Apple must rewrite Samsung statement: UK court

A UK court has told Apple to re-write a press statement on its website declaring that Samsung did not copy its tablet designs

November 2, 2012
Samsung vs Apple

Apple must re-write a statement posted on its website acknowledging that Samsung did not infringe on its registered designs for tablet computers, and place it more prominently on its homepage, a court in the UK ruled on Thursday.

The statement was deemed to be “non-compliant” with the order in a previous High Court judgment that concluded Samsung’s Galaxy tablet did not infringe Apple’s designs, in part because its products were “not as cool”.

The world’s two leading smartphone makers are fighting over patents, both for smartphones and for tablets like Apple’s iPad, in courts around the world.

South Korea’s Samsung argued that Apple’s statement, which made potentially confusing references to German and U.S. court decisions as well as the British ruling, was “inaccurate and misleading”.

Judges agreed and said Apple must post the new statement within the next 48 hours, although the U.S. company said it would need two weeks to post the notice.

Judge Robin Jacob told Apple’s lawyer, Michael Beloff, he did not believe that it would be difficult to post a new statement on the website.

“I would like to see the head of Apple make an affidavit about why that is such a technical difficulty for the Apple company,” the Press Association quoted Jacob as saying. “This is Apple that cannot put something on their own website?”.

Apple declined to comment on the ruling.

Related articles

Samsung cleared of multi-touch infringement claim

Apple patent against Samsung second-guessed

iPad Mini 7.9-inch Apple tablet PC announced

Nexus 7 now in SA

Tags: Active, Apple, patent, Samsung

Join the conversation

Connect with MyBB

twitterfacebookandroidappleblackberrynewsletterfeed

Poll

How would you describe the quality of your broadband connection?

View Results

Loading ... Loading ...

More News

Internet bank fraud affects few: Absa

SIM swap fraud fix

Although small, the number of defrauded customers is still unacceptable, according to Absa’s head of digital channels and payments

Internet in SA: English vs Afrikaans vs African languages

SA tech

Latest Effective Measure statistics reveal the most popular languages among Internet users in South Africa

Joburg City Power in court over R800-million tender

Joburg City Power

Numsa is taking Johannesburg City Power to court over a R800 million tender

Digital reincarnation for ancient Dunhuang Buddhist art

Dunhuang Buddhist art

The unique appeal of the Dunhuang cave art is the very thing that is putting them under threat

bool(true)