South Korea
court denies Samsung a ban on Apple's iPhone and iPad
Samsung's lawsuit
alleged that the iPhone 5, iPhone 4s, and second-generation iPad had infringed
on its patents
A South Korean court on
Thursday ruled against Samsung Electronics in a lawsuit that threatened to ban
older iPhone and iPad models in the country for alleged patent infringement.
The ruling gives Apple a victory in a
lawsuit that had claimed its iPhone 5, iPhone 4s and second-generation iPad had
infringed on three of Samsung's messaging related patents.
The South Korean electronics maker had
demanded an injunction against Apple to stop sales of the devices until the
infringing technology was removed, a Samsung spokesman said. In addition, the
company had also asked for 100 million won (US$95,160) in damages.
"We are disappointed by the
court's decision," Samsung said in an email. "As Apple has continued
to infringe our patented mobile technologies, we will continue to take the
measures necessary to protect our intellectual property rights."
The company is reviewing the ruling and
will decide later whether to appeal.
Both companies continue to be locked in
court battles across the world over alleged patent infringement in their
smartphones and tablets. Last month, a U.S. jury ordered Samsung to pay $290 million to
Apple in a retrial to review part of the damages the South Korean company had
to pay for patent infringement.
Samsung, however, said it won a legal
victory over Apple on Wednesday. A German court in Mannheim dismissed an Apple
lawsuit claiming patent infringement against Samsung, after ruling the involved
patent was invalid, according to Samsung.
Apple did not immediately respond to a
request for comment.
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