Samsung plans on suing Apple if they release the next iPhone with LTE technology. Apple currently holds half of the LTE patents that Samsung holds. Is it enough?
In a world where the current state of the patent system can be so easily abused, what would happen if those same concepts were used to govern society and all businesses?
Reuters is reporting that Google CEO Larry Page and Apple CEO Tim Cook have been meeting to discuss the never-ending patent wars between the two companies.
Apple and Google quietly agreed to a licensing deal in Germany earlier this week, which makes us wonder if they wanted peace, were intimidated, or focused on US court?
While Apple may have won the jury in their latest case against Samsung, this trial is certainly far from over. Samsung still have many options how to move forward.
There's been all sorts of crazy fallout from this Apple v. Samsung court verdict. One we never thought to expect was a slight raise in shares of Research In Motion.
Google recently released a statement reassuring potential customers that the recent Apple ruling will have little effect on the whole of the Android OS.
Jurors in the Apple-Samsung lawsuit decided on Saturday that Samsung had copied Apple and should pay at least $1.049 billion in damages. But did they do their jobs?
While Google is still tangled in several court cases over patents, that hasn’t stopped the company from speaking out about where they think this patent circus is heading.
Sources are reporting that Samsung will release the P10 tablet this year, which uses their new A15 Exynos 5250 chip and would boast a 2560 x 1600 resolution.
From multi-touch to icons, to folders to scrollable windows, Apple arguably had to steal a lot of patents to create the first iPhone. Would they have survived a lawsuit?
Google announced yesterday that iPhone users would receive the new android jelly bean enhanced voice search as a standalone app before ICS or gingerbread users would.
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