minutes ago
Hewlett-Packard reaches agreement on several patent violation complaints filed last year against
makers of compatible inkjet cartridge.
|
InformationWeek RSS Feed -
17 hours ago
Manufacturer of Google phones says Steve Jobs' patent complaints are groundless.

|
Macworld -
17 hours and 20 minutes ago
Taiwan-based HTC responded on Wednesday to Apple's patent infringement suit, saying that it
disagreed with the actions taken and will defend itself fully.

|
DailyTech News Feed -
17 hours and 45 minutes ago
Company is standing up to Apple's patent claims...
|
the::unwired -
18 hours and 38 minutes ago
HTC Corporation
yesterday outlined its disagreement with Apple's recent
legal actions. In the press statement, HTC affirmed that it's commitment to create a
portfolio of innovative smartphones that gives consumers a variety of choices. Founded in 1997
with a passion for innovation and a vision for how smartphones would change people's lives, HTC
has continually driven this vision by consistently introducing award-winning smartphones with
U.S. mobile operators. The industry has recognized HTC's contributions through a variety of
awards including Fast Company's 2010 Top 50 Most Innovative Companies and MIT Technology Review's
2010 50 Most Innovative Companies.
Related Links: [Permalink]
Tagged under: [HTC] [Apple] [Patent] [Infringement] [Lawsuit]
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