he U.S. International Trade Commission on Friday dismissed the foremost of a posed of complaints HTC leveled against Apple, finding that the Cupertino, Calif., society did not violate a power management patent owned by the Taiwanese handset maker.
If HTC chooses not to appeal, today’s dismissal could bring an close to its cause against Apple that was foremost lodged in May 2010 and has after been whittled down to one out of an original five asserted patents, reports FOSS Patent’s Florian Mueller.
The dismissal echoes an initial October 2011 determination by an Administrative Law Judge who felt that no violation had occurred.
Following the initial finding, HTC brought the suit before the ITC for brushup in December and while the Commission granted an investigation, it would solely do thence with deference to the power management patent.
Muller believes that HTC’s causa is fundamentally weak, and was about likely a response to an Apple complaint against the companionship in March 2010. However, the two companies are yet involved in a complicated struggle that includes upcoming cases in the U.S. and Germany, and the results of those cases could have far-reaching implications.
In November 2011, the ITC dismissed another complaint against Apple, this time from S3 Graphics.
The complaint was considered to exist motivated by Apple’s suits against HTC’s Android handsets as S3 Graphics and HTC were in the same family of companies.
The Taiwanese telephone maker purchased S3 for $300 million when it appeared the society would win its lawsuit against Apple, though HTC later rued the decision when the complaint was dismissed.
As for the almost late ITC finding, HTC has the choice of appealing the decision to the Federal Circuit, nonetheless no announcement of such plans has been made.







