The legal squabbles continue after Apple hit back at Motorola for what it alleges is an infringement on its patents for multitouch and other touch-screen-related technologies, that Motorola apparently utilises in its Android smartphone portfolio.
Three weeks after Motorola sued Apple over smartphone-related patents, Apple filed two suits in the US District Court in Wisconsin, alleging Motorola handsets such as the Droid, Droid X and Droid 2 infringe on six patents dealing with ways users access the handsets.
Apple is seeking damages and wants the court to halt Motorola from selling its Droid phones. Patently Apple details the lawsuits here.
The Droid devices, sold by Verizon Wireless, have helped Google’s Android platform top 20 percent market share in two years. They’ve also helped loose Motorola from the phone sale doldrums, boosting the company to a $109 million (£68 million) profit in the recently closed quarter.
Apple launched its popular iPhone in 2007 with some solid innovations in multitouch technology, including the practice of using two fingers to pinch and zoom on the phone.
The iPhone, for which Apple has filed many patents, has grown to capture 25 percent of smartphone market share in the United States.
Apple sued HTC in March, alleging the phone maker infringed on 20 patents, including interface, hardware technologies used in HTC’s handsets, including Android-based devices.
HTC fired back, suing Apple for infringing on five patents, and requesting that the International Trade Commission prevent Apple from selling its iPhone, iPod and iPad devices in the United States. Apple filed a second suit versus HTC in June.
Microsoft got in on the Android-suing action last month, suing Motorola for violating nine patents related to technologies in its Android handsets.
That came months after HTC agreed to pay Microsoft royalties related to the use of smartphone technologies in its Android phones.
Perhaps as a pre-emptive strike for legal action related to Android phones from Apple, Motorola sued Apple for infringing on Motorola patents in technology used in the Apple iPhone, iPad, iTouch and certain Mac computers.
Motorola filed its complaints in the United States and with the International Trade Commission.
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