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The Courts Apple

China's Xiao-i Sues Apple for $1.43 Billion Over Siri AI Infringement (venturebeat.com) 70

Chinese artificial intelligence company Shanghai Zhizhen Intelligent Network Technology, also known as Xiao-i, has filed a lawsuit against Apple, alleging it has infringed on Xiao-i's patents. From a report: Xiao-i is calling for 10 billion yuan ($1.43 billion) in damages and demands that Apple cease "manufacturing, using, promising to sell, selling, and importing" products that infringe on the patent, it said in a social media post. Xiao-i argued that Apple's voice-recognition technology Siri infringes on a patent it applied for in 2004 and was granted in 2009.
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China's Xiao-i Sues Apple for $1.43 Billion Over Siri AI Infringement

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  • How about at least listing the claim that is supposedly infringement? This is slashdot we aren't going to read TFA.
    • I was under the impression that they were allowed to register "voice recognition" in general. Isn't that how parent laws work?
      • I read the article. Thereâ(TM)s no further information. No patent number, no description. Apple will probably win a random patent lawsuit like this, since itâ(TM)s probably an indefensible patent, or buy the company off.

        • Re: Great summary (Score:5, Insightful)

          by NateFromMich ( 6359610 ) on Monday August 03, 2020 @01:44PM (#60361249)

          I read the article. Thereâ(TM)s no further information. No patent number, no description. Apple will probably win a random patent lawsuit like this, since itâ(TM)s probably an indefensible patent, or buy the company off.

          If this wasn't a Chinese company suing them in China, I'd agree. But think about this:

          In July, China’s Supreme People’s court ruled that the patent was valid.

          Of course they did. This is China and they aren't going to side with a foreign company.

          • "In July, China’s Supreme People’s court ruled that the patent was valid."
            Well shit, the ChiComs legal system said it, it must be the only correct interpretation.
            Come on China, this is some Trump level twitter posts nonsense.
            Chinar should stick to trying to claim the Entire South China Sea, because it has the work 'Chinar' in it.
              • Obviously a typo. Nevertheless, they would just file a complaint within the WTO. Worst case, Apple shuts off Siri for Chinese consumers and watch them bitch and shout at their own stupid government. Maybe Apple could send a helpful push notification every time someone says âoehey Siriâ: âoewe have shut off features of your Mac/phone. This is due to the CCPs ruling that an overly broad patent is valid (we think it isnâ(TM)t). If you want functionality restored, help us by calling Xi Jinpi

              • by cusco ( 717999 )

                ChiCom? I think the poster is stuck in 1979.

            • Zhizhen Network Technology Co.:

              We *know* Apple are using our AI Mandarin voice recognition technology. We stole it from them in the first place!
          • Comment removed based on user account deletion
            • by HiThere ( 15173 )

              Or perhaps they'll decide that their local companies are now developed enough that they *like* that price.

              Or this could be decided in response to Trump's extortion of TikTok.

              Or...it could be very poor reporting of a perfectly valid complaint.

            • They're probably upset at the TikTok and also Apple moving a quarter of their iPhone manufacturing to India.

          • You think it is any different with US courts? funny... It's not like Apple hasn't sued others for blatant ridiculous generic patents (like the rounded design of the iPhone years ago). If a chinese company has a patent it should be handled the same way as if it was a company from another country.
      • I was under the impression that they were allowed to register "voice recognition" in general. Isn't that how parent laws work?

        No.

      • by HiThere ( 15173 )

        Only in the Eastern Texas Patent Court https://www.bloomberg.com/opin... [bloomberg.com]

    • If so then there will be prior patents.

      • Yep.
        https://www.sri.com/hoi/siri/ [sri.com]

        Not just STI but DARPA funded as well. The Chinese company may be running a squeeze play on Apple over the Chinese market. And given all the part sourcing from China they may have Apple by the short hairs.

        But the us govt isn't going to be happy about China using any DARPA funded patent developments as a result.

        This is just going to be tit for tat given Huawei et al.

