Australian Court Blocks Sales of Samsung Galaxy Tablet 158
jimboh2k writes "Apple has succeeded in blocking the sale of Samsung's Galaxy Tab 10.1 tablet in Australia until a final hearing can be heard in the case down under. The judgment on Thursday could effectively kill chances of the tablet ever launching properly in Australia after Samsung claimed further delays to the product would threaten hopes of gaining traction."
This may not be so good for Apple... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:This may not be so good for Apple... (Score:5, Insightful)
Uhh, there's no precedent set here... It's the norm that if you're found to violate a patent that an injunction is given. Apple wouldn't argue that in injunction shouldn't block the iPhone 4S because that would be mean... they would argue that an injunction shouldn't block the iPhone 4S because they already licensed samsung's patents when they took out a RAND license on the 3G patent pool.
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As far as I know the judge didn't rule that patent violation took place, but until the ruling is made on patent violation Samsung can't sell the Galaxy tab.
Seems a bit strange to me... you know... "innocent until proven guilty"...
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I don't know how law works in Australia, so take this as an answer to your question that is applicable in the US but maybe not AUS. First, there is no "innocent until proven guilty" well anywhere except TV and armchair attorneys. It's "burden of going forward" and "burden of persuasion." But it's irrelevant here anyway. There is no "guilty" in civil court. It's liable not liable. Second, an injunction is not relief. An injunction is merely to maintain the status quo to prevent any irreparable harm while the
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An injunction simply means that the Judge has decided that there is enough substance in this case to warrant it actually proceeding. Thus until the case is resolved, Samsung is not allowed to ship a potentially infringing product.
If Samsung wins the case, Apple will be liable for damages.
So don't worry, Samsung iPad fans, you might end up being able to buy your iPad ripoff in Australia after all!
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I'm wondering if the bigger mistake is the message to handset makers that if you use Andriod you get sued and products get blocked. Not just apple of course as there seems to be new suit against an Android maker every other day, but really have to wonder if at some point this becomes counter productive. Yes, Apple wants to beat Android, but what happens if you scare all the handset makers away from Android? Obviously they aren't going to stop making phones. Don't own one myself, but with good review the
Nice rant (Score:5, Insightful)
Small detail... this has nothing to do with Android. Apple has a beef with the design of the physical phone, the packaging, the cabling AND Samsungs skin for Android. In this suit at least, they got no complaint against Android itself.
Re:Nice rant (Score:4, Informative)
A big detail you missed, that's true for Germany and Netherlands, not Australia.
This has to do with two multitouch patents that have everything to do with Android and nothing to do with Samsung. Mobile phones are also vulnerable.
http://pericles.ipaustralia.gov.au/ols/auspat/applicationDetails.do?applicationNo=2005246219 [ipaustralia.gov.au]
http://pericles.ipaustralia.gov.au/ols/auspat/applicationDetails.do?applicationNo=2009233675 [ipaustralia.gov.au]
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Lets expand that to anyone who says anything positive against MS and tag them with the Borg icon, that way we can drive them out with comments and moderation. Wait, that has already happened.
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1) Most of the patents Samsung is asserting over Apple are covered by F/RAND requirements and
2) As I understand it, Apple has already bought licenses to Samsung's patents through their parts suppliers who pay royalties to Samsung.
I don't think Samsung has as much of a leg to stand on as people think they do.
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1) F/RAND doesn't mean free. Apple effectively wants to pay nothing
No, apple has already paid for the RAND patent pool for 3G, samsung want to double charge them.
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Except it's not applicable. This is not a case of apple should have licensed the RAND patent pool, it's a case of apple did license the RAND patent pool, and Samsung should have put this critical-to-3G's-functioning patent into the pool, as they were required to do when the pool was made up.
Apple does not have a license for the patent in question, but should have, because Samsung tried to submarine 3G basically.
Re:This may not be so good for Apple... (Score:4, Insightful)
Not losing ... Apple are winning an injunction which as long as they supply a valid looking case is automatic, this does not mean the actual case will stand up in court later ...Apple will have to prove that Samsung were trying to steal market share by copying
By the way Samsung do make money from Apple .... the iPad screen, processor, memory etc .etc is made by .... Samsung which is why Samsung hold patents on most of the technology, they designed it ...
Apple designed the iPad, but other people make it from mostly, off the shelf parts, most of them are made by Samsung, so unsurprisingly the Samsung Tab is made from mostly the same parts ... The only thing unique about the iPad is the physical shape and the desktop layout (which are protected with Design patents)
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the iPad screen, processor, memory etc .etc is made by .... Samsung which is why Samsung hold patents on most of the technology, they designed it ...
Samsung did not design the A5 processor. It is an ARM design (cortex A9), that has had been tweaked to a slightly custom design by Apple engineers. Samsung played little to no part in its design. They just fabricate it.
They also do not "make the screen", they are a minority supplier, most of the ipad screens come from another manufacturer (LG?).
All of that is irrelevant though. Samsung is countersuing over patents on mobile communications tech, not basic computer components.
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I said "make money from Apple" by selling them some of the components for the iPhone and iPad ... I did not say Designed all the components they sell ,...?
The point I was trying to make was that Samsung were already making money from every sale of a iPad.
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This could potentially work against Apple if Samsung go after the iPhone 4S on Oz. Precedent has been set, and it would be quite difficult for Apple to argue that an injunction shouldn't block the iPhone4S if Samsung decide to assert their hardware patents.
The Australian legal system is not precedent based.
Secondly, it's a civil matter, not a criminal matter.
Finally, Justice Bennett needs here head examined. There is no reason to deny competition and absolutely no reason to rule against Samsung after Apple have been caught lying to the court.
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copying of what? of making a square or rectangular shaped device? of making a better product?
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I have, have you? The Galaxy tab looks like the exact same trade dress as their picture frames and their Touch of color line of LCD TVs and monitors. As those all came out before Apple started using the design, I would have to say that Apple copied Samsung here, not the other way around.
https://encrypted.google.com/search?q=samsung+picture+frame&hl=en&rlz=1C1AFAB_enUS443US443&prmd=imvns&source=lnms&tbm=isch&ei=oWCYTtHaPMbl0QHr582uBA&sa=X&oi=mode_link&ct=mode&cd=2 [google.com]
Ugh. (Score:1)
Judgement could be used to ban ANY android device (Score:5, Insightful)
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According to your link the issue is with multitouch. My LG android phone doesn't have that so it should be safe. My HP touchpad does and I expect HP would have been in trouble over that if they hadn't bailed from the market.
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I'd like to see the Patent Office held liable for granting such ridiculous patents in the first place. The lawyers are just playing the game that they've been trained to play, and corporations being corporations are doing the same.
At least this is two big companies that can afford the legal costs to fight. Smaller players don't stand a chance. The real enemy here is the game that's being played.
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I already did. I specifically chose the Galaxy because of Apple's antics.
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Can't imagine why it wouldn't work in the 10.1.
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Damn straight! I don't really think the idea of using more than one finger on the touchscreen is stealing at all. Apple may have come up with a very good implementation of multitouch usage, but unless you've lived your entire life interacting with the world one finger at a time, its an obvious step for touchscreen devices.
So yeah, Apple trying legal tricks to block competition based on retarded patents that shouldn't have been granted is something I don't like. Samsung violating stupid patents, is somet
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I'm seriously considering the purchase of a Samsung Galaxy Player to replace my aging iPod 3G. I certainly won't be replacing it with another iPod.
Leverage (Score:1)
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Actually no. The situation was stable and acceptable to all involved until Apple bought their way into the mobile industry. Standard practice was to, more or less, do what one wanted as long as the others could too. Certain licensing was required and the big boys held to that, but Apple doesn't want to play with/like the rest. Which more or less means that either they all get together and put a stop to Apple or they wait it out and let Apple deal with all of them one after the other.
Either way it's a lose
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until Apple bought their way into the mobile industry. .
?
Not sure what you mean by this. They designed the iphone, introduced it and it sold well. Did the same with ipad. How did they buy their way into the mobile industry in any way differently than every other manufacturer of such devices?
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not sure either, apple didn't buy anything, it took nokia around 5 years to see any money for their patents.
Afaik samsung never got anything yet for their 3g patents at all.
Gov't - because nothing is too small to screw with (Score:5, Insightful)
All of these patent laws and copyright laws - all they do is promote innovation and competition, don't they?
Re:Gov't - because nothing is too small to screw w (Score:5, Funny)
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Government shouldn't be allowed in business, saying that it is ran by 'free market capitalist' is obviously skewing the reality, which is that government is ran by those, who do not want free market capitalism (for themselves at least), they want to create and maintain a monopoly for themselves, captivating the audience (not customers - prisoners of the system), and when they get in trouble because they are not challenged by any competition in any way, they expect a government bail out.
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Free market capitalist is not given any opportunities to run government or to buy government but also he is by definition not ruled by government.
Free market is by definition free of government intervention.
Once there is government intervention, then BY DEFINITION there is NO free market capitalism anymore. So at any moment that government starts regulating businesses, they stop being free market oriented businesses, their obvious response is to compete not by creating a better product at a lower price, bu
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As I said - free market is only free when it is free of government intervention. Once it is no longer free of government intervention, it is automatically no longer a free market, it is a distorted market, which sends out the wrong signals, which are not to compete based on user expectations and product quality/price, etc., but to use the distorting power that can be bought (and if a politician has power, then he is for sale, unless he is an ideological politician, which is probably one in 100,000).
It's no
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A business within free market competes with other businesses for the customers based on product quality/price.
A business within a non-free market can obviously compete with other businesses based on buying politicians, this is absolutely normal and to be expected (and I would do exactly that, presented an opportunity).
As I always contend - there is only one thing that is reliable, it's human greed. This is a good thing, not a bad thing.
Human greed can be a positive, constructive thing, when it's bound by th
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Oddly, people were saying this in 1990... Still hasn't happened.
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posting anonymously to protect my karma
Why should we value an opinion you don't even feel strongly enough to put your name to?
I've noticed a trend recently of people hiding behind anonymous coward status to protect their karma status, is karma that hard to earn? I get posting anonymously if you were posting information that might be confidential or identify you in other ways, but simply to karma whore? Seriously guys?
I don't care who just died (Score:4, Insightful)
This company needs to be knocked off their perch. ESPECIALLY as Australian people have a penchant for strongly following the rules of tall poppy syndrome.
Anecdotal comment: Out of the 50 staff I work with in my team in the office, we have had the following phone purchases in the past 12 months
1x iphone 4
5x galaxy S2
1x galaxy 1 series
3x HTC Android phones
2x Acer Android phones (surprisingly good, Liquid Metal phone - 120$ AUD outright!)
1xAsus Transformer
0xipads
Also of note, 2 of those Android purchases were directly moving FROM iphones to Android. If I increase that threshold to 18 months*, I can add another iphone 4.
The sentiment in the office and amongst all the nerds I know except 2 die hards is that "Apple is evil" and generally to be avoided. It's basically 'not cool' to own an iphone at the moment, at least with the people I speak with. (If you can't tell, I'm one of the converts)
I have in the past 12 months though, recommended an iphone for someone surprisingly. A girl who had an iphone 3gs she dropped it and shattered it, she's not tech savvy and already has an iphone with itunes backup, it would be silly to push my 'Android agenda' on the girl when clearly an iphone would suit here.
Flame comment begin: and to be genuinely honest, I see the iphone as the 'dumbest' of the smartphones, it's perfect for people like her because it's like the old Nokia 6110 of smartphones, simple and basic. You can't do much but you can't break much either. (Yes I genuinely believe that and I owned 3 of the things)
* and the guy who got his iphone 18 months ago is envious of everyones Galaxy S2, he's switching to Android at the end of his 24 month contract.
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I guess being litigious fuckstains now translates to "driving a market segment" good to know, thanks.
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You can hate the game and the player who beats the crap out of the other players who are competing normally.
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The amount of things you have to hack to get an iphone to do what you want is just as much as for an android phone. Maybe a little more for an iphone. The only d
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All I hear from fanboys/girls is "omg why won't it work".
Android fanboys/fangirls? Doesn't sound like fanboy talk.
My mate's constantly having to close applications when he's done with them on his Galaxy S (stock, not modded) because leaving them running just kills the responsiveness on his phone. Doesn't matter what app it is.
iOS resource management is miles ahead of Android's. And that translates to "it just works".
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It's not an Apple product.
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For us, it comes down to personal preference and nothing else. The Android seems just as dumb as iOS and I honestly don't see the advantages of Android over iOS, at all.
My partner has a Samsung Galaxy S2, I have an iPhone 4. The Android unit is nice, but I don't see any advantages of it over what Apple is offering, we tried using the alternative app stores on the Android and we found them lacking anything worth getting, aside from that I don't know what it's offering that the iPhone isn't.
My fiancee has just bought a Nexus-S to replace her lost iPhone 3GS. what it came down to was basically price. For what she uses it for, which I imagine is what *most* people use their smartphone for (making phone calls, sending text messages, a bit of web browsing, calendaring, the occasional silly app) there really wasn't a lot of difference between an iOS device and an Android device. The iPhone 4 is about £500 whilst the Nexus-S is £300 - the hardware is pretty much identical (the only bi
In Australia, yes? (Score:2)
Make the lawyers fight it out in a cage filled with snakes, horny kangaroos, and drop bears. Last man/woman stand wins. It's the Aussie way.
(don't get all ruffled Aussies, it's just a joke)
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And we don't need another hero, just a tin of tuna
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That is just seriously messed up. What kind of evil are you advocating anyway?
Please stop and rethink.
How about: two lwayers enter, zero lawyers leave.
I think that sounds much better.
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You could always rig a drop bear right outside of the exit....
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+1 for the drop bears
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I have a question (Score:2)
Apple to Samsung: (Score:1)
Madness (Score:2)
These childish patent wars have got to stop.
It sickens me that companies like Apple and Samsung are flinging patents around, while great men like Dennis Ritchie who contributed so much more to the world never achieved anywhere near the riches of these technology leeches.
What ever happened to competing on the merits of your product instead of the size of your legal team?
Want to fix the patent system? Deny the rights of corporations to hold patents. Only the actual inventor or creator, a real flesh a
Re:Madness (Score:5, Insightful)
Until there's a way to put a corporation in jail, they should not have the same rights as people.
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I refuse to accept that corporations are people until Texas executes one.
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Actually, in the US, corporations DO have the rights of citizens. Look it up.
They don't in any other nation as far as I know, but in the US, they do.
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Boycott Apple (Score:2)
It sickens me that companies like Apple and Samsung are flinging patents around
Do not blame Samsung. This is 100% Apple's fault. Samsung is doing nothing more than trying to defend itself against an evil, abusive, monopolist. If somebody got mugged in an ally, would you critize that person for trying to fight back?
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It was all conceived at Xerox PARC decades ago. Read up on Alan Kay's work there. All Apple did is BUILD something like the tablet devices envisioned all those years ago. There are also clear examples to the tablet designs throughout science fiction, particularly the Star Trek PADD devices, so Apple didn't even invent the idea of shiny surfaces or rectangular form factors.
They didn't invent the multi-touch screen; they just used it.
They didn't invent the icon; they used them.
The didn't invent the
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Rounded corners are not a patented aspect, visual looks of interfaces are not a patented aspect either.
And i'm pretty sure the look and feel aspect has already been tried and they lost.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apple_Computer,_Inc._v._Microsoft_Corporation [wikipedia.org]
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this is a bad, bad precedent (Score:2)
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Bigger Picture (Score:1)
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Well I like my Galaxy S. I don't want an iPhone (I have an iPod Touch that gets used less and less). For what I do, the Galaxy S is a better fit than the iPhone. And as far as copying goes, the iPhone itself borrowed heavily from designs in years past (wish I could remember the name of the phone that looked like the iPhone but predated it). There are only so many ways to design a phone with a big touch screen. As far as software function goes, well Android and iOS both seem to copy each other. My Gala
Please Welcome, Tim Cook! (Score:2)
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I think you stretch the analogy too far
Oh no. You just used the words "analogy" and "stretch" in a reply to a comment about homosexuals. It suffices to say that the analogy will soon be stretched further. You have doomed us all.
The delay is not a bad thing. (Score:1, Insightful)
The delay is a good thing. Since we are all already aware of what has happened, this delay will give foolish people lots of time to post their faux-sincere "condolences" at shitholes like Hacker News, reddit and Google+. There'll be many thousands of useless one-line "My condolences to his family" and "RIP dmr" comments.
By the time Slashdot gets around to posting this news, the majority will hopefully have that crap out of their system, and we can remember him and the impact he made with useful, insightful,
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See: http://slashdot.org/recent/ [slashdot.org]
Specifically:
* http://slashdot.org/submission/1816404/dennis-ritchie-father-of-c-and-unix-reported-dead [slashdot.org]
* http://slashdot.org/submission/1816390/dennis-ritchie-co-creator-of-unix-and-c-has-died [slashdot.org]
It is in the firehose currently. Twice. These posts are off topic in this regard. I don't know why it hasn't been submitted to the front page yet if he is as influential as all of you commentors are saying. I never heard of him before today. However it is off topic. Give the editor
"I never heard of him before today" - no shit (Score:2, Insightful)
It's just what US business does and some other pla (Score:2)
It's not a Korean probl
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Blair Witch was the first (mainstream) film that kicked off that horrid form of cinematography, long before Cloverfield (and it has a lot to answer for because of that).
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"Homicide: Life on the Streets" pioneered shakycam long before Blair Witch. Except it was actually good.
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If that's true, then siding with Apple will just promote the system that you descripe. Apple represents abusive monopolies through influence, corruption, and abuse of the patent systems, and legal systems.
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Flamebait... Really? (Score:1)