Apple Complaint Against Nokia to Be Investigated by ITC
The federal International Trade Commission will
investigate the complaint that Apple filed against Nokia on Jan. 15.
The complaint claims that the "sale of certain mobile communications and
computer devices and components" by Nokia infringe on nine patents held by
Apple and asks that Nokia be made to stop selling the devices in the United
States.
The ITC will assign the case to one of its six administrative law judges, who
will hold an evidentiary hearing and decide whether a violation has occurred,
the agency announced Feb. 19.
On Jan. 27, the ITC likewise agreed to investigate a
complaint that Nokia logged against Apple, alleging, similarly, that its
computers, phones and music players infringe on several patents, specifically
to camera, antenna, power management and user interface technologies.
The recent legal tit-for-tat between the two began on
Oct. 22, with Nokia filing a complaint against Apple in a U.S. District Court,
alleging that Apple's iPhone infringes on 10 Nokia-held patents for GSM, UMTS
and WLAN standards.
"The basic principle in the mobile industry is that those companies who
contribute in technology development to establish standards create intellectual
property, which others then need to compensate for," Ilkka Rahnasto, vice
president of Nokia's legal and intellectual property division, said in a
statement.
"Apple is also expected to follow this principle," Rahnasto continued. "By
refusing to agree [to] appropriate terms for Nokia's intellectual property,
Apple is attempting to get a free ride on the back of Nokia's innovation."
Apple answered Dec. 11, alleging that Nokia infringes on 13 of its patents and
releasing a statement of its own, in which Bruce Sewell, Apple's general
counsel and senior vice president, offered: "Other companies must compete with
us by inventing their own technologies, not just by stealing ours."
Ezra Gottheil, an analyst with Technology Business Research, has called the
lawsuits a "form of negotiation," and told eWEEK that the matter of who's in
the right is nearly impossible to tell.
"No one's accusing anyone of stealing anything. It's all a matter of
convergence-of two separate organizations winding up with techniques that are
similar enough that if one patent [seems to cover it more], then the other
company has to pay to use it," Gottheil told eWEEK.
The very busy ITC additionally announced Feb. 19 that it
will also investigate a complaint filed by Motorola against Research In Motion.
In a Jan. 22 complaint, Motorola alleged that the sale of RIM products violates
five Motorola patents.
