Another day, another lawsuit after NTP filed patent lawsuits against six of the industry’s biggest players – Apple, HTC, LG Electronics, Microsoft and Motorola – in a United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia.
The lawsuits accuse the manufacturers of infringing on eight patents related to “the delivery of electronic mail over wireless communications systems.”
In a 9 July statement on the suits, NTP describes its founder, Tom Campana, as being the inventor of wireless email.
NTP was previously involved in a years-long legal struggle with Research In Motion. In 2001, it sued the BlackBerry maker for what it said were infringements on nine of its patents for wireless email. After years of legal maneuverings, in 2006, RIM agreed to make a one-time payment of $612.5 million (£405 million) to NTP, in exchange for being able to continue offering its email services.
According to NTP, following its litigation with RIM, the US Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) began to reexamine some NTP patents. In its 9 July statement, NTP said it had additionally filed an appeal to the US Court of Appeals, asking that the USPTO’s remaining rejections of NTP patent claims – several claims under investigation were earlier found to be valid – be overturned.”
The filing of suit today is necessary to ensure that those companies who are infringing NTP’s patents will be required to pay a licensing fee,” said Stout. “In view of the USPTO Board’s ruling, the debate over whether Mr. Campana was an originator in the field of wireless email is over. No patents in US history have received as much scrutiny as NTP’s patents. We are delighted that the USPTO Board has recognised the groundbreaking innovation of Mr. Campana by confirming 67 of NTP’s patent claims. We are also confident that the USPTO’s rejections, which are on appeal before the US Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, will be overturned.”
NTP currently has licensing agreements with Good Technology, Nokia and Visto, in addition to Research In Motion.
For Apple, the NTP suit is likely just one more matter to keep its legal team busy. On 2 March, Apple sued smartphone rival HTC over issues of patent infringement, and on 12 May, HTC sued back, likewise claiming that Apple infringed on some its patents.
Apple has similarly been trading legal documents with Nokia, which on 22 October, 2009 filed a suit against Apple, alleging that it violated 10 Nokia patents. Apple soon sued back, accusing Nokia of violating 13 Apple-owned patents. The two have since gone back and forth again, and no resolution is expected in the near-term. On 12 March, Reuters reported that Apple and Nokia have requested that trials for their respective suits be heard in mid-2012.
In March, Taiwan-based Elan Microelectronics also filed a complaint against Apple, this one with the US International Trade Commission, alleging that the Apple iPad, iPhone, iPod touch, MacBook and Magic Mouse infringe on an Elan patent for multi-touch technology.
Additionally, since its 4 June launch of the iPhone 4, Apple has had still two more suits filed against it. The first, in a District Court in San Francisco, accuses Apple of perpetuating fraud by selling a device it allegedly knew to have antenna issues. The second, filed in a District Court in Maryland, ropes in AT&T as well, and accuses the two of a number of wrongdoings, including deceptive trade practices, intentional misrepresentation and fraud by concealment.
None of the companies named in the recent NTP filing has released an official response to the allegations.
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