THE MICROSOFT CONTEST LIVE AT APTECH UGANDA
NEW YORK, Aug 2:
Microsoft on Friday (August 1) sued Samsung in US federal court,
claiming the South Korean giant had breached a contract over licensing
of technology used in the fiercely competitive smartphone market.
“After
becoming the leading player in the worldwide smartphone market, Samsung
decided late last year to stop complying with its agreement with
Microsoft,” the US technology firm’s deputy counsel said in an online
post.
The complaint
filed in federal court in New York alleges Samsung is failing to make
payments for patented Microsoft technology used in smartphones and
tablets. Samsung did not immediately respond to an AFP request for
comment.
Microsoft
contends the South Korean consumer electronics colossus is not adhering
to a contract from 2011, and said it filed the court action after months
of “painstaking negotiation.” The legal pact involved Samsung paying to
use Microsoft intellectual property, according to the post by deputy
counsel David Howard.
Samsung’s
smartphone sales have quadrupled since the contract was signed as the
company grew from shipping 82 million Android-powered handsets in 2011
to shipping 314 million three years later, Microsoft maintained.
SAMSUNG A SMARTPHONE STAR
Samsung has
become a smartphone goliath, and the biggest maker of handsets powered
by Google’s free Android software. “Samsung predicted it would be
successful, but no one imagined their Android smartphone sales would
increase this much,” Howard said.
After
Microsoft made a deal last year to buy Nokia’s smartphone business,
Samsung stopped abiding by the cross-licensing contract, the US company
says. Microsoft said in the filing that Samsung used the Nokia business
acquisition as grounds to step away from the licensing deal.
Microsoft
closed the deal for Nokia’s smartphone business in April with some
adjustments from the announced price of US$7.52 billion (5.44 billion
euros). Nokia was the world leader in mobile phones before the
introduction of Apple’s iPhone in 2007 and the onslaught of Android
phones, mainly from Samsung.
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