SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) â" Nine Silicon Valley residents who presided over the epic three-week patent trial between smartphone titans Apple Corp. and Samsung Electronics Co. began deliberating the multibillion-dollar case Wednesday.
Apple is demanding Samsung pay it $2.5 billion for allegedly stealing the design technology of the iPad and iPhone to create illegal knockoffs. Samsung counters that Apple stole its technology and is demanding $399 million.
During closing arguments Tuesday, a lawyer for Apple said that Samsung was having a ââcrisis of designââ after the launch of the iPhone, and executives with the South Korean company were determined to illegally cash in on the success of the revolutionary device
Samsungâs lawyer countered that the technology giant was simply and legally giving consumers what they want: Smart phones with big screens. Lawyers finished their closing arguments late Tuesday.
The competing claims came after last-minute talks between chief executives failed to resolve the dispute.
Apple Corp. argues that Samsung Electronics Co. should pay the Cupertino-based company $2.5 billion for ripping off its iPhone and iPad technology when it marketed competing devices.
Samsung has sold 22.7 million smartphones and tablets using stolen â" ââinfringedââ in legalese â" Apple technology since June 2010 on sales of $8.16 billion, Appleâs lead attorney, Harold McElhinny told jurors Tuesday.
ââThe damages in this case should be large because the infringement has been massive,ââ he said.
McElhinny said Apple confronted Samsung about the alleged copying and sought a resolution before filing its lawsuit last year.
ââInstead of doing the right thing, Samsung decided to gin up claims of its own,ââ McElhinny said of Samsungâs counter claim seeking $399 million from Apple for allegedly using Samsung technology in making the iconic iPhone and iPad.
Apple and Samsung combined account for more than half of global smartphone sales. Apple is also demanding that Samsung pull its most popular cellphones and computer tablets from the U.S. market.
ââApple is asking what it is not entitled to,ââ Samsungâs lawyer Charles Verhoeven said during his closing arguments. ââRather than competing in the marketplace, Apple is seeking an edge in the courtroom.ââ
Verhoeven argued that the state of technology has led most phone makers to design simple-to-use products with large, rounded rectangular faces. He conceded that Apple makes great products but said it doesnât have a monopoly on the design it claims it created.
ââThere is nothing nefarious about this, itâs the way technology has evolved,ââ he said, showing jurors a slide of a Best Buy advertisement with photