Qualcomm and Teleepoch
Enter Into a 3G CDMA Subscriber Unit License Agreement, October
6, 2007
MTN chooses Cambridge Broadband
Networks for multi-service wireless network in Rwanda, October 6,
2007
Brazilian government to
publish 3G bidding rules soon, October 6, 2007
KTF 3G service suffers
from technical problems, October 6, 2007
Argentina’s Personal
lunches 3G service in Rosario, October 6, 2007
Russia has it's first 3G
network, October 6, 2007
AT&T could drop Alcatel-Lucent
as 3G mobile network supplier, October 6, 2007
Enea Extends License Agreement
with ZTE for 3G Handsets, October 2, 2007
LG to unveil premium handsets
in Brazil, October 2, 2007
KTF 3G subscribers doubled
in less than 3 months, October 2, 2007
3G policy in India will
be non-uniform, October 2, 2007
- previous news
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QUALCOMM files patent infringement suit against Nokia
November 7, 2005
QUALCOMM and its wholly owned subsidiary, SnapTrack, filed suit on
November 4 against Nokia Corporation and Nokia Inc. in federal court
in San Diego for infringement of eleven of QUALCOMM's patents and
one patent owned by SnapTrack. QUALCOMM's lawsuit includes patents
that are essential for the manufacture or use of equipment that
complies with the GSM, GPRS and EDGE cellular standards (the GSM
family of standards) and other patents that are infringed by Nokia's
products. Patents that are essential to a standard are those that
must necessarily be infringed to comply with the requirements of
the standard. QUALCOMM's complaint states that Nokia is infringing
QUALCOMM's patents by making or selling products in the United States
that comply with the GSM family of standards. QUALCOMM seeks an
injunction against Nokia's continuing sale of infringing products
and monetary damages.
"We have been discussing a number of issues with Nokia for some time, including the fact that we have essential GSM patents for which Nokia is not licensed, and we are disappointed that this has resulted in litigation," said Louis M. Lupin, senior vice president and general counsel of QUALCOMM. "Until recently, we had been led to believe that these issues might be resolved cooperatively and amicably. However, it now appears that a cooperative resolution of these issues is quite unlikely and we must move forward with the litigation in order to protect our rights and to get these issues resolved."
Demand from cell phone users for data services and multimedia features has been growing dramatically since the advent of 2G cellular technologies. The ability to provide better data performance is one of the primary reasons that the wireless industry has selected CDMA technology for nearly all 3G cellular standards and systems. Faced with this demand and spurred by competition from CDMA systems, 2G standards, such as GSM, have been evolved to support improved data capabilities. These evolutions of GSM-first GPRS and later EDGE-have adopted patented innovations developed by QUALCOMM originally for use in CDMA systems to: achieve higher data rates, increase spectral efficiency, enhance capacity, improve resistance to interference, permit access to packet switched networks, and facilitate multimedia distribution. Nokia's GSM, GPRS and EDGE standards-compliant products unavoidably infringe QUALCOMM's patents surrounding these inventions that have become essential to the GSM family of standards. Six of the patents in QUALCOMM's complaint against Nokia were also asserted in the complaint that QUALCOMM filed against Broadcom Corporation on July 11, 2005.
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