Category: Standard-Essential Patents
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Philips and OPPO settle patent licensing dispute: UK court order
Philips and OPPO have settled their standard-essential patent dispute as a UK court order implies.
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Samsung takes patent license from InterDigital and Sony for digital TVs and computer display monitors
InterDigital has announced a patent license agreement covering Samsung’s digital TVs and computer display monitors, the key standards being ATSC 3.0, HEVC, VVC, and WiFi.
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$5.22 per unit is aggregate 5G SEP royalty according to Lenovo’s deductions from UK High Court decisions
Lenovo points to the FRAND determinations from London in its own dispute with InterDigital and in Optis v. Apple, arguing that the total 5G stack value is $5.22/unit and Ericsson should therefore get only 23 cents.
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Nokia and Honor patent cross-license agreement concluded without–but potentially on brink of–litigation
Nokia and Honor have announced a patent cross-license. They may have avoided litigation at the 11th hour but it is a successful outcome for both. It has no bearing on Nokia’s disputes with OPPO and vivo.
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Lenovo offered Ericsson only 23 cents per phone, is seeking its own SEP injunctions; U.S. antisuit hearing on 1/11
Ericsson’s opposition to Lenovo’s U.S. antisuit TRO motion contains various interesting revelations concerning Lenovo’s tactics.
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Lenovo seeks antisuit injunction, says Ericsson brought 30+ preliminary injunction actions in Colombia
Lenovo filed a U.S. antisuit motion on Friday against Ericsson’s injunctions in Brazil and Colombia. More than 30 PI motions filed in Colombia.
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Netflix first to be permanently enjoined over Brazilian standard-essential patent; Lenovo hit with preliminary injunction
Standard-essential patent enforcement news from Brazil: Netflix becomes the first company on the receiving end of a Brazilian permanent injunction over a SEP, and Ericsson obtained a Brazilian preliminary injunction over two SEPs.
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Ericsson’s three Colombian Christmas cards for Lenovo: SEP injunctions
Ericsson’s efforts to get Lenovo to take a license to its standard-essential patent (SEP) portfolio were sufficient, says a Colombian government agency and enters three preliminary injunctions.