Linked by Thom Holwerda on Wed 8th Aug 2012 06:23 UTC
Legal "The 2010 report, translated from Korean, goes feature by feature, evaluating how Samsung's phone stacks up against the iPhone. Authored by Samsung's product engineering team, the document evaluates everything from the home screen to the browser to the built in apps on both devices. In each case, it comes up with a recommendation on what Samsung should do going forward and in most cases its answer is simple: Make it work more like the iPhone." Pretty damning. We still need to know a few things: how many of these were actually implemented? How common are these types of comparisons (i.e., does Apple have them)? Are these protected by patents and the like? And, but that's largely irrelevant and mostly of interest to me because I'm a translator myself, who translated the document, and how well has he or she done the job?
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RE[8]: Common practice
by Thom_Holwerda on Wed 8th Aug 2012 14:41 UTC in reply to "RE[7]: Common practice"
Thom_Holwerda
Member since:
2005-06-29

So you are saying people should not copyright works of literature because language already existed. You would then have no problem if another site just took content of OSNews verbatim and started cloning it, right? Since you didn't invent any of the tech used to run this site or the English language itself.


You completely and utterly misunderstood everything I said.

I did not say people should not protect the sum of their work. I said they should not be able to protect the parts of that sum if they had no hand in inventing said parts. Apple is not attacking Samsung based on the overall iPhone, because it's pretty obvious the two are completely and utterly different. No, Apple is smarter than that, and is suing using the small parts. Apple is trying to stifle the competition using frivolous small parts - and not the sum.

In other words, your example is of no relevance. Your example would be of relevance if Samsung released the Epple yPhone S4 which looked identical to iOS and the iPhone 4S. However, that's not the case.

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