If Apple doesn't buy up patents with no other intent than to initiate litigation, then this doesn't happen. And before anyone starts with the usual specious false equivalency arguments about how everyone does it, the relevant point is who started all of this and why. Say you don't like me, maybe because I said "specious," so you walk up and punch me in the head a couple of times, no matter how convinced of the appropriateness of your actions, when I hit back I have not committed the same act that you have. You attacked, I defended.
This feature exists in many phones, but Apple selectively went after 2 (possibly 3) phones that use it because they are far superior to their limited devices, not only in the same way that most Android phones are, but in areas where iPhones are percieved to still hold an edge of some sort, such as the screen and the camera. One of the many areas where this case was incorrectly ruled upon, imo, is that Apple's claims were being selectively applied to do harm to a competitor instead of just to enforce a case of infringement. Helping a corporation gain a competitive advantage is not the court's job.
If some HTC phones can come in with this patent violation, and other phone makers can import their phones with the feature, as well, and as has been demonstrated by the fact the phones will be in our hands today, HTC had even removed the offending code, pretending that HTC is responsible is patently and provably false. Silly and disingenuous too.