WASHINGTON: Apple did not violate patents owned by Samsung
Electronics in making the iPod touch, iPhone and iPad, a judge at the
International Trade Commission said in a preliminary ruling on Friday.
Apple
and Samsung have taken their bruising patent disputes to some 10
countries as they vie for market share in the booming mobile industry.
Apple won a landmark victory last month after a US jury found the South
Korean firm had copied key features of the iPhone and awarded Apple
$1.05 billion in damages.
ITC Judge James Gildea said on
Friday that Apple did not violate the four patents in the case. Samsung
had accused Apple of infringement in a complaint filed in mid-2011. It
asked for the infringing products to be banned from sale in the United
States.
The full commission is due to decide whether to uphold or overturn its internal judge's decision in January.
"We
remain confident that the full Commission will ultimately reach a final
determination that affirms our position that Apple must be held
accountable for free-riding on our technological innovations," Samsung
said in a statement.
Apple did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
The
patents in the complaint are related to 3G wireless technology, the
format of data packets for high-speed transmission, and integrating
functions like web surfing with mobile phone functions.
Apple
has a parallel complaint filed against Samsung at the ITC, accusing
Samsung, a major Apple chip provider as well as a global rival, of
blatantly copying its iPhones and iPads. The ITC judge's preliminary
decision is due in mid-October.
Samsung was the
top-selling mobile-phone maker in the second quarter of 2012, with Apple
in third place, according to data from Gartner Inc.
Samsung's
Galaxy touchscreen tablets are considered by many industry experts to
be the main rival to the iPad, though they are currently a distant
second to Apple's devices.
Apple has waged an
international patent war since 2010 as it seeks to limit the growth of
Google's Android system. The fight has embroiled Samsung, HTC and others
who use Android.
Google's Android software, which Apple's
late founder Steve Jobs denounced as a "stolen product," has become the
world's No. 1 smartphone operating system.
The ITC
judge's decision comes just weeks after the most closely watched patent
trial in years. A jury in a California federal court ordered Samsung to
pay $1.05 billion in damages after finding that Samsung had copied
critical features of the iPhone and iPad and could face an outright
sales ban on key products.
Samsung has said it will contest that verdict and work with carriers to modify its products to keep them on the US market.
The case at the International Trade Commission is No. 337-794. -
Reuters