Nokia Brews legal storm against Qualcomm

Legal action launched over alleged unauthorised use of MediaFLO and Brew patents

Written by Robert Jaques

Nokia has accused Qualcomm of "effectively copying" its intellectual property, and has filed patent counter assertions against Qualcomm in the Eastern District of Texas Court.

The filing relates to Qualcomm's alleged unauthorised use of six Nokia implementation patents in its MediaFLO and Brew businesses.

Nokia pointed out that Qualcomm has sought injunctions against the mobile firm in previous litigation, forcing it to seek damages and "injunctive relief" .

"Nokia has a strong history of innovation in intellectual property broadcast television and mobile download environments predating Qualcomm's activities," said Tero Ojanpera, chief technology officer at Nokia.

"This is another example where Qualcomm has effectively copied Nokia's innovations. We believe that, for MediaFLO to evolve and for Brew to remain viable, Qualcomm needs access to these and many other patented Nokia inventions. "

Nokia argued that its patents are at the "core of MediaFLO and Brew technologies", for example in ensuring the broadcast quality of service within MediaFLO and in enabling the download of applications with Brew.

The firm added that it has recently declared another set of patents to the Telecommunication Industry Association as essential for the FLO air interface used in MediaFLO.

Nokia added that it will "continue to vigorously defend itself" against the infringement and unauthorised use of its intellectual property.

Nokia's patent counter assertions are part of its response to the Qualcomm lawsuit filed in the Eastern District of Texas on 2 April 2007.

In that lawsuit Qualcomm's three patents-in-suit allegedly involve certain types of mobile software download and execution environments.

Nokia is confident that the Qualcomm patents are invalid, for example, based on the alleged inventions having been patented or published by other companies, including Nokia, before Qualcomm.

In addition, Nokia believes that its products do not infringe any of the patents.

See also:

reader comments

related articles

 

UK High Court rules Qualcomm patents invalid

Nokia cleared of infringement 03 Mar 2008

Rambus sues Nvidia over memory patents

Lawsuit alleges 17 violations 11 Jul 2008

Barracuda countersues Trend Micro

Patent saga continues 03 Jul 2008

latest news

Ballmer highlights aims for New Year

Ballmer announces Windows 7 beta and future alliances designed to improve information sharing 08 Jan 2009

Active Storage completes UK Jigsaw

Jigsaw unveiled as Raid vendor's first non-US Platinum partner as it launches in Europe 08 Jan 2009

Dell quits Irish production

Vendor to slash 1,900 jobs in Limerick as it migrates assembly for EMEA customers to Poland 08 Jan 2009

poll

Challenging times ahead?

Challenging times ahead?

Do you think there will be a lot of channel job cuts in 2009?

Previous poll results

Paul Anderson, Trend Micro

Vendor Q&A: Paul Anderson, Trend Micro

During this Q&A session Paul Anderson, UK country manager of Trend Micro talks about the changing threat landscape and how Trend is working with resellers in 2009

Sara Yirrell and Rick Wallis

Vendor Q&A: Rick Wallis, NEC Computers

In this exclusive vendor Q&A, Rick Wallis, UK sales director at NEC Computers talks to CRN editor Sara Yirrell about his firm’s plans for the channel.

events

Channel Expo 2009 logo

Channel Expo 2009

The UK's top reseller exhibition will return to the NEC on 20 May 2009

CRN Fight Night 2009

The channel's only white-collar boxing event is back

Newsletter signup

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

Existing User

Newsletter user login:

Advertisement

White papers

Search white papers

Top categories

Primary Navigation