Linked by Thom Holwerda on Fri 11th Dec 2009 17:41 UTC
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RE[2]: Nokia has key patents, Apple not.
by vivainio on Fri 11th Dec 2009 22:39
in reply to "RE: Nokia has key patents, Apple not."
They'll both want to walk away with their pound of flesh and the only way they can both do that is with a cross licensing deal: Apple doesn't pay up and get's to save face. Nokia walks away with the only "legitimate" license to pinch, flick, blah, blah, blah...
If apple has a valid patent on flicking, it wouldn't be possible to implement reasonable open source UIs for touch screen devices. Flicking is also simple physical simulation on computer, how in the world could you patent that? You can't really own laws of nature.
RE[3]: Nokia has key patents, Apple not.
by jamboarder on Fri 11th Dec 2009 23:34
in reply to "RE[2]: Nokia has key patents, Apple not."
If apple has a valid patent on flicking, it wouldn't be possible to implement reasonable open source UIs for touch screen devices. Flicking is also simple physical simulation on computer, how in the world could you patent that? You can't really own laws of nature.
Agreed. Thus the use of quotation marks in
...Nokia walks away with the only "legitimate" license to pinch, flick, blah, blah, blah...




Member since:
2009-02-16
Huh? If any thing a cross licensing deal is, perhaps, more likely in this case.
Which one of these two companies do you think would fork out cash? Apple won't do it now; they've countersued - too much self-righteous pride to do that. Nokia won't fork out a penny. They've got a far bigger grab bag of relevant patents and tons of licensing precedent.
They'll both want to walk away with their pound of flesh and the only way they can both do that is with a cross licensing deal: Apple doesn't pay up and get's to save face. Nokia walks away with the only "legitimate" license to pinch, flick, blah, blah, blah...