Apple wins small victory over HTC in smartphone patent battle
The U.S. International Trade Commission ruled on the first definitive case of the smartphone patent wars, handing a narrow victory to Apple.
The commission ruled that HTC devices that use “data tapping” technology in a specific way will be hit with an import ban starting April 19, 2012. The technology, as outlined by patent expert Florian Mueller in his blog, allows devices to look at phone numbers in unstructured data formats such as e-mail and allows other applications — such as a dialer app — to process that kind of data. The ban applies only to devices that use the technology and, Mueller said, if Google and HTC can create a workaround in the Android system, the ban won’t apply to any HTC devices. “If Google can implement this popular feature, which users of modern-day smartphones really expect, without infringing on the two patent claims found infringed, this import ban won’t have any effect whatsoever,” Mueller said. If Apple can claim more small wins like the “data tapping” patent, Mueller said in his post, it could advance its case against Android feature by feature.
Apple wins small victory over HTC in smartphone patent battle Victory for Apple: US trade body bans infringing HTC phones starting in April (ars technica) Apple wins import ban on select HTC smartphones (GigaOm) US Backs Apple in Patent Ruling That Hits Google (NYTimes) Apple Ruling Hits Android (WSJ) Apple Wins Ruling Ban On Some HTC Phones (Bloomberg)