The patent
spat between
Nokia and
Qualcomm
took another turn today when the Finnish mobile giant responded to the Qualcomm
lawsuit filed in the Western District of Wisconsin on 2 April 2007.
Nokia said that it "remains confident" that its products do not infringe
either of the two patents cited in the Qualcomm lawsuit, and further asserts
that "both patents are invalid".
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Nokia also filed patent counter assertions against Qualcomm for its alleged
infringement of six Nokia implementation patents used in Qualcomm GSM/WCDMA and
CDMA2000 chipsets.
Qualcomm has sought injunctions against Nokia in its previous litigation
filings. Nokia said that it is therefore seeking damages and an injunction
against Qualcomm's 'infringing' chipsets.
"Over the past 19 months Qualcomm has filed 11 patent litigation cases
against Nokia seeking damages and injunctions," said Rick Simonson, chief
financial officer at Nokia.
"Nokia has now filed its first counter action to address Qualcomm's
unauthorised use of Nokia technology. We will continue to defend ourselves and
exercise all rights according to our extensive intellectual property rights
portfolio."
The implementation patents cited in the Nokia counterclaim relate primarily
to multi-band/multi-mode technologies that allow transparent roaming for
consumers.
It also covers direct conversion technologies that reduce handset and chipset
size, cost and power consumption.
"These technologies have had a significant role in the success of Nokia
devices. Qualcomm, through its unauthorised use of Nokia patents, has copied
these innovations and made them available to its chipset customers," Nokia
claimed.
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