Samsung Ordered To Hand Over Unreleased Designs To Apple 260
An anonymous reader writes with an article in Edible Apple "Samsung last Wednesday was ordered to hand over to Apple five as-of-yet unreleased products so that Apple can compare them to their own offerings ahead of litigation. Apple of course claims that Samsung's products blatantly copy the look and feel of Apple's iOS devices."
Except That Is Completely Incorrect (Score:5, Informative)
Samsung Ordered to Hand Over Unreleased Designs to Apple
Uh huh ... well, when I go to the original source cited in the article [courthousenews.com] I find this piece of text:
She [Judge Koh] also limited the results of discovery to "Outside Counsel Eyes Only," meaning neither Apple nor its in-house counsel will get a peek at the phones or related marketing materials.
(Emphasis mine.) I must confess that one does have to read the entire article of Courthouse News to get to that somewhat important and relevant tidbit but that is asking a bit much for an editor. Or perhaps that was known but "Court Counsel to Judge Samsung Prototypes" just doesn't boil up the anti-Apple blood like the current headline does?
Re: (Score:2)
this is 2011 and the Age of Blogs. Get with the program
Re:Except That Is Completely Incorrect (Score:4, Insightful)
this is 2011 and the Age of Blogs. Get with the program
Who needs information when you have presumption?
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
We're not here to learn, we're here to argue. Slashdot is a game, not a news site.
Re: (Score:2)
we're here to argue.
No we're not. [mindspring.com]
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
we're here to argue.
No we're not. [mindspring.com]
YES. WE. ARE!!!!!
Re:Except That Is Completely Incorrect (Score:4, Funny)
Interesting that a link to a video is preferred over the script in a thread where the root post is a complaint that nobody reads...
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
The very article you linked to says the same thing:
"Samsung Electronics was told Wednesday to fork over five of its not-yet-released mobile phones to Apple."
And I am pretty sure it would be hard to put this news in a light that wasn't anti-Apple.
No Matter How Much I Hate Apple, I Prefer Facts (Score:3)
And I am pretty sure it would be hard to put this news in a light that wasn't anti-Apple.
I am one of the most anti-Apple people out there. I own a very old iPod I bought from a friend for $30 and I love the device but I hate the software so I use my own GPL software to access it. I will never buy an Apple product first hand. I will never buy their software and I will never develop for them. But I don't let that get in the way of facts about current news.
I personally feel like all the major phone makers were playing nicely until Apple joined and then someone kicked the patent hornet nes
Re:No Matter How Much I Hate Apple, I Prefer Facts (Score:4, Interesting)
It is my opinion that Apple's design (ornamental?) patents [wikipedia.org] or look and feel patents do disgust me more than other functional oriented patents ....
That's an interesting stance. It's always seemed to me that design patents seem inherintly more just. After all, there should be an infinite number of ways of designing the look and feel of your interface.
So apple patented the design of a home screen consisting of rectangular icons with a 1:1 aspect ratio and corners clipped by a circle with a diameter 90% of the width. Why wouldn't I, as a competitor, want to make a product that looked different? Mine will have round icons instead. problem solved. Yeah, some people just want to make a knockoff product that looks like an iphone. Design patents make that hard. I have a hard time feeling sorry for them. As a consumer i'd kind of like a choice in how my phone looks.
It's the fact that someone can patent an algorithm, like displaying a full screen launch image prior to loading the application to give the system a feeling of responsiveness, that i find egregious.
Re:No Matter How Much I Hate Apple, I Prefer Facts (Score:4, Interesting)
The courts decided to exempt clothing design from copyright protection [ted.com] precisely because of the reason you cite (1:58 into the talk). They didn't want someone owning the idea of using a button in a certain place, or having a cuff on your sleeve.
Re: (Score:3)
I'm not an Apple fan at all, but if you've seen/used a Samsung android phone and an iPhone you'd agree there are many more infringements than just accidentally arriving at the same common sense UI.
