Arthur T Knackerbracket has found the following story:
Apple and Broadcom have been told to pay the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) a beefy billion bucks for ripping off three of the US university's Wi-Fi patents. A federal jury in Cali decided on Wednesday that technology described in the data signal encoding patents owned by Caltech is used in millions of iPhones without wireless chip designer Broadcom nor phone slinger Apple paying the necessary licensing fees. Broadcom supplies radio communications components to Apple for various iThings.
The jury took just under five hours to decide its $1.1bn patent-infringement prize following a two-week trial, with Apple being forced to pick up the bulk of the damages, $837m, compared to Broadcom's $270m. The figures were what Caltech asked for.
[...] Despite the massive award, the news had no noticeable impact on Apple's share price coming a day after it announced better-than-expected results. Broadcom's slipped just a quarter of a per cent.
-- submitted from IRC
(Score: 2) by EvilSS on Friday January 31 2020, @06:55PM (3 children)
(Score: 2) by RamiK on Saturday February 01 2020, @03:10AM (2 children)
Not in a competitive market.
compiling...
(Score: 2) by EvilSS on Saturday February 01 2020, @04:53AM (1 child)
(Score: 2) by RamiK on Saturday February 01 2020, @03:22PM
If and buts. It's not every company. It's Broadcom and its customers. And their competitors will be rewarded where Broadcom was punished.
They'll take less profits and they'll keep the prices the same or watch their customers move to their competitors.
Honestly they're some of the most profitable and least cost-effective companies that ever existed. And, Apple specifically, does very little good with their profits so every cent you pry off their hands into the public treasury is doing public service.
compiling...