Apple Sues HTC For Infringing On 20 iPhone Patents

Whoa, Apple just sued HTC for infringing on 20 patents “related to the iPhone’s user interface, underlying architecture and hardware.” UPDATE: The patents Apple’s claiming are incredible. We’ve got both full filings below. And HTC’s comment. They’re surprised too!

Update: Apple’s asking for a permanent injunction, which would bar HTC from importing or selling phones here that use these patents, along with triple damages with maximum interest (read: a lot of money). As you can see, some of the patents are fairly broad, like “unlocking a device by performing gestures on an unlock image”, which seems to cover like every touchscreen phone ever. Here’s a breakout of the patents. Notably not among them? Anything pertaining to multitouch.

The ‘331 Patent, entitled “Time-Based, Non-Constant Translation Of User Interface Objects Between States,” was duly and legally issued on April 22, 2008 by the United States Patent and Trademark Office.

The ‘949 Patent, entitled “Touch Screen Device, Method, And Graphical User Interface For Determining Commands By Applying Heuristics,” was duly and legally issued on January 20, 2009 by the United States Patent and Trademark Office. A copy of the ‘949 Patent is attached hereto as Exhibit B.

The ‘849 Patent, entitled “Unlocking A Device By Performing Gestures On An Unlock Image,” was duly and legally issued on February 2, 2010 by the United States Patent and Trademark Office. A copy of the ‘849 Patent is attached hereto as Exhibit C.

The ‘381 Patent, entitled “List Scrolling And Document Translation, Scaling, And Rotation On A Touch-Screen Display,” was duly and legally issued on December 23, 2008 by the United States Patent and Trademark Office. A copy of the ‘381 Patent is attached hereto as Exhibit D.

The ‘726 Patent, entitled “System And Method For Managing Power Conditions Within A Digital Camera Device,” was duly and legally issued on July 6, 1999 by the United States Patent and Trademark Office. A copy of the ‘726 Patent is attached hereto as Exhibit E.

The ‘076 Patent, entitled “Automated Response To And Sensing Of User Activity In Portable Devices,” was duly and legally issued on December 15, 2009 by the United States Patent and Trademark Office. A copy of the ‘076 Patent is attached hereto as Exhibit F.

The ‘105 Patent, entitled “GMSK Signal Processors For Improved Communications Capacity And Quality,” was duly and legally issued on December 8, 1998 by the United States Patent and Trademark Office. A copy of the ‘105 Patent is attached hereto as Exhibit G.

The ‘453 Patent, entitled “Conserving Power By Reducing Voltage Supplied To An Instruction-Processing Portion Of A Processor,” was duly and legally issued on June 3, 2008 by the United States Patent and Trademark Office. A copy of the ‘453 Patent is attached hereto as Exhibit H.

The ‘599 Patent, entitled “Object-Oriented Graphic System,” was duly and legally issued on October 3, 1995 by the United States Patent and Trademark Office. A copy of the ‘599 Patent is attached hereto as Exhibit I.

The ‘354 Patent, entitled “Object-Oriented Event Notification System With Listener Registration Of Both Interests And Methods,” was duly and legally issued on July 23, 2002 by the United States Patent and Trademark Office. A copy of the ‘354 Patent is attached hereto as Exhibit J.

United States Patent No. 5,481,721 entitled “Method for Providing Automatic and Dynamic Translation of Object Oriented Programming Language-Based Message Passing Into Operation System Message Passing Using Proxy Objects,” issued on January 2, 1996…

United States Patent No. 5,519,867 entitled “Object-Oriented Multitasking System,” issued on May 21, 1996…

United States Patent No. 6,275,983 entitled “Object-Oriented Operating System,” issued on August 14, 2001…

United States Patent No. 5,566,337 entitled “Method and Apparatus for Distributing Events in an Operating System,” issued on October 15, 1996…

United States Patent No. 5,929,852 entitled “Encapsulated Network Entity Reference of a Network Component System,” issued on July 27, 1999…

United States Patent No. 5,946,647 entitled “System and Method for Performing an Action on a Structure in Computer-Generated Data” issued on August 31, 1999…

United States Patent No. 5,969,705 entitled “Message Protocol for Controlling a User Interface From an Inactive Application Program,” issued on October 19, 1999…

United States Patent No. 6,343,263 entitled “Real-Time Signal Processing System for Serially Transmitted Data,” issued on January 29, 2002…

United States Patent No. 5,915,131 entitled “Method and Apparatus for Handling I/O Requests Utilizing Separate Programming Interfaces to Access Separate I/O Service” issued on June 22, 1999…

United States Patent No. RE39,486, entitled “Extensible, Replaceable Network Component System,” reissued on February 6, 2007…

Steve Jobs’ biting take on the lawsuit:

“We can sit by and watch competitors steal our patented inventions, or we can do something about it. We’ve decided to do something about it. We think competition is healthy, but competitors should create their own original technology, not steal ours.”