I have a HTC android and have been very happy with it, but when I used a friends Samsung android phone the experience was completely different. Samsung have gone out of their way to modify their Android verisons, and several apps and UI elements are obvious clones of Apple iPhone. It's just blatant and unneccesa
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Don't let reality get in the way of your Apple hate.
http://www.economist.com/node/17309237 [economist.com]
"Since 2006 the number of mobile-phone-related patent complaints has increased by 20% annually, according to Lex Machina, a firm that keeps a database of intellectual-property spats in America."
The first iPhone was unveiled by Apple CEO Steve Jobs on January 9, 2007, and released on June 29, 2007.
So the mobile patent wars started before Apple showed up, Apple just added another litigation happy company with a ton of pa
Re: (Score:2, Interesting)
Here's the problem in 1 sentence from a Samsung Galaxy S [slashgear.com] review : "In the time we’ve been carrying the Galaxy S, more than a few people – geeks included – have mistaken it for an iPhone 3GS." There's a fine line between using similar desing elements and making something so similar it's mistaken for something else. Should it be illegal ? Probably not, but you can sort of see why Apple is pissed off.
Re: (Score:2)
Yes, but it was a nest that needed kicking.
I mean the state of phones was stagnant.
Hate Apple or Design Patents? (Score:2)
I am one of the most anti-Apple people out there.
I'm mostly indifferent towards Apple but I appreciate you stating your biases up front.
I personally feel like all the major phone makers were playing nicely until Apple joined...
That's sort of a problem don't you think? I'm not sure I'm entirely comfortable with them not competing with each other including in the court room.
It is my opinion that Apple's design (ornamental?) patents or look and feel patents do disgust me more than other functional oriented patents ....
OK, I'll bite. Why? A patent is a patent regardless of who holds the rights to it. Lots of companies hold design patents besides Apple. Is this an argument against Apple or against design patents? There certainly are many problems with the patent system but saying Apple'
Re: (Score:2)
Or perhaps that was known but "Court Counsel to Judge Samsung Prototypes" just doesn't boil up the anti-Apple blood like the current headline does?
Welp, this is an ad-supported site.
Re: (Score:2)
How much Apple is paying for the subdomain has not yet been determined.
Zero. Go to Apple.slashdot.org, look at the number of comments for each story, and you'll see why.
Re: (Score:2)
I think it's even more impressive how TFA poses
The obvious question is how Apple can request to see products that haven’t been released yet...
without even remotely taking the time to follow through on their own motto of "Apple news, rumors, and analysis".
Re: (Score:3)
Apple didn't "request" anything. The judge saw enough graphical evidence in apple's case, she decided a "preview" was in order.
"Without expressing an opinion on the merits of Apple's claims, the court acknowledged that "Apple has produced images of Samsung products and other evidence that provide a reasonable basis for Apple's belief that Samsung's new products are designed to mimic Apple's products."
there's an image from APPLs filing here:
http://www.appleinsider.com/articles/11/05/24/samsung_ordered_to_sho [appleinsider.com]
Re: (Score:2)
I'm somewhat confused as to how filing a motion for expedited discovery during a lawsuit doesn't count as "requesting" anything. Apple only stopped short of filing an injunction (something on the order of a CnD most likely).
Source:
Any of the articles linked so far, including yours.
Re: (Score:3)
Also, the five "unreleased designs" are:
The Galaxy S2, [youtube.com]
the Galaxy Tab 10.1, [youtube.com]
the Galaxy Tab 8.9, [youtube.com]
the Infuse 4G, [youtube.com] and finally
the Droid Charge [youtube.com]
"Unreleased designs?" Seriously?
Re:Except That Is Completely Incorrect (Score:4, Informative)
Addendum:
The three phones can be purchased today (the Galaxy S2 may not ship for about two weeks). The Galaxy Tab 10.1 will be officially available June 6. The Galaxy Tab 8.9 will be in stores "very early summer".
Samsung has 30 days to provide these gadgets.
According to TFA the judge herself "highlighted that Samsung has 'already released images and samples of its forthcoming products to the media and members of the public.'"
