As part of the ongoing legal battle between Qualcomm and Intel, a US International Trade Commission (ITC) judge has declined Qualcomm’s request for an import ban on certain iPhone models. The judge said that while some iPhone models infringe on one Qualcomm patent, an import ban would go against certain factors.
In a statement, Apple said, “We’re glad the ITC stopped Qualcomm’s attempt to damage competition and ultimately harm innovators and U.S. consumers.”
Meanwhile, Qualcomm declared in its statement that while it was pleased the judge found patent infringement, it doesn’t make sense for the ITC to not then block imports of the infringing products. “It makes no sense to then allow infringement to continue by denying an import ban. That goes against the ITC mandate to protect American innovators by blocking the import of infringing products,” Qualcomm general counsel Don Rosenberg said. “There are many ways Apple could stop infringing our technology without affecting the public interest.”
Just earlier this week, Qualcomm raised the stakes in legal battle with Apple, accusing the company of stealing trade secrets and giving the information to Intel.
Full Content: Reuters
Featured News
Biden Administration Unveils Measures to Tackle Healthcare Costs Through Competition
Dec 7, 2023 by
CPI
Australia’s to Probe Coles and Woolworths for Alleged Price Gouging
Dec 7, 2023 by
CPI
D.C. Attorney General Pushes to Revive Suit Accusing Amazon of Price-Fixing
Dec 7, 2023 by
CPI
Google Withdraws Appeal, Opening the Door for Indian Startups Against User Choice Billing System
Dec 7, 2023 by
CPI
U.S. Congress Delays Legislation on TikTok Amid National Security Concerns
Dec 7, 2023 by
CPI
Antitrust Mix by CPI
Antitrust Chronicle® – Horizontal Competition: Mergers, Innovation & New Guidelines
Nov 30, 2023 by
CPI
Innovation in Merger Control
Nov 30, 2023 by
CPI
Making Sense of EU Merger Control: The Need for Limiting Principles
Nov 30, 2023 by
CPI
Sustainability Agreements in the EU: New Paths to Competition Law Compliance
Nov 30, 2023 by
CPI
Merger Control and Sustainability: A New Dawn or Nothing New Under the Sun?
Nov 30, 2023 by
CPI