Nokia
has won a patent infringing battle against HTC, leading to the ban of sales of
the HTC One Mini in the UK. The
UK High Court found in October that HTC had infringed Nokia’s European patent
number 0998024, described as a ‘modular structure for a transmitter and a
mobile station’. As a result, Judge Richard Arnold ruled today that HTC can no
longer sell its One Mini smartphone in the UK.
HTC
had tried to argue that the microchips found to infringe Nokia’s patent were “a
very small component” and therefore did not justify a sales ban. It also
claimed that HTC does not compete with Nokia in the UK, because its smartphones
run Google’s Android operating system while Nokia’s running Microsoft’s Windows
Phone OS.
However,
Nokia dismissed these arguments, claiming that it has “lost sales of Lumia
phones since the launch of the One range.” HTC sold about 715,000 smartphones
worth about £221 million in the UK between January and September, according to
court documents.
HTC’s
flagship One smartphone was also found to infringe the patent, but a ban has
been delayed to give HTC time to appeal. Judge Arnold said in his ruling that
blocking UK sales of the One would cause “considerable” damage to HTC’s UK
business.
No comments:
Post a Comment