Industrial espionage this ain't.
Re: (Score:2)
It's worth noting that 5000 Galaxy Tab 10.1's were given away to Google I/O attendees earlier this month.
Re: (Score:3)
I think legally it's correct (enough)
When company hires a law firm to represent them.. that FIRM IS them.. (you're speaking on their behalf in a court of law).. that's why you hire lawyers.. to represent you.
the fact that Apple employees don't get to see it is secondary - all it guards against is Apple possibly taking queues from the Sammy's next iterations.
Re: (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
If Samsung is the company helping Apple design their product, and if Samsung is the one providing chips and layout internally, and if the design is sufficient in that the design matters, and Samsung is using this knowledge of pre-released products in their own products close enough to or before Apple's launch, then we have a matter for discussion, though there's likely no matter of legal issue as you can't copyright an idea, only the expression of that idea.
Apple tried copyrighting the interface of the comp
Re: (Score:2)
Reading slashdot is kind of like a game, where the goal is to see if you can anticipate in what ways the summary is false, prior to reading the article. For instance, in this case, it might have been that Samsung wasnt actually involved, or that there wasnt a court case but a tersley worded request; turns out that Apple DOESNT get the unreleased designs.
I find it to be a good form of mental exercise.
no surprise (Score:2)
Re:no surprise (Score:5, Insightful)
You mean they are rectangular and black with a touchscreen? This is hardly revolutionary design. And Samsung's TVs look just like other TVs - again rectangular and black.
Re: (Score:2)
You mean they are rectangular and black with a touchscreen? This is hardly revolutionary design. And Samsung's TVs look just like other TVs - again rectangular and black.
As the owner of two MacBooks, two iPods, two Samsung TVs and a Samsung Colour Laserprinter, I can tell you that a newish 40" Samsung TV has a very distinctive look (which is actually quite nice, and one of the reasons for me to buy it), and if someone copied that look then I think Samsung would be very upset, and rightfully so. Just as Apple is quite upset about someone copying the looks of the iPhone.
Re: (Score:2)
except other then the fact they are rectangle, black and have a touch screen, they look nothing alike.
Re:no surprise (Score:5, Insightful)
I shrugged at that myself, but then I've bought Samsung Galaxy S II a few days ago. And you know what? It really tries very hard to look like an iPhone. I don't just mean the full-glass front screen and a hardware "home" button. Their replacement launcher, TouchWiz, is also an iOS lookalike, with four icons on the bottom. App drawer is replaced to work more like iOS, too, with automatic sorting of icons replaced by manual positioning on a number of screens. Heck, they even changed tab switching UI in the browser to look identical to iPhone, except that the close button is (-) instead of (x).
So, it's not just Apple being silly here. Mind you, Samsung beats them on some other points (like screen size and contrast/brightness, or sheer hardware power), but they definitely do copy the design.
Re: (Score:2)
Their replacement launcher, TouchWiz,...
Eeew.
Not even close (Score:2)
A Galaxy and an iPad look nothing alike. Anybody can tell the difference with their eyes closed.
http://www.techchee.com/2010/06/04/samsung-galaxy-tab-tablet/
Re: (Score:2)
You're confusing Galaxy Tab (the tablet) with Galaxy S (the phone). I have no idea how Galaxy Tab looks and whether it is similar to iPad. I was comparing Galaxy S2 to iPhone.
Re:no surprise (Score:4, Informative)
Like I said, it's not something that is easily glanced from screenshots. I was similarly skeptical of any such claims in past discussions on Slashdot. But seeing the thing live, I changed my mind. Most of all, the tab switching UI in the browser convinced me that it's deliberate copying - it's not just similar, it's practically identical. Icon tweaks can be explained as coincidence, but this - no way.
