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Nokia lawsuit forces Oppo and OnePlus out of the German market

Nokia lawsuit forces Oppo and OnePlus out of the German market

2 years ago
Anonymous $33nAR-2OaA

https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2022/08/oppo-and-oneplus-shut-down-sales-in-germany-after-nokia-lawsuit/

Many Chinese brands have somehow escaped the global smartphone patent wars, but Oppo and OnePlus are feeling the pain in Germany due to a Nokia patent lawsuit. As the site Juve Patent reports, Nokia received two favorable patent rulings last week, and OnePlus and its parent company Oppo were ordered to cease and desist their infringement. For now, ceasing infringement means shutting down sales in Germany.

This is Nokia Corporation, the cellular infrastructure company, not HMD, which licenses the "Nokia" brand for smartphones. Nokia and Oppo used to have a patent licensing agreement, but it recently expired. Just as we've seen in cable carriage disputes, the two companies were in negotiations for renewal, but disagreements over the price led to a deal not happening. Oppo told its side of this familiar story to Juve Patent, saying, "The day after the 4G agreement between Oppo and Nokia expired, Nokia immediately went to court. They had previously demanded an unreasonably high contract renewal fee."

Nokia lawsuit forces Oppo and OnePlus out of the German market

Aug 9, 2022, 6:49pm UTC
https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2022/08/oppo-and-oneplus-shut-down-sales-in-germany-after-nokia-lawsuit/ > Many Chinese brands have somehow escaped the global smartphone patent wars, but Oppo and OnePlus are feeling the pain in Germany due to a Nokia patent lawsuit. As the site Juve Patent reports, Nokia received two favorable patent rulings last week, and OnePlus and its parent company Oppo were ordered to cease and desist their infringement. For now, ceasing infringement means shutting down sales in Germany. > This is Nokia Corporation, the cellular infrastructure company, not HMD, which licenses the "Nokia" brand for smartphones. Nokia and Oppo used to have a patent licensing agreement, but it recently expired. Just as we've seen in cable carriage disputes, the two companies were in negotiations for renewal, but disagreements over the price led to a deal not happening. Oppo told its side of this familiar story to Juve Patent, saying, "The day after the 4G agreement between Oppo and Nokia expired, Nokia immediately went to court. They had previously demanded an unreasonably high contract renewal fee."