USPTO rejects claims of Apple patent that figures in dispute with Samsung
USPTO rejects claims of Apple patent that figures in
dispute with Samsung
By John Ribeiro
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IDG News Service | Aug 7, 2014 10:35 PM
The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office has rejected some
claims of an Apple patent that was one of the basis for a recent damages award
in a dispute with Samsung Electronics.
The USPTO Office Action ruled that two patents had
anticipated claim 18 of Apple’s U.S. Patent no. 8,074,172, according to a
filing Thursday by Samsung in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District
of California, San Jose division.
The ‘172 patent is better known as the “auto-complete”
patent as it describes the prompting of words as users input text into devices.
It is titled “Method, device, and graphical user interface providing word
recommendations.”
The patent figured in a recent trial in the California
court, where a jury ruled in May that Samsung should pay Apple about US$119
million in damages for infringing three patents. Claim 18 of the ‘172 patent
was asserted against Samsung.
District Judge Lucy H. Koh had ruled in January that
Samsung products had infringed the ‘172 patent.
The decision by the USPTO in the ex parte reexamination
that did not include the other parties is not final and still offers Apple
appeal options. Apple was not immediately available for comment.
Samsung’s filing stated that it was bringing the USPTO
decision to the notice of the court as it was relevant to its defense in
connection with the ‘172 patent, but does not discuss the implications of the
decision on the damages award against it.
Apple and Samsung said this week that they were ending
their patent litigation outside the U.S., though they clarified that the deal
did not involve any licensing agreements, and disputes in the U.S. would
continue.
One element of Samsung’s strategy has been to invalidate
Apple patents which have been asserted against it.
In the U.S., Samsung asked the California court in July
to hold invalid claims of two other Apple patents in the wake of a U.S. Supreme
Court decision in Alice v. CLS Bank that raised patentability standards. The
Apple patents are the ’721 patent, also known as the “slide-to-unlock” patent,
and the ’959 patent, known as the “universal search” patent. The two patents
had also figured in the trial, but Samsung products were only found to infringe
the ‘721 patent.
This story, "USPTO rejects claims of Apple patent
that figures in dispute with Samsung" was originally published by IDG News
Service .
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