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Patent wars: Tech giants sue Samsung and Google
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-24771421
A group of tech giants known as the Rockstar Consortium is suing Google, Samsung, HTC and others over alleged mobile phone patent infringements.
Rockstar, jointly owned by Apple, Microsoft, Blackberry, Ericsson and Sony, is targeting manufacturers of phones that run the rival Google Android operating system.
Rockstar spent $4.5bn (£2.8bn) buying thousands of Nortel patents after the telecoms giant went bankrupt in 2009.
Google lost out in the bidding war.
The Rockstar lawsuit claims Google has infringed seven patents relating to the way internet search terms match up with relevant advertising.
Dominance
The move is just the latest in a number of mobile device patent cases being fought across the world, as technology behemoths fight for dominance of the lucrative smartphone, tablet and games console markets.
Google's Android has been doing particularly well, largely thanks to the success of Samsung's Galaxy range of smartphones.
Android devices accounted for 81.3% of smartphone shipments in the third quarter of 2013, according to research firm Strategy Analytics, compared with 13.4% for Apple iOS and 4.1% for Windows Phone.
This week, Nokia, whose mobile devices division is being bought by Microsoft, won a patent victory over HTC that could see the Taiwanese company's HTC One smartphone being banned from import into the UK.
And earlier in October, Samsung offered to stop taking rivals to court over alleged patent infringements for a period of five years, after European Union authorities said the South Korean company's litigious actions were stifling competition.
Samsung faced a potential £11.3bn ($18.3bn) fine if found guilty of breaching European anti-trust laws.
Google's Motorola Mobility, which the search giant bought for $12.5bn, has also been accused of similar anti-competitive behaviour.
Samsung and Apple are currently slugging it out in the courts of more than 10 countries across Europe.
Cross-licensing
But some senior technology experts believes the legal conflict is bad for consumers.
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