The patents dispute trial between Apple
Inc.(NASDAQ:AAPL) and Samsung has almost drawn to a close with the Korean
handset maker resting its case with witnesses saying that the iPhone and iPad
maker had to shell out $421.8 million in royalties to Samsung.
The presiding Judge Lucy Koh had given the companies
25 hours each to present their cases and has fixed August 21, as the date on
which jury deliberations were to begin. The trial started on July 30, with
Apple presenting the evidence for the prosecution.
On Wednesday among the last witnesses to be called by
Samsung, was David Teece of the University of California, who estimated that
Apple's infringement of two patents of Samsung made it liable to pay $349
million to the Korean electronics giant, at a royalty rate of 2.4 percent.
On cross-examination by an Apple lawyer however Teece
admitted that he did not how Samsung had arrived at that particular royalty
rate.
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Teece was shown a letter written by Samsung to Apple
in July 211 wherein it had made a proposal that the iPhone maker pay it 2.4
percent royalty to license any of its 86 patents.
Apple, in a pre-trial filing had said that the 2.4
percent ought by Samsung was "unfair, unreasonable and
discriminatory."
Samsung “has never sought or received” the 2.4 percent
royalty “from any licensee, and indeed cannot even explain where that number
came from, “Apple argued.
Samsung on its part countered that it had offered the
same royalty rate to Apple that it had been offering any other technology
company.
Judge Koh has also tried her bit to get the two
companies to settle before jury deliberations begin. She instructed that the
Chief Executives of the two companies should get on the phone and talk to each
other. She also instructed them that in case it was left to the jury to decide
on the outcome, then the two companies should issue statements by Aug 18, as to
whether they were successful in some measure simplifying the claims.
Meanwhile bankrupt camera maker Eastman Kodak
Company(PINK:EKDKQ), that is under court-led restructuring since January this
year, had sewed up deals with four movie studios that will ensure that movie
cameras use Kodak film until 2015.
The studios with whom it has signed pacts are Walt Disney,
Warner Brothers, NBC Universal and Paramount Pictures.
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The new agreements, which cancel old pre-existing
agreements with the studios, ensure that the movie studios will keep buying a
specified quantity of Kodak's film and the company will give them rebates and
discounts.
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