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Ericsson and ZTE in Patent Legal Battle

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Ericsson has filed three patent infringement lawsuits against Chinese company ZTE. The Swedish telecoms equipment maker filed the suits in the UK, Italy and Germany after trying to reach an agreement with ZTE about licensing the patents. The development is the latest of an increasingly aggressive set of moves being taken by a number of vendors in the industry, with patent disputes erupting among Apple, Nokia, Motorola and Huawei among others.

 

In the latest case, Ericsson has accused ZTE of infringing some of its patents relating to GSM and WCDMA technologies. According to Ericsson, ZTE uses the patents in its handsets, its network infrastructure, or both, in the three European countries. Ericsson is planning to ask the courts to stop sales of ZTE products that use technology in which the Swedish group’s patents have allegedly been infringed. But ZTE denied the allegations and accused Ericsson of abandoning the negotiations that had been under way between the companies saying it will initiate “patent invalidation procedures” against Ericsson.

 

“For several years, Ericsson has made numerous attempts to sign license agreements with ZTE on fair, reasonable and non-discriminatory (FRAND) terms,” the company said. “Such attempts have unfortunately been unfruitful, and we have now, as a last resort, decided to exercise our legal rights to enforce our patents against ZTE’s infringing products,” the company said, noting it has signed licensing deals with more than 90 vendors.

 

ZTE, which said it plans to take its case to the patent re-examination board of China’s State Intellectual Property Organization, said it also has been able to reach cross-licensing agreements in most cases and seldom has to resort to third-party negotiations, let alone lawsuits.

 

Intellectual property rights (IPR) are the lifeblood of infrastructure, chip and device manufacturers, which spend billions developing new technology and can recoup research-and-development expenses through licensing the technology to competitors. However, because the financial stakes are so huge, companies look to the courts system if they feel they are not being paid fairly for their innovations. On the other hand, because patent dispute claims can take years to resolve, companies sometimes won’t level patent-infringement charges until the market or company has traction.

 

Patent lawsuits can take years to reach resolution. Qualcomm Inc. (QCOM) and Nokia Corp. (NOK) battled back and forth for two years before settling IPR claims. In perhaps one of the most infamous patent disputes, Research In Motion Ltd. (RIM) paid $612.5 million to NTP, a tiny Virginia-based company, to settle a five-year battle over patent claims that had been rejected by the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, leading to calls for patent reform in the United States.

 

The case highlights growing competition between Ericsson, the world’s biggest network infrastructure maker by sales, and fast-growing Chinese rivals such as ZTE and Huawei. It also underlines the intensifying battle over intellectual property in the telecoms industry.

 

While smaller than Huawei, ZTE has become one of the world’s top five mobile network equipment makers and is enjoying strong growth in the handset market. The Hong Kong-listed company insisted it was committed to respecting intellectual property rights, pointing out that it filed more international patent applications last year than any other telecoms group.

 

In addition to seeking damages, Ericsson plans to ask courts in the UK, Italy and Germany to halt sales of ZTE products that use technology in which the Swedish group’s patents have allegedly been infringed. ZTE said it would “fight any action that intends to involve our customers in patent lawsuits”.

 

In the technology-intensive telecommunications industry, ZTE sees innovation as the core of the company and attaches great importance to patent strategy. The company has consistently invested 10 percent of its income on R&D including the development of an international patent strategy. As of December 31, 2010, ZTE held a total of 33,000 patents, among which, 1863 were international patent applications in 2010 as registered with WIPO (World Intellectual Property Organisation), making ZTE No.1 in the telecommunications industry and No. 2 across all industries worldwide.

 

When disputes over patents occur, ZTE always follows the rules of mutual respect and mutual benefits to seek reasonable solutions. To date, through negotiation and cross-licensing, ZTE has reached a consensus with most telecommunications systems and components vendors on the majority of products and has been seldom needed to resort to third party adjudication, let alone legal action.

Motorola To Drop Android for Own OS?

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Motorola is said to be developing a web based operating system that would power their handsets in future. May be, the company finds their dependence on a single supplier is not a good idea anymore.