Sound familiar? Of course it does, because Nokia’s being accused of the same thing, and Apple had similar nasty comments for Palm as well, though they haven’t led to a lawsuit (yet).

We’re digging up what exactly HTC is in trouble over, with Apple merely stating it’s related to the “iPhone’s user interface, underlying architecture and hardware”. However, it’s worth noting Apple won a fairly huge multitouch patent just a couple of weeks ago, and now they’re nailing HTC for twice as many patent infringements as they busted Nokia on in that countersuit.

Apple’s original set of iPhone interface patents were actually fairly limited when you drill down, but we’ll see pretty shortly what, precisely, they’re suing HTC over. Which should give us a pretty good idea of whether or not this just the first of many lawsuits, since HTC’s not exactly the only other multitouch game in town.

The terse press release, in full:

Apple Sues HTC for Patent Infringement

CUPERTINO, Calif. March 2 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ — Apple® today filed a lawsuit against HTC for infringing on 20 Apple patents related to the iPhone’s user interface, underlying architecture and hardware. The lawsuit was filed concurrently with the U.S. International Trade Commission (ITC) and in U.S. District Court in Delaware.

“We can sit by and watch competitors steal our patented inventions, or we can do something about it. We’ve decided to do something about it,” said Steve Jobs, Apple’s CEO. “We think competition is healthy, but competitors should create their own original technology, not steal ours.”

Apple reinvented the mobile phone in 2007 with its revolutionary iPhone®, and did it again in 2008 with its pioneering App Store, which now offers more than 150,000 mobile applications in over 90 countries. Over 40 million iPhones have been sold worldwide.

Update 2: HTC’s comment, and they’re as surprised as we are:

We only learned of Apple’s actions based on your stories and Apple’s press release. We have not been served any papers yet so we are in no position to comment on the claims. We respect and value patent rights but we are committed to defending our own innovations. We have been innovating and patenting our own technology for 13 years.

Update 3: John at Digital Daily’s got the ITC filing against HTC. It lists the 10 other patents Apple’s suing over, and spells out all the phones at issue – which looks like basically every Windows Mobile and Android phone HTC makes, from the G1 to the HD2. Nilay at Engadget notes, crucially, that while Apple names a whole bunch of HTC phones, the phones they call out repeatedly as infringing on specific patents are Android phones (the WinMo phones are called out for containing a DSP chip, not for anything WinMo related). Meaning that the bigger issue could be with Android itself, and Google, though it’s not exactly clear yet.

Also, Nilay’s got a solid patentese-to-English breakdown for all of the patents Apple’s claiming, like what exactly a patent on “Time-Based, Non-Constant Translation Of User Interface Objects Between States” means.

Discuss

(9 Comments)
  • [–]

    ThePengwin

    Wednesday, March 3, 2010 at 9:58 AM

    …………………
    …………………
    …………………
    …………………
    …………………This is serious?

    First I didn’t like apple’s “close but no cigar” phone, then I realized the iPhone may be good for some, just not me. Now they are suing my favorite tech company?

    My hate for Apple and the iPhone is back in full swing. Hulk Smash

    • [–]

      crannaford

      Wednesday, March 3, 2010 at 1:35 PM

      Couldn’t agree more. I loathe Apple and won’t have a bar of any of their product no matter how good they are, and make no mistake they are excellent. Their pompous attitude of, we’re better than you, drives me insane. Thank goodness Henry Ford didn’t have this attitude, or Fords would be the only cars with round wheels. I’m one tech customer Apple will never have.

  • [–]

    Chad

    Wednesday, March 3, 2010 at 10:39 AM

    While Apple has a point on some of these, it seems very targeted – why sue HTC, not Samsung, LG or any other touchscreen phone maker?

    Also, the fact that there’s a patent for ‘Object-based multitasking’ is a bit odd. While I know what that means, it’s a bit funny, given the word multitask is not thought of as being in the iPhone’s vocabulary!

