Apple and Samsung will be duking it out in court this week about features that could be in your phone or tablet.
Apple alleges that its iPad and iPhone are
being copied by Samsung and wants Samsung's products pulled from store
shelves and online stores — and to be awarded $2.5 billion in damages.
Samsung disputes the claims and alleges Apple's iPhones run on its
wireless technologies — and that Samsung, in turn, should be paid
royalties.
The high-stakes battle opens Monday in a federal court in San Jose in what will be one of the most widely watched Silicon Valley sagas.
"Obviously, Apple is going for injunctions on this," says Michael Barclay, a fellow with the Electronic Frontier Foundation. "There are a lot of things in the iPhone that were carefully thought out and easy to use."
The
trial is scheduled to go before U.S. District Court Judge Lucy Koh, who
last month awarded Apple a preliminary injunction that could force
Samsung's Galaxy 10.1 from shelves pending the outcome of the trial.
The
landmark legal case could have long-lasting ripple effects on more than
50 lawsuits waged worldwide between mobile phone makers powered by
Google's Android mobile operating system and Apple, say legal experts.
"It's
the most important trial between these players, so far," says
independent analyst Florian Mueller. "Apple is hoping for a breakthrough
that would have important implications for other lawsuits."
Consumers
could notice some differences if companies are forced to dramatically
alter their products or remove them from markets. Still, if Apple
prevails, it wouldn't be long before mobile developers would create
technology workarounds, say legal experts.
Apple
is waging war about similarities in hardware design, software functions
and packaging. To complicate matters, Samsung is a major partner and
supplier of components to Apple.
Jurors will
likely be familiar with many of the touch-screen gestures that will be
on trial. Apple is lodging claims against Samsung about a patent that
covers touch-based dragging of documents, as well as pinch-to-zoom and
twist-to-rotate capabilities. Another patent from Apple on trial will be
its tap-to-zoom function that makes text or images pop up larger. Apple
is also claiming Samsung infringes on its scrolling patent.
"If
Apple, over time, enforces enough touch-screen user-interface patents,
it could have an effect (on) consumers," says Mueller. "Combined, they
can make a real difference and have a significant effect on purchasing
decisions by consumers."
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