Also keep in mind that Samsung was not designing this from grounds-up - they had stock Android to begin with. That also has 4 icons across, and it has fixed buttons at the bottom. And yet stock Android UI looks nothing like iPhone (e.g. the fixed buttons on the bottom visually distinct from app icons), while TouchWiz does. It goes down even to minor touches - e.g. stock Android has five screens, and, like on iPhone, you can flick left/right to switch. But the default screen there is the "middle" one (i.e. you have two on the left, and two on the right). In TouchWiz, the default screen is the leftmost one, so any icons you add always fill up screens to the right. Furthermore, if you flick to the left from the leftmost screen, you get to the "search screen", just like on iPhone - and visually very similar as well.
Re: (Score:2)
No, I am sure it is more than that. Apple on the other hand has always radically new designs. Think about the first ipod. Totally radical. Nothing at all like a 1958 radio (http://www.flickr.com/photos/benarent/4248023281/).
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Have you seen these things? It's pretty damn blatant. [idevices.org]
Re: (Score:2)
Looks like every other smartphone to me.
Re: (Score:2)
I had my white droid 2 global months before the white iPhones came out. So maybe Motorola should be suing Apple over the color white?
Re: (Score:2)
Apple basically launched the "era of touch"... maybe with a little help from Nintendo. Yet "personal satisfaction" is the only compansation they get for getting us there.
Yeah, it's a real shame that they didn't benefit in terms of gaining a very significant market share or by making tons of money by selling countless iPhones. Poor Apple!
Seriously, what on *earth* are you on that you think Apple hasn't received significant reward for the iPhone's success?! Sheesh.
Re: (Score:3)
I'd still choose the Samsung, because it will likely have a high-contrast Samsung LCD panel, and of course Samsung customer service, and out-of-warranty repairs are often covered by Samsung but when not, quake-induced shortages aside, it's usually easier to get replacement parts from Samsung than Apple.
Whereas the AppleTV-embedded TV will probably be orphaned in 2-3 years and no longer work because the new AppleTV firmware will no longer support the older model, and besides, out-of-warranty repairs will be
Re: (Score:2)
I've noticed many of their phones and the Galaxy tablet look almost identical to their Apple counterparts....
So what? You can't copyright "look and feel" [wikipedia.org]. And you can't patent something unless it is innovative - a thin touchscreen phone/computer with rounded edges is not innovative - it's obvious. There are many episodes of Star Trek that show the concept of a touch screen computer that would qualify as prior art.
Re: (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
Its not copyright, it's a design patent.
Re: (Score:2)
Next up : Dell [engadget.com]. Hey if you got to copy so
Re:no surprise (Score:4, Insightful)
Nobody but hardcore fanboys* are going to ditch their current TV to buy an Apple-branded television.
Sounds lucrative to me...
Re: (Score:2)
Then please explain why it takes 10 seconds for my new tv sets to boot up with "The please wait..." message.
Oh, it's also has upgradable firmware via the USB port
(Hint: it's a cheapy store brand, under $300, 2 years ago)
I have lots of Samsung Phones (Score:5, Funny)
Re: (Score:2)
Well presumably they are only going to copy the good ideas, not the stupid ones.
Re:I have lots of Samsung Phones (Score:4, Informative)
Well presumably they are only going to copy the good ideas, not the stupid ones.
Not so. Apple's claim shows that Samsung have copied Apple's dock connector design too.
Re: (Score:2)
Well presumably they are only going to copy the good ideas, not the stupid ones.
Not so. Apple's claim shows that Samsung have copied Apple's dock connector design too.
Damn, I wish I had mod points ...
Re: (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
My response would be along the lines of "Why would Samsung copy Apple's colossal blunder?"
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Because these claims are subject to consumer confusion and “ordinary observer” standards, the products themselves and the packaging in which they are sold are likely to be central to any motion for preliminary injunction.
"Consumer confusion" - Apple is arguing that consumers find it difficult to tell the difference between a Galaxy S and an iPhone and might buy a Samsung product when they meant to buy an Apple one.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
Without that pretentious little apple logo and the "Designed in California" placard I'm not entirely sure how a consumer would be confused.
Clearly, you have not met many consumers. Most of them are as dumb as rocks.
Re: (Score:2)
That's not really nice to rocks...