 

Information Week is quoting unnamed sources that indicate Motorola is developing its own mobile web-based operating system, possibly as a way to hedge its bets on the Android smartphone OS that it has been so successful with of late. When asked for comment, Motorola told IW that the project did exist, but that the company was firmly committed to the Android platform.

 

“We would like to note that any work on such an OS could potentially be part of Motorola’s “lapdock” plans for its devices, such as the ATRIX, or could merely be a “plan B” in the event that something drastic happens to the Android platform or the company’s relationship with Google.”

 

Though an official confirmation hasn’t yet come by from the Motorola head honchos, hints of an own web based OS being a practical alternative have trickled down from the company’s think tank. The hiring of ex-Apple and ex-Adobe engineers some time ago might be seen as something related to this thought. Or so, we guess. Hope you remember Motorola has hired a number of web engineers already.

 

Now that a web based OS that will sport the Motorola branding is on its way, we guess the company is seriously considering handsets that will be powered by the new creation.

 

Though no one knows what period it will take for development, it cant hurt to look forward to playing with devices that will have the Moto OS.

 

[News Flash] BuzzCity Replies Tekedia – Provides Answers To Our Questions

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Our best post, in terms of traffic, last week came from our prediction that CallCamp will win Garage48 Lagos, more than  12 hours before the final event. It happened and many provided feedback. That gave us the highest pageview. Second to that was an article on Nigeria and game downloads – courtesy of Buzz City report. 

When we got BuzzCity report, we studied every aspect of it. We must appreciate the efforts they put in it because our parent company had been working for a partnership with an Indian company. The numbers they had there came naturally. However, there were some things we could not understand. We just asked questions.

Today, we are happy to inform thousands of our readers that through BuzzCity PR agency, BuzzCity is providing answers.

Hi there. We represent BuzzCity as their PR agency. Buzzcity would like to respond to the analysis that appears on the tekedia site – https://www.tekedia.com/?p=4473 . I have attached their response. Please let me know if there is anything else I can help you with.

The feedback, from BuzzCity, communicated via ChannelPR is attached.

 The key point is this: We are definitely not biased towards Nigeria in our insights, our findings just reveal that Nigeria is growing faster than South Africa and Kenya at the moment.

Garage48 Lagos Over, Now Garage48 Accra

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It began with this post by Garage48, on its plan to be in Africa

 

For the first time in its existence, the Garage48 event series is coming to Lagos. Together with two world companies, Google and Nokia, it will take place from the 6th to the 8th of May 2011 at the Lagos Resource Centre, Victoria Island. Originally developed in Europe, Estonia and expanded to other countries, the purpose of the event is to build new web and mobile services in one single weekend – 48 hours.

 

Lagos is done! Remarkably fine, indeed. The next stop is Accra Ghana. And here is it.

 

Together with Google and Nokia another event of Garage48 will be launched in Ghana on the 13th of May. Garage48 Accra is second in Africa, following the Nigeria’s gathering, which was sold out in just 4 days. Extreme developing weekend for local technology professionals, entrepreneurs and marketers will take place at Kofi Annan Centre of Excellence in ICT.

 

For more information:
http://www.garage48.org/accra

Ragnar Sass
Garage48 Africa project manager
ragnar@garage48.org

 

Jojoo Imbeah
Garage48 Accra organizer
accra@garage48.org

 

Accra, Ghana in May 13-15

The Lessons of Garage48 Lagos – Evaluation Toolkit of Ideas

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Garage48 Lagos is past tense and CallCamp has won. Congratulations to the team. As we round up this experience and exercise, we refer you to this nice post by Tarmo Tali.  If you follow these ideas, you can take out the noise in your vision.

 

Step 1. – Search for existing solution 

Step 2. – Is your idea clear?

Step 3. – Who are your users and what is your offering?

Step 4. – Stay out of jail.

Step 5. – Does it matter?

Step 6. – Who is your team?

Step 7. – Value is more important than money.

Step 8. – Stand on the shoulders of the giants. 

Step 9. – How you boot and sustain?

Step 10. – Learn from history.