The Korea Herald

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InterDigital files complaints on Samsung, two others

By Korea Herald

Published : Jan. 3, 2013 - 20:06

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Huawei Technologies Co., ZTE Corp. and Samsung Electronics Co. were named in a new patent- infringement complaint filed by InterDigital Inc. over technology related to the latest mobile-phone standards.

The complaint, filed with the U.S. International Trade Commission in Washington, builds on one that InterDigital lodged against Huawei, ZTE and Nokia Oyj in 2011, which is scheduled for a hearing in February. The case includes new patent claims against Huawei, ZTE and Nokia and adds Samsung, which had previously licensed InterDigital technology.

InterDigital claims Huawei, ZTE, Samsung and Nokia products including mobile phones, USB sticks, laptop computers and components infringe as many as seven of its patents. It’s seeking an order that would prevent imports of the products into the U.S.

“While the vast majority of our dozens of licensees recognize our contributions and choose to license our portfolio based on discussions alone, in some cases we are forced to resort to legal action,” Lawrence Shay, president of InterDigital’s patent holding unit, said in a statement Wednesday.

The company said it filed companion lawsuits in federal court in Wilmington, Delaware, seeking cash compensation for the unauthorized use of its inventions. That case will probably be put on hold pending the outcome of the ITC case.

King of Prussia, Pennsylvania-based InterDigital also announced Wednesday that it had extended a patent license with BlackBerry maker Research In Motion Ltd. to ensure it covers 4G technology.

Huawei and ZTE are China’s two largest makers of phone equipment. Both are based in Shenzhen. Samsung, based in Suwon, South Korea, is the world’s largest maker of mobile phones.

The first patent case against Huawei prompted the Chinese company to file an antitrust complaint with European Union regulators. Huawei claims InterDigital has made “unreasonable and discriminatory demands” for licensing fees. 

(Bloomberg)