Nokia has filed another legal complaint against Apple with
the U.S. International Trade Commission, accusing its rival of infringing on mobile
patents.
“Our latest ITC filing means we now have 46 Nokia patents in
suit against Apple, many filed more than 10 years before Apple made its first
iPhone,” Paul Melin, Nokia’s vice president of intellectual property, wrote in
a March 29 statement. “Nokia is a leading innovator in technologies needed to
build great mobile products and Apple must stop building its products using
Nokia’s proprietary innovation.”
Nokia’s current ITC complain centers on seven patents
related to multitasking, data synchronization, positioning, use of Bluetooth
and calling quality.
Nokia’s
previous complaints to the ITC argued that Apple was in violation of
Section 337 of the Tariff Act of 1930, which prohibits the importation of
products that infringe on others’ technology. In addition to the ITC action,
Apple and Nokia have sued and counter-sued over their respective patent
portfolios. Nokia claims its purpose is to protect its $60 billion in wireless
research and development investments.
The ITC can use Section 337 to ban the importation of goods
that violate U.S. patents. Certainly tech companies
have found themselves the target of ITC investigations for allegedly running
afoul of the statute, often in response to rivals’ complaints of patent
infringement. Those companies’ longstanding traditions of manufacturing their
products in other countries, before shipping them to the United States, leave them open
to such investigations.
Nokia has a newfound reason to make Apple’s life difficult,
considering the Finnish manufacturer recently partnered with Microsoft
to make
the latter’s Windows Phone 7 the software platform for its smartphones.
Together, the two companies will attempt to challenge both Apple’s
iPhone and
the rising number of Google Android smartphones that currently dominate
much of
the consumer smartphone market.
Under the terms of the agreement, according to Nokia’s
publicly released Form
20-F 2010 report, Nokia will leverage its expertise in hardware and design
to “help bring Windows Phone to a broader range of price points, market
segments and geographies.” In addition, the two companies will collaborate on
both development and joint marketing initiatives.
However, the partnership also carries some substantial
risks.
“If we fail to finalize our partnership with Microsoft or
the benefits of that partnership do not materialize as expected, we will have
limited our options and more competitive alternatives may not be available to
us in a timely manner, if at all,” reads one section of the report. “Our
expected transition to the Windows Phone platform may prove to be too long to
compete in the smartphone market longer term.”
In the meantime, Nokia seems interested in continuing its
legal battles against its longtime rival.