        I'm liking the TikTok squeeze play. The Chinese outrage that the us regulators are forcing Chinese company's

        • by thereddaikon ( 5795246 ) on Monday August 03, 2020 @01:56PM (#60361283)

          I think most people are having a hard time waking up to the fact that we are at the start of a new cold war. Right now we are at the same stage the West and Soviets were in the late 40's. Cooperation between sides is just now ending and divisions are growing. The next few years will entail the painful withdrawal of economies bifurcating. Within the next decade China and the west will isolate from one another. We will slip back into the uneasy stalemate of a bipolar world (heh). We will likely see a spate of proxy wars again, probably in places like Africa and South America. A new analog to NATO will form in the Pacific as smaller nations who don't want to be pushed around by China band together against their common enemy. History is repeating itself.

          • by Solandri ( 704621 ) on Monday August 03, 2020 @03:14PM (#60361643)

            I think most people are having a hard time waking up to the fact that we are at the start of a new cold war

            LOL. That cold war has been going on for a couple decades now, it's just that China was the only one fighting it. The West didn't believe it was a war, so were willingly handing over all their tech secrets to China for the carrot of future sales in China (which of course never materialized). That contract to build a high-speed rail system in China [wikipedia.org] that Siemens won? Siemens wisely refused to just hand over the manufacturing technology, but foolishly agreed to manufacture the trains in China. During off hours when the manufacturing plant was closed, China simply went in, opened up all the manufacturing equipment, and measured and copied all the technology that Siemens wasn't willing to hand over. A few years later, China booted Siemens out, and began manufacturing the trains themselves. When the attacker has physical access to your systems, your security is nil.

            For two decades China has been keeping the value of the Yuan artificially low. Normally when a country starts to develop, its currency value rises. But not in China's case. Not letting your currency rise reduces your purchasing power, and stagnates your citizens' real income. So why do it? To keep Chinese labor prices artificially low, so Western companies would continue to put manufacturing in China, where China could beg/borrow/copy/steal as many secrets as they could.

            I think Trump is an idiot and a terrible president. But one thing he's gotten right is treating China as if in a hostile negotiation. All the previous Presidents have done everything they could to placate China, for fear of upsetting U.S.-China trade and tanking the U.S. economy prior to re-election. But even if for the wrong reasons, Trump has been facing off against China the way we always should have been. You see, the notion that companies should play fair and respect each others' secrets is a distinctly western construct. It's not present in the East. You may have run across it in anime and manga, where a new hiree is required to spy on their previous employer. That'd be a faux pas in the West, but is completely normal in the East. The eastern attitude towards trade secrets is that its your responsibility to protect them, and the responsibility of competing companies to try to steal them. You cannot rely on patent law or the western notion that it's "wrong" to steal secrets to protect you. What's been going on in China since the 1990s has been the chickens setting up manufacturing in the foxes' den, completely oblivious to the fact that foxes eat chickens.

    • Re:Great summary (Score:4, Informative)

      by Anubis IV ( 1279820 ) on Monday August 03, 2020 @02:11PM (#60361353)

      According to the original reporting from Reuters [reuters.com], Apple claims the patent has to do with games and instant messaging in ways that aren't relevant to Siri. It even went so far as to have independent appraisers who had been certified by China's Supreme People's Court sign off on the fact that Siri doesn't make use of the patent, but I have yet to see the actual patent (though, even if I did, I suppose it'd be in Chinese and thus rather difficult for me to peruse).

      Apparently this is a continuation of a case that's been going on since 2012 [cnet.com]. Apple filed back then to have the patent invalidated, and it was, but then that ruling went through 8 years of appeals. Finally, the Supreme People's Court ruled last month that the patent was actually valid, leading to a renewed suit for a larger dollar amount.

      • Great timing as Apple moves 25% of iPhone manufacturing to India. Sounds like usual state corporate hardball.

