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posted by takyon on Thursday August 27 2015, @12:15PM   Printer-friendly
from the patent-unlocked dept.

The German high court has upheld an earlier ruling, that Apple's "Slide to Unlock" Patent (EU Patent 1964022) is a trivial extension of the state of the art embodied by the Swedish Neonode N1 released in 2003 (with Windows CE), and is therefore invalid.

From Reuters:

The Neonode N1 had substantially similar technical features, the patent court had found. It ruled Apple's easier-to-use interface was not in itself patentable. Neonode sold tens of thousands of phones before declaring bankruptcy in 2008. It reorganized itself as an intellectual property firm licensing its patented optical technology for use in phones, tablets, readers and other touchscreen devices.

Motorola Mobility, at the time a unit of Google Inc but now owned by China's Lenovo Group Ltd, filed the original suit in a Munich court against the Apple user interface patent. Apple won that case but the ruling was later overturned by the federal patent court.

Also at Heise (German).


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday August 27 2015, @08:00PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday August 27 2015, @08:00PM (#228706)

    I said slide to whatever, not a physical slide to unlock, and i wasn't talking about just phones. And yes, it is fucking trivial to make slide to whatever in software. The patentable part could be the touch part of the phone, which it has been, but using that slide motion on a touch screen to do a function is not patentable.