BFF-08 Apple, Broadcom ordered to pay $1.1bn for patent infringement

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BFF-08

US-TECHNOLOGY-APPLE

Apple, Broadcom ordered to pay $1.1bn for patent infringement

LOS ANGELES, Jan 30, 2020 (BSS/AFP) – A Los Angeles jury on Wednesday
ordered Apple and Broadcom to pay $1.1 billion to a university in California
for infringing on four Wi-Fi technology patents.

Apple was ordered to pay $837 million and Broadcom must pay $270 million
to the California Institute of Technology, in what is thought to be one of
the largest patent verdicts ever.

Caltech, as the university located near Los Angeles is known, had sued
both tech giants in 2016, alleging that Apple products including iPhones,
iPads and Apple Watches used Broadcom components that infringed on Caltech
patents related to wireless data transmissions.

Both Apple and Broadcom indicated they planned to appeal the verdict.

“Caltech appreciates the jury’s thoughtful attention throughout the
trial,” the university said in a statement to AFP. “We are pleased the jury
found that Apple and Broadcom infringed Caltech patents.

“As a nonprofit institution of higher education, Caltech is committed to
protecting its intellectual property in furtherance of its mission to expand
human knowledge and benefit society through research integrated with
education.”

In court documents, Apple and Broadcom had said that Caltech’s claims “are
based solely on the incorporation of allegedly infringing Broadcom chips in
Apple’s iPhone, Mac, and other devices.”

“Broadcom manufactures the accused chips, while Apple is merely an
indirect downstream party whose products incorporate the accused chips,”
according to court filings. “Accordingly, the claims that Caltech has against
Apple depend on establishing that the accused Broadcom chips infringe the
patents and that the patents-in-suit are not invalid.”

Broadcom was the main target of the lawsuit but Apple was also named as it
is one of Broadcom’s biggest customers.

BSS/AFP/FI/ 0838 hrs