Re: (Score:2)
That's for in 2 years time when they finally get around to copying the current designs.
Actually they do (Score:2)
Not to throw cold water on the joke too much but in fact Samsung phones have the same issue. [physorg.com]
How can they? (Score:2)
When they haven't seen the iphone 5 to copy it yet?
Re: (Score:2)
In order to prove they aren't copying it, Apple should be forced to hand over the iPhone 5 design to Samsung.
Trying to Compete is a Crime? (Score:5, Insightful)
"Helping their cause, Apple presented to the judge a news report which quotes a Samsung executive saying that they will have to improve parts of their upcoming Galaxy Tab 10.1 tablet in light of the thinner iPad 2 from Apple."
Someone tell me how this is worth anything in the legal world? Of course Samsung would want to improve their product to compete with a product currently on the market. How is this relevant?
Re: (Score:2)
Because, if you accept Apple's legal theory that anything that looks like their product is an illegal copy then you understand. Of course they tried this with MS in the 90's (suing over the look and feel of MacOS) and got soundly trounced that doesn't mean that in the current environment they will lose. There has been a gradual shift in attitudes that copying the look or use of a product is illegal use of IP. That there is no basis in law for that doesn't stop them, after all half the patents now granted a
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Even worse, the judge made an unreasonable interpretation of the contract.
more of this look and feel bullshit again? (Score:3)
Apple shut down Digital Research Inc's GEM/1 because of "look and feel" claims. Playing from the same old playbook even though the legal system around software has changed dramatically in the past 25 years.
Re: (Score:2)
Didn't they try that crap on Microsoft as well over Windows and lose?
Oh yes, yes they did: Apple v Microsoft [wikimedia.org]
"Apple cannot get patent- protection for the idea of a graphical user interface, or the idea of a desktop metaphor [under copyright law]..."
Re: (Score:2)
Apple didn't shut down GEM/1, they made them (re)move the trash icon.
Re: (Score:2)
Why look-and-feel patents suck (Score:2)
Look-and-feel patents suck, and there's a very simple argument for that: users like to have similar interfaces for similar functions.
In case you don't agree: imagine that somebody patented the querty keyboard.
Re: (Score:2)
Is that a new derivative of the QWERTY keyboard? They can patent that if they like - I don't see many people adopting it.
Apple is just lucky.... (Score:3)
that Xerox PARC didn't sue them for copying look-and-feel, the mouse, and ethernet.
Re: (Score:3)
The reason, Xerox was an Apple investor [obamapacman.com], it'd be like suing yourself
“Xerox could have owned the PC revolution, but instead it sat on the technology for years. Then, in exchange for the opportunity to invest in a hot new pre-IPO start-up called “Apple,” the Xerox PARC commandos were forced — under protest — to give Apple’s engineers a tour and a demonstration of their work. The result was the Apple Macintosh, which Microsoft later copied to create Windows.
[...]
The
Re: (Score:2)
Seriously? Even here on Slashdot where we know how to use the inter-tubes?
"The first successful commercial GUI product was the Apple Macintosh, which was heavily inspired by PARC's work; Xerox was allowed to buy pre-IPO stock from Apple, in exchange for engineer visits and an understanding that Apple would create a GUI product. Much later, in the midst of the Apple v. Microsoft lawsuit in which Apple accused Microsoft of violating its copyright by appropriating the use of the "look and feel" of the Macintos
Re: (Score:2)
Actually, if you look at the Xerox Star Desktop [wikinfo.org] and the original Macintosh Desktop [webdesignerdepot.com], they don't look much alike. No menu bar, window borders look a lot different, scrollbars look different, etc.
Generic. (Score:2)
Stop splitting subject and verb! (Score:2)
"Last Wednesday, Samsung was ordered..."
or
"Samsung was ordered last Wednesday"
NOT "Samsung last Wednesday was ordered..."! Yeesh! Wednesday was not ordered! Quit butchering grammar!
Re: (Score:2)
This seems like bullshit if you were to ask me.