        • Apple is also reported to be seeking Chinese-based suppliers for aspects of their supply that are currently exclusively outside of China. I suspect they're reading the tea leaves and expect they will soon find themselves in a position where the only way to reach the Chinese market will be with Chinese-built parts while at the same time the only way to reach the US will be with non-Chinese-based parts. As such, they're seeking to set up parallel operations: anything not currently in China needs to be duplica

  • Cool... (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Freischutz ( 4776131 ) on Monday August 03, 2020 @12:51PM (#60360953)
    Apple is getting sued by a Communist company, That's like Baal having a bare knuckle fight with Satan. Figuring out who to root for in the fight should cause some human kernel panics around here.
    • They seem to be a private company, which goes against the principles of communism, so I'm not sure how you can call them communist other than as a reactionary false statement.

      • It's a Chinese company ... hence it's a CCP company.
      • Re:Cool... (Score:5, Funny)

        by Rick Schumann ( 4662797 ) on Monday August 03, 2020 @01:00PM (#60361019) Journal
        I'm pretty sure in China 'private company' just means they don't have an official government proctor permanently stationed at their offices, they just come in on Tuesdays and Thursdays.
      • by Puls4r ( 724907 )
        Yeah. Private. In China. Where the main Chinese-propaganda government TV channels are already astroturfing it.

        FYI, this is for infringement in China. And if you think an American company is going to get a fair shake in China's system, then I've got a bridge to sell you too.

        Strike that. The Chinese already own the bridge.
      • You seem to not understand how Communism controls almost all businesses behind the scenes in China. This company is #1 in surveillance technology, primary shareholder is Fu Liquan, who is 100% in the Dear Leader's back pocket.

    • Hey! My kernel is none of your business, and for your information my kernel is highly protected!
      *Crosses legs and covers kernel with both hands*
    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      I'm sure it will be just as fair as that American court was when examining Apple's patent claims against Samsung.

    • by HiThere ( 15173 )

      Given the readily available details....yeah, it has to be decided purely on the basis of existing biases.

  • by Rick Schumann ( 4662797 ) on Monday August 03, 2020 @01:03PM (#60361035) Journal
    HAAAAHAHAHAHAHAHA that's hilarious!
    What's next? The Chinese government accusing the U.S. of human rights violations? *guffaw*
    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • What's next? The Chinese government accusing the U.S. of human rights violations? *guffaw*

      Already has been doing so [theguardian.com] every year [xinhuanet.com], because the US has been [wikipedia.org] and is violating [theatlantic.com] human rights [theweek.com]. (but China only does so after the US launch the attack on the issues, every year.)

      It looks like news to you only because you, like most Americans, are either reading biased US news coverage, insensitive [wikipedia.org] to your own country's real guild, or both, while falsifying and exaggerating the problems of your enemies.

      • Some of those things are due to the Trump administration which is only 'The United States government' in name, otherwise they're just squatters.
        Some of them are long-standing problems that are currently being addressed -- much to the chagrin of racist assholes in this country.
        One of them is about enemy combatants and not in the same category, and is a totally different discussion.
        None of which excuses the Chinese government in any way shape or form for the bullshit things that they do to people, and you
  • It's hard to find info on the patent itself. This legal blog post from July is the most info I could find: https://www.slwip.com/resources/latest-decision-by-supreme-peoples-court-of-china-confirms-validity-of-little-i-robot-patent-in-blow-to-apple/ [slwip.com]. It seems to revolve more around performing assistant type functions (e.g. asking for directions, making reservations, or, seemingly critical to this particular case and patent, playing games) than around voice recognition itself (e.g. deep learning).
  • >China
    >Patent
    LMAO

  • I'm not sure why someone would claim that Apple stole their AI technology for Siri. Siri isn't exactly a shining example of working AI.

  • China company suing for infringement, thatâ(TM)s a larf
  • For analysis by ACTUAL patent lawyers practicing in China https://www.slwip.com/resources/latest-decision-by-supreme-peoples-court-of-china-confirms-validity-of-little-i-robot-patent-in-blow-to-apple/ [slwip.com] that actually goes through the legal reasoning.

    The patent in English https://patents.google.com/patent/CN100518070C/en?oq=+200410053749 [google.com]

    From my reading of the patent and the analysis, this looks at least reasonable, and much better than many US patent decisions.

  • so why not China?

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