    • [–]

      MattB

      Wednesday, March 3, 2010 at 2:02 PM

      The most plausible theories I’ve seen floating around the net are that they’ve gone after HTC because a) it’s made a few of the more flagship Android phones (the Hero was getting raves last year, and the Nexus One is the latest media-dubbed ‘iPhone killer’) and b) as a fairly young company it doesn’t have a large patent portfolio like Palm or Motorola that it could countersue with.

      Presumably Apple expects that they can scare off other makers from dabbling too heavily with Android by picking on the weakest member of the group.

      Stay classy, Apple.

  • [–]

    matt

    Wednesday, March 3, 2010 at 10:43 AM

    Wow Apple, you are awesome. go out of your way to restrict competition when you launch, and now that they have finally caught up, and are indeed beating you in some areas… sue them…

    “we are the most Innovative company in the world”

    yeah, because you trample innovation everywhere else, with things like this, and rejecting iphone apps that copy functionality that may be implemented on the iphone by them some time in the future, certainly makes you look nervous anyway.

    “Method and Apparatus for Handling I/O Requests Utilizing Separate Programming Interfaces to Access Separate I/O Service”

    to be clear, that says “having a different API for each input method” I don’t even know why you would want that…

    “Object-Oriented Multitasking System,”
    yer.. for all that multitasking you can do on the iphone…

    maybe the reason MS beat Apple in that landmark case wasn’t so much because MS had good lawyers, but because Apple’s case was retarded like this!

  • [–]

    Matt

    Wednesday, March 3, 2010 at 3:09 PM

    This is rather disturbing that the ’849 patent is only weeks old and is being applied to things that used that system before the patent was awarded.
    The fact that it is also being applied to an idea that most people thinking of touch screen interfaces would independantly come up with shows how out of touch the US patent office is with technology.
    There has been a trend to patent purposely vague statements (it isn’t even actual products any more but things like waving your finger) by companies because of how the patent office is failing to notice that companies like Apple are taking patents designed to lock out competitors rather than protect actual innovation.

  • [–]

    Cedwa

    Wednesday, March 3, 2010 at 3:39 PM

    I hate reading about these ridiculous patent wars. Just like every other Gizmodo reader I love technology and these kinds of acts really hinder in the evolution of our beloved tech. Consider the resources wasted on these patent conflicts and imagine if that was dedicated into their research departments instead. We would have some awesome tech already.

    I appreciate that Apple makes some good technology, however personally I will never buy an Apple product based on my views on the company due to events such as these.

    HTC has been my favorite phone company for some time and I’d hate to see them suffer for such a pathetic move by Apple. It seems, IMHO that this is just another way to put a few extra dollars in the Apple account (once the case is settled). As if ~50% of market share isn’t enough.

    I hope out of some miracle that HTC manages to win this one just to knock Apple of their high horse and show them that some of the patents they have filed are absolute rubbish.

  • [–]

    red T-rex

    Wednesday, March 3, 2010 at 6:15 PM

    This is a good thing that this eventually gets to court to sort out the ridiculous patents from the genuine ones. Otherwise other vendors will always have a potential lawsuit hanging over their heads due to their own interpretations of what the patents mean. All the better for Microsoft with them taking a different approach which will protect them in some ways (though not all). I’m sure some will be proven but hopefully most will not. After all can Apple really claim to have invented multitouch scrolling? Personally, I’m not sure but I wouldn’t be surprised if someone else can have demonstrated this before. Let’s clear some of the muddy waters now so that they can get on competing with a clearer set of rules.

  • [–]

    Matt Clairmont

    Saturday, March 6, 2010 at 2:22 AM

    I can’t believe apple (more targetted towards steve jobs) patented all of those things that he KNOWS the entire market for full touch screen phones requires to operate. Seriously, he really thought companies could design an unlocking system that NON graphical and doesn’t require you to touch an object?? (which also falls under object oriented programming because you’re telling an object on the screen to do something) so what does he want me to do, touch just a text label saying unlock? What if I bump it accidentally?

    As for the multitasking part…..where is that on the phone market for you apple? Last time I looked at someone using your phones they can’t read a text message or an email instantaneously, they have to switch apps for that. Your multitasking is non exisistant. You might as well say your network chips are running full duplex only to claim your phones are capable of “multitasking”.

    I’m now ashamed that I own an iPod and have once contributed to funding your stuck up, non sportsman (competition) like attitudes!

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