No no, in this world, it is called "intellectual property". Welcome to the world where money can buy ideas.
Re: (Score:2)
Again, no no! It's not bullshit, it's called a sugared beverage. It's actually not bad tasting.
Re: (Score:2)
No only if you purposefully make them look so much alike that it can potentially confuse the consumer. Like when you make a nearly identical handset and change the icons to very closely resemble the iPhone ones. Now personally I don't think this should be against the law, but the first time I saw a commercial for one of these phones I do remember thinking to myself they were shameless iPhone rip offs. I'm not the only one either :
First Look: Samsung Vibrant Rips Off iPhone 3G Design [wired.com]
Review: The IPhone Look A [associatedcontent.com]
Re: (Score:2)
Re:coke or pepsi (Score:4, Insightful)
Let me get this straight. If I make a product that is too similar to another already on the market then I gotta give it up? This seems like bullshit if you were to ask me.
If you make a product that looks exactly like the design patent that someone else owns, yes. Just as an example, take an iPhone and a Windows 7 phone. The Windows 7 phone doesn't look one bit like an iPhone. Now take one of these Samsung phones. They don't look one bit like a Windows 7 phone, but they look very, very similar to an iPhone.
Microsoft didn't copy Apple, they designed these phones themselves. Samsung copied. Apple has design patents that list about ten particular design choices, and Samsung copied all of them. Two or three design choices matching could have been coincidence, and most importantly the result would not look like an iPhone. All design choices matching means it looks the same, it is copied, and the copy is illegal.
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
And you conveniently forgot - Apple copied LG Prada. What's your point?
Re: (Score:2)
That's controversial. Despite a lot of bluster LG never did file a lawsuit so they probably didn't have much of a case.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
"... but they look very, very similar to an iPhone. "
I disagree. I don't find the to be unreasonably similar at all.
Re: (Score:2)
If you make a product that looks exactly like the design patent that someone else owns, yes. Just as an example, take an iPhone and a Windows 7 phone.
Hey, on my Gnome2 desktop, I have an application menu that's pretty much just like XP's start menu, and I've got a row of buttons that allow me to toggle to the active window. Windows can be minimized, restored or closed using the familiar XP icons in the familiar XP order and button placement ( _ [] X ). The title bars are at the top, and can be used a
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Unless you flipped the names around. If Apple copied Samsung I'd make a mint selling torches and pitchforks.
Re: (Score:3)
It is for the purposes of issuing an injunction against releasing those products, should they cause problems.
And as for Samsung copying the "design" of the iPhone, the iPhone is rectangular based shape with a screen. And while they look similar, so do Addidias shoes look similar to Nike (same basic shape [gstatic.com]).
Re: (Score:3)
It is for the purposes of issuing an injunction against releasing those products, should they cause problems.
And as for Samsung copying the "design" of the iPhone, the iPhone is rectangular based shape with a screen
Still, an icon for your photo gallery doesn't exactly *have* to show yellow flower petals, you know. Samsung copied details here to a depth that makes it more than clear that the phone and the software should look "just like the iPhone".
Personally I think it's just pathetic what Samsung did, even if the lawsuit is somewhat silly. On the other hand Apple has to draw a line somewhere.
When I first handled the Galaxy S I was surprised how obviously and unashamed this thing tried to ape the iPhone. "Rectangular
Re: (Score:2)
Ape indicates it is a crude imitation. There is no way one can mistake the Samsung for a iPhone, even though they look similar.
Re: (Score:2, Troll)
I'm not arguing with their logic but having dealt with both of the products you mentioned I can't say I agree that the Galaxy Tab is better in pretty much any way. At best the new 10.1 inch tablet puts them on even footing except that Honeycomb wasn't really ready for prime time last I checked and Samsung isn't exactly a shining star of after the sale support, especially in the software arena where they have been historically very poor with their phones. If Samsung can put the same level of service into t
Re: (Score:2)
What should a "tablet" look like? A tire iron?
I can easilly tell the difference between a galaxy, and an ipad, with my eyes closed.