Samsung Seeks Ban of iPhone and iPad in The Netherlands

The first hearing in the case is scheduled for Monday. Samsung in The Netherlands is demanding a preliminary injunction against all mobile products of Apple "specifically iPhone 3GS, iPhone 4, iPad 1, and iPad 2."
All these devices infringe four of Samsung's essential 3G patents, the Korea-based tech giant claims in the complaints, which Webwereld, a Dutch IDG publication, has viewed .
Samsung is seeking a ban in The Netherlands on importing, trading and sales by Apple and five Apple subsidiaries. Additionally, Samsung wants Apple to recall all infringing devices in stock from its "professional customers," including electronics stores like Media Markt, where Apple has set up a shop-in-a-shop business.

Samsung is also invoking similar patents in other cases against Apple in the U.S., the U.K., France, Germany, Japan and South Korea.
The patents in question are so called standards-essential, which means they are incorporated in internationally accepted technology standards -- in this case, 3G and UMTS standards as ratified by organizations such as ETSI.
For Samsung this actually can turn out to be a liability, because however solid or crucial these patents might be, Samsung cannot deny Apple a license. This is because holders of standards-essential patents come have an obligation to provide all third parties with a licence under fair, reasonable, and non-discriminatory terms, the so-called RAND or FRAND terms.

Patent consultant and activist Florian Mller applauded this decision.
"I think the court in The Hague does the right thing by evaluating those FRAND issues first," Mller said. "This can simplify the whole case because it may reduce it to the question of whether Apple owes Samsung any money, and if so, how much, without any need to talk about an injunction."
Mller is critical of Apple's worldwide patent offensive, but he is even more critical of Samsung's reply, which according to him amounts to "scattershot litigation around the globe with light and questionable artillery," hoping to create a degree of legal uncertainty that might force Apple into a settlement favorable to Samsung.
"Should it turn out that Apple entered the market without taking licenses to essential patents, then that's indefensible and Apple should pay," Mller said. "However, it doesn't justify an abuse of standards-essential patents. Asking for an injunction is an abuse unless the request for the injunction is limited to the scenario in which the defendant doesn't accept to pay FRAND royalties."
Apple and Samsung and their respective counsels declined to comment, citing ongoing litigation.
Read more about drm and legal issues in Computerworld's DRM and Legal Issues Topic Center.































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