HTC And Apple Settle Patent Dispute; Perhaps Tim Cook Realizes Patent Fights Are A Waste
from the one-would-help dept
While the Apple patent disputes with Samsung and Motorola seem to get most of the publicity, Apple's first patent lawsuit against an Android phonemaker was against HTC, who quickly sued back. However, over the weekend, the two companies announced a settlement in which they're cross-licensing all of their patents to each other for a period of ten years. While the full details are secret, all of the indications are that HTC is paying Apple, but not a huge amount. HTC has said that it won't have "an adverse material impact" on its financials. While HTC remains a smaller player than Samsung, one hopes that this is actually a sign that Tim Cook has realized that Steve Jobs' infatuation with killing Android in court is not a productive strategy. This, of course, won't end many of the other patent fights around smartphones, but hopefully it shows that Apple has become less ridiculously "religious" about fighting in court, rather than focusing on the marketplace.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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Filed Under: android, patents, settlement, smartphones, tim cook, waste
Companies: apple, htc
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Time to throw some "it's good to steal music and movies" protein to your wolves already...
oh, and you're welcome for this "troll".
lol
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And next wekk, I'm stealing all the rights to Amnesia: Machine of the Pigs.
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Our I.Q./post ratio was actually doing pretty well until you posted.
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lol
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http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20121109/13423720996/draconian-downloading-law-japan-goes-in to-effect-music-sales-drop.shtml#comments
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Good
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Please try selecting another word that is more suitable for your porpoises.
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Thank goodness
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well dayum!
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Different approach to this story
This article spins a different, questionable, view. Just something to think about. Most of the comments disagree.
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The one thing people (especially Droid fans) don't realize is that while HTC makes descent sub-$100 smart phones, the problem problem is that Google makes them pay a $20 licensing fee just for the use of their Android Software...per device sold. Add that to Microsoft's $10 for Windows phones, that's $30 a phone loss on their profit margin. Now add another $20 in subsidized purchases from your local carrier....that's ZERO profit margin on a $70 HTC droid based phone.
Also, during the elections this year, I experienced first hand what a Samsung Galaxy IIIs looks like....I asked the polling station person if that was the new iPhone 5 and she said "Nope that's a Samsung".
Another thing Droid fans don't realize is that Google is continually encouraging the patent war by giving phone makers and patent trolls alike "defensive patents". HTC and Apple were probably the first to realize this and decided to just drop everything...you won't see much if HTC I'm the droid market since they've switched mainly to Windows Phone.
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Why would you pay for both windows and android license when producing a phone?
And also I think your figures are horribly wrong, google probably gets around $3 per android device sold.
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Neither of those make sense. Google does not license Android to HTC, just some of their specific applications (like Google Play). Microsoft DOES charge licensing fees for about 50% of the android devices out there - you know to license an OS that Microsoft had nothing to do with developing, but I don't know which side of the fence HTC falls on that deal.
As far as HTC dropping Android for Windows phone? Well, they seem to have split the market and are producing both low-cost phones and high-end phones. It seems unlikely that they will want to suffer the cost of Windows phone licensing on their low-end phones as it is considerably more expensive.
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As for Apple's position. I'm seeing a lot of change since John Ives took over as supreme commander in design after Frestall got sacked. One has to remember that outside of the now fairly legitimate looking Apple complaint against Samsung on Design (iPhone 5 cases fit exactly on Samsung Galaxy SIII devices, and when covered I couldn't tell the difference. So my guess is that Tim Cook wanted this all along but John Forstall was impeding progress because "his" designs were being copied.
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And seriously, you mistook a Galaxy S III for an iPhone 5(or any iPhone)?
http://asset0.cbsistatic.com/cnwk.1d/i/tim/2012/09/18/archimedes_35438535_51_610x436.jpg
Time to pick up a new prescription at the optometrist's.
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Are you suggesting that
a) Apple has been designing the iPhone 5 since 2010, but
b) Samsung designed, developed, prototyped and then released the S III in just three months?
I suppose I could point you to Wikipedia where it says work on the S III began in 2010, or how similar it is physically to the Galaxy Nexus(released in November 2011, a full year before the iPhone 5), how it uses a quad-core Cortex A9 processor with Mali-400 quad-core GPU and not the customised Apple A6 dual-core processor with a 3-core PowerVR GPU found in an iPhone 5.
But since you appear to be immune to reality within your RDF, I guess I shouldn't waste my time.
And disregard my comment about the optometrist's prescription earlier. That's not the prescription you need.
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Take those tow out fo the game, and Android is in a much weaker position.
...Innovators, my ass. More like fucking vultures.
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Furthermore, with Forestall out of the picture at Apple, it seems Apple has become more kind under Sir John Ives' complete control and oversight of design at Apple.
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So I suppose Google is also charging Amazon 20 dollars per kindle fire to license Android (an open source OS) as well. :roll eyes:
The few dollars Google actually does charge for their closed source Apps (not to be confused with the OS which is free without the Google Apps), pales in comparison to the 10s of dollars per phone MS charges for windows phone 8 licenses, with the same carrier fees on top of it.
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As far as Apple licensing its technologies, 7 to 8 dollars per device sold was the average fee for Macintosh clones and compared to anything Motorola Mobility has put at as FRAND and Industry Standards Patent licensing fees, is quite reasonable too.
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In other news
\laugh at Apple
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I've seen both up close and from a distance: the only way you could confuse the two is if you were actually an amoeba.
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iPhone 5 dimensions
123.8 x 58.6 x 7.6 mm
Galaxy S III dimensions
136.6 x 70.6 x 8.6 mm
Unless the iPhone 5 cover you're talking is elastic, it cannot 'fit exactly' onto an S III.
Have you even seen a Galaxy S III? The home button has the same shape with a square symbol? Forget the home buttons, even the phones themselves are shaped different. I'd say your polling station worker had an iPhone 5 and was just 'coitusing' with you, maybe she felt you were an Apple fanboi and wanted to mess with your head.
Just take a look at the pic I linked to above to see the iPhone 5 and S III side by side. Or read this
http://www.androidpolice.com/2012/05/04/the-samsung-galaxy-s-iii-the-first-smartphone-designed -entirely-by-lawyers/
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And actually, yes I can make out that a ~124 x 59 mm object is smaller than a ~136 x 70mm, even at five feet. And I can see that a flattened trapezoid button does not look like a circle with a square symbol on it. And I can definitely spot the difference between a 100 mm screen and a 120 mm screen from 5 feet away.
Seriously, go take a look at an actual S III or at least a picture of it on google image search or something before typing such utter BS.
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You're arguing against someone that has used both phones to do the same thing and had to use different methods of getting there, have radically different shapes and different methods of betting tot he main screen.
...and you're syaing that Samsung copied Apple?
Samsung have had the one-touch-home thing for at least ten years. I still have my old Samsung phone lying around. So, remind me again why that's patented?
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Now go away.
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There couldn't be enough room on the planet for both of their egos.
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I currently have a Samsung Galaxy SIII and it's nothing like an iPhone from a design view. The top and bottom are rounded where the iPhones are flat, the phone itself is much larger, the buttons are different shapes and there are even more differences I could mention.
And, let's face it, mobile phone design is pretty much converging on a basic shape/design. Form follows functionality.
Having been in the mobile industry for over 10 years, I can tell you for sure that Apple didn't produce much that was new in the phone world - they just done it better than most - with things such as smooth screen interfaces, more sensitive touch screens and an all round more pleasant user experience.
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