Yeah of course. It a board game by Milton Bradley
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Hahahaaahahaaaha!!!! This is priceless!!!
Tap'n from my White SGT2 7.0 SE
Yeah of course. It a board game by Milton Bradley
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Hahahaaahahaaaha!!!! This is priceless!!!
Tap'n from my White SGT2 7.0 SE
Look ok they aren't a monopoly yet but can anyone argue that that's not what they want to be? Honestly if they had released the original iphone on 4 carriers with 3G and mms on 07 android probably would of never taken off. Even i was intrigued by the first generation one
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Steve Jobs had said he would do everything he could do to wipe out and destroy android, thus squashing any and all competition. This in my mind is anti-competitive,
I give up. It just me and 2 apple defenders now. With android phones in their signatures
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Competitors competing in a free market by utilizing all legally available means is anti-competitive? What business isn't out to beat, and ideally, destroy its competitors? What should he have said or done? Maybe met with Google and Android phone manufacturers to come to an agreement on how to divy up the smartphone market (in secret obviously since that would be collusion)?
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They don't care about having the highest market share considering that they have 60% of the profits.
Well for starters it is all too common given Korean court ruled that they both infringed on one another there. But there the Galaxy S2 got banned but also did the iPad1 & 2, iPhone 3GS, and iPhone4. Which I found hillarious Apple lost bigger than they gained in that country. Made up for it in this case though.
The judge didn't let Samsung present the same type of evidence that Apple presented. Emails and documents that said Apple was using designs from other companies like Sony to design the original iPhone and iPad. In truth it is common practice for companies to buy a competitors product, disect it, and then design their own thing based off the various things that they find and creating their own tech to a point. Samsung had their documents shared in court stating to that fact. That's what killed them.
I own a lot of Samsung things, dislike Apple for the fact they lock so much stuff down and charge more or at all for things I can get for free or use otherwise. My sadness about all this is as a tech lover and geek. This just opens the flood gates for people to create devices left and right just to patent design and make it harder for individual companies to come out with their own because the corners look too much like the iPhone or any other companies devices. This case will be used as precedent in so many other patent cases that it will kill a lot of innovative start ups before they can start.
It was not a fair trial. And this is what happens when a judge allows this kind of case to go forward and be decided by people who have no idea what they are looking at or how to judge it. And then withholding the evidence that shows that Apple did not even originate their own design. Some common sense would go a long way too. I mean, how different is a phone going to look. I knew this would happen with this being decided in the Bay Area and idiot fans wanting to give Steve Jobs his dying wish.
That the judge did not allow Samsung to present evidence Apple used the same tactics with other companies was absolutely the correct decision. There is no tenet in the American legal system that says the laws are waived because you did it yourself to someone else. If Sony was suing Apple then they would be justified but that was not the case.
I am also really tired of these doom saying comments about how this is going to destroy innovation or people are going to patent everything. Innovation is stifled when inventors, whether they be a one person shop or Apple, or Google, or Microsoft, etc., can have their creations appropriated by others with the inventor receiving no benefit. If Samsung benefitted by abusing Apple's patents, that gave them a competitive advantage over other manufacturers. By not negotiating licensing terms, that could have also given Samsung an unfair cost advantage. People on this site otherwise seem rather bright. but on this issue, take off the blinders, look at the patent laws, and consider the evidence in that light. Apple did not win on every count. They won on those that were pretty clear cut and also supported by Samsung's own documents that were produced in the discovery phase.
The patent system actually still works and this is an example of that fact. Samsung could not prove their case, and evidence from their own records supported Apple's contention about copying elements of Apple products that were already patented. As at least one analyst noted, over a decade ago Apple lost its look and feel argument against Microsoft and almost went under as a result. I would suggest, they would not have pulled this trigger unless they were convinced the preponderance of the evidence (and the resulting odds) would be in their favor.
The thing this decision may really influence is the extent to which large companies may be willing to push the envelope with respect to utilizing elements that might be considered part of someone else's patent. Guess what? That might actually lead companies to think outside of the box and really innovate, or put up the money to get access to the patents of innovators. BTW, look and feel have been patented for as long as there has been a patent system. Every manufacturer selling products in the US knows this fact. They also should understand the risk of making their product too much like something else on the market that may be patented.
Plain and simple the patent system was designed to protect start up companies and inventors, not allow multi billion dollar companies to bully the competition. Maybe apple isn't a monopoly yet, but it what they are pushing for.
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When you can patent shapes and contours, the patent system is in trouble.
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When you can patent shapes and contours, the patent system is in trouble.
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Having a high % of the profits and high margins isn't illegal though.
Interestingly that's one of the things that the court today didn't hold up. The Galaxy Tab was found to not infringe on the iPad design patent.
Could we move onward and drop the whole "colorful" metaphors, etc.... I think we still achieve our point without going down that street.
Thanks everyone...