Apple’s big court victory against
Samsung on Friday is expected to trickle down to consumers, affecting
the creation of future mobile technology and potentially raising prices
for devices, analysts and patent experts say.
A jury’s
decision to award Apple $1.05 billion after finding Samsung violated
six patents will make rivals think twice about smartphones and tablets
that too closely resemble Apple products.
That could mean delays and hardship for Apple rivals as they scramble
to change their roadmaps for products that may be too similar to the
iPhone or iPad. They will be forced to create software workarounds to
avoid legal pushback from Apple, experts say.
The nine-member jury in the U.S. District Court in San Jose agreed
that Samsung violated three key touchscreen patents that have become
commonplace in smartphones, such as one that allows users to tap on
images and making them bigger and another to pinch an image and enlarge
it.
And the legal tussle among rivals is far from over. Samsung, which
has vowed to fight the jury decision, faces a separate but perhaps even
more daunting hearing scheduled to begin Sept. 20 that could ban Samsung
devices with infringing technology from U.S. sales.
Any outcome will negatively affect the South Korean company, some
experts say. If Samsung’s smartphones are banned, the company will be
forced to change features such as the pinch and zoom technology that
Apple says is theirs. And even if U.S. District Judge Lucy Koh doesn’t
grant an injuction, Samsung will have to work out royalties for patents
that the jury agreed were protected intellectual property belonging to
Apple, analysts say.
Add up the delays and fees, and devices could get a bump in price, some experts say.
“The scope of injuctions is not limited to accused products of the
action but could apply to any products down the road that could apply
and be held liable for contempt of court,” said Florian Mueller, a
patent analyst and consultant and author of blog FOSSPatents.
Yet there could be an upside for consumers, other experts say. There may be more choice in the kinds of products available.
“Within a product cycle or two, consumers will begin to see exciting,
new and different-looking designs,” said Christopher V. Carani, a
partner at the Chicago-based intellectual property law firm McAndrews,
Held & Malloy.
“If a permanent injunction is ordered, the Apple victory will create
some delay to market for look-alike smartphones that need to be
redesigned. But this should be viewed as a perfect opportunity to go
back to the drawing board,” Carani said.
Apple, emboldened by the jury’s verdict, is pushing to block sales of
Samsung devices that infringe its design patents. On Monday, the
company will present a list of smartphones and tablets that it wants Koh
to ban. The injunction hearing is expected to stretch as long as two
months.
And the companies are expected to ask the judge to overturn elements of the jury verdict.
Apple may ask the judge to reconsider a tablet design complaint that the jury denied. It may also seek more money in damages.
Samsung said it is gearing for a extended battle to defend itself.
“We will move immediately to file post-verdict motions to overturn
this decision in this court and, if we are not successful, we will
appeal this decision to the Court of Appeals,” Samsung said in a
statement.
Legal experts say Samsung’s changes are slim at overturning the jury decision.
“There is a strong presumption that the jury was correct and will be
reversed only in cases in which the verdict was, essentially, a travesty
of justice” said Peter Toren, a patent litigation expert and partner at
Weisbrod, Mattheis & Copley in Washington. “There does not appear
to be any serious question that the jury’s verdict was wrong in this
case. Further, I can’t imagine that Judge Koh would take it upon herself
to reverse the verdict in such a high profile case.”
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