Apple's $1B Patent Award From Samsung Gets Cut By $450M 56
New submitter charlesj68 writes with news that U.S. District Judge Lucy Koh has cut Apple's $1.05 billion patent infringement award from Samsung down by $450.5 million. She also said Samsung deserves a new trial over claims related to some of its smartphones.
"Koh rejected Apple’s request to enhance the jury’s award, saying the amount Samsung owed was heavily disputed and the jury wasn’t bound to accept either side’s damages estimate. 'It is not the proper role of the court to second-guess the jury’s factual determination as to the proper amount of compensation,' Koh said in her ruling. Apple is entitled to additional damages for sales of infringing products that weren’t considered by the jury, Koh ruled, saying she intends to calculate the amount beginning on Aug. 25, the day after the jury reached its verdict. As the case has been appealed, Koh said she would delay considering evidence of actual post-verdict sales and pre-judgment interest until the appeals are completed."
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It's written in Perl, so you know it's easy to maintain
Ha ha. Good one!
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just look at Slashdot's leading edge high quality clean design.
Ha ha. Good one!
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It's still a very current event and one that is quite relevant to "the new PC." In case you haven't been paying attention, the notion of the smart phone is still developing quite rapidly. Also, the thing about patents... software patents, F/RAND patents, standards critical patents and all that. This one trial encompasses many hot issues. Also it involves Apple whose new empire no longer cares about the computers it was once known for and now the devices and the media it sells... err... I mean "licenses.
Too little, too late (Score:4, Interesting)
It's been pretty obvious from the start that Koh was in the tank for Apple. I suspect at this point, she's worried about what the appeals court might have to say about her conduct, especially if they can't find grounds to overturn her verdict.
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It's been pretty obvious from the start that Koh was in the tank for Apple. I suspect at this point, she's worried about what the appeals court might have to say about her conduct, especially if they can't find grounds to overturn her verdict.
If that was the case, how come shes still practicing law? In other civilized countries we have laws against judges preciding over cases where they have personal stakes in the outcome of the case - She should receive the judicial version of curbstomping if the bolded is correct.
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It's been pretty obvious from the start that Koh was in the tank for Apple. I suspect at this point, she's worried about what the appeals court might have to say about her conduct, especially if they can't find grounds to overturn her verdict.
If that was the case, how come shes still practicing law? In other civilized countries we have laws against judges preciding over cases where they have personal stakes in the outcome of the case - She should receive the judicial version of curbstomping if the bolded is correct.
Yep. But on these same civilized countries, one must first file a denounce. The denounce is studied and, if accepted, a lot os legal proceddings (including a trial) is needed before the judge is discharged from his/her duties.
I don't see no denounce being filed. Yet. But things can change - mainly by the fact that Samsung's case didn't had a very... up to the letter... treatment under this judge's rule.
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Check out icebike's comment above. If you were really "looking forward", you wouldn't have much trouble finding the evidence you claim to seek.
Re:Too little, too late (Score:5, Interesting)
It's been pretty obvious from the start that Koh was in the tank for Apple. I suspect at this point, she's worried about what the appeals court might have to say about her conduct, especially if they can't find grounds to overturn her verdict.
I suspect that Koh pretty much handed Samsung grounds for appeal when she ruled the Court has identified an impermissible legal theory on which the jury based its award, and cannot reasonably calculate the amount of excess while effectuating the intent of the jury [groklaw.net]. Groklaw saw this coming from day one.
Further Groklaw noted months ago that
The jury appears to have awarded damages for the Galaxy Tab 10.1 LTE infringing — $219,694 worth — but didn't find that it had actually infringed anything
.
And of course there was Lucy Koh shooting off her mouth about the Galaxy 10 being in obvious infringement (even imposed an injunction, since lifted), when in fact it was found not to infringe by the jury. Ooops, how embarrassing.
Koh is probably going to get overturned entirely on this trial. It hasn't even gotten to the appeal stage yet.
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It's also pretty obvious that Samsung is astroturfing social web sites. After all, their marketing budget is bigger than Apple & Sony combined.
.... [Citation needed] ..?
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It's also pretty obvious that Samsung is astroturfing social web sites. After all, their marketing budget is bigger than Apple & Sony combined.
.... [Citation needed] ..?
Have no idea if Samsung is bribing /. posters to astroturf, seems like a waste of money since half the people on this forum would do that for free. He was right about Samsung's ad budget though, it appears to be bigger than Apple's, HP's, Dell's, Microsoft's and Coca Cola's budgets combined: http://www.businessinsider.com/chart-of-the-day-samsungs-massive-marketing-budget-2012-11 [businessinsider.com].
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Well, they kind of are a gigantic company present in a lot of markets and market segments. Samsung likely is a direct competitor of all of the companies they outspend (Coca Cola is active in certain segments of chemical research). You'll have to compare to a company of similar breath to get a realistic picture.
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Well, they kind of are a gigantic company present in a lot of markets and market segments. Samsung likely is a direct competitor of all of the companies they outspend (Coca Cola is active in certain segments of chemical research). You'll have to compare to a company of similar breath to get a realistic picture.
If only we were talking about all of Samsung and not just Samsung Electronics. But we aren't talking about Samsung (Fine) Chemicals, nor Insurances, nor Engineering, nor Heavy Industries, nor etc. Only Samsung Electronics. Not that much breadth left.
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Samsung Electronics also covers their home appliances. I've seen more advertising for Samsung fridges and washing machines than phones/tablets.
Good one. And still doesn't account for spending more on advertising than Coke.
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Samsung really doesn't need to astroturf anything. Apple's recent attempts to patent everything in sight, including Star Trek's "PADD" haven't earned them a lot of friends.
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Samsung really doesn't need to astroturf anything. Apple's recent attempts to patent everything in sight, including Star Trek's "PADD" haven't earned them a lot of friends.
Samsung still has several times as many patents as Apple. Esp. design patents.
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Do any of Samsung's design patents attempt to teleport Star Trek's designs into the future so they can't qualify as "prior art"?
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Do any of Samsung's design patents attempt to teleport Star Trek's designs into the future so they can't qualify as "prior art"?
Yes. And way before Apple too. Why do you ask?
You couldn't make this stuff up (Score:2)
And the winners are: the lawyers.
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Partly true there... but the other part is that she was not prepared for what she had. She saw Apple as most people generally do from the beginning. "Winner" was her presumption. Following the ["what's the point of having a trial at all!?"] trial showed how things were stacked against Samsung, "the evil asian company who couldn't possibly do anything but shamelessly copy honest American companies" AMIRITE? As the trial went on, she began to see things a bit differently. But the Jury foreman made his mi
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Her behavior, actions and reaction spoke volumes. Yeah sure, it's all speculation even if she were to personally respond to my commentary personally admitting or denying everything I said. But based on what people do, it's not often hard to peice together what motivates a person to have done them.
At some point, when a thing is so broken that you can't possibly piece it back together with any coherence, you just have to toss it out and get a new one.
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Argument against IP laws (Score:1)
I hope someday people realize that ideas are not scarce goods (queue jokes about common sense). Apple's invention - rounded corners and all - was built on the collective shoulders of all of civilization. Likewise Samsung's ideas built on the same thing - possibly including some ideas put forward by Apple. THIS IS NOT A BAD THING. In fact, what I just describe is exactly how Markets work.
The sooner we stop treating ideas like real physical property, the better off we will as a society will be. Punish pe
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No victim, no crime.
But corporations are people, and rounded corners belong to Apple - clearly if Samsung had used razor-sharp edges on their tablet, people would have bought iPads instead, and so Samsung did steal from Apple.
This is depressing. On a slightly related note, I'm looking at my (physical) desktop and can't find one single device (including keyboards, monitors, computer cases, etc) without rounded corners.
Re:Argument against IP laws (Score:4, Insightful)
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* Not intended to be a factual statement
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The sooner we stop treating ideas like real physical property, the better off we will as a society will be. Punish people for stealing actual things instead of hypothetical customers (lost sales)
You have it backwards. Physical property is worth less than good ideas (not common ones). What you call actual things are simply = good ideas (design etc) + cheap raw materials + manufacturing machines. As you can see, the most valuable factor in the above equation is "good ideas."
Ummm... (Score:2)
And then proceeded... to second-guess the jury’s factual determination as to the proper amount of compensation by $450,000,000?
Am I missing something here? I would prefer to not RTFA if at all possible..
Re:Ummm... (Score:4, Informative)
Yes, you are missing that she didn't second guess the jury's factual determination, she "identified an impermissible legal theory on which the jury based its award".
There is a difference between matters of law and matters of fact (in a jury trial in the US, the former is the purview of the judge and the latter that of the jury, generally.)
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The jury had some problems with a few phones. In one case, they ordered the phone had not infringed and then later ordered compensation for the phone. In another instance, the breakdown of compensation didn't equal the total compensation awarded (bad math on the part of the jury) and the judge doesn't know which amount they meant. There are probably more, but those are the first two I can remember.
So, the judge order new trials on all the phones she couldn't figure out what the jury meant or they clearly
Re:Ummm... (Score:4, Insightful)
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Big Deal (Score:1)
450Million would only run the US Government for what, like 2 seconds?
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About an hour.
Annual expenditure is $3.8 trillion.
Fair Use ignored (Score:1)
she's an ass (Score:2)
I don't agree with her decision and she's done too much meddling and wavering. Nobody should be happy with how things have turned out. And after all, isn't that's what compromise is about -- disappointing both parties.
Corporate Antics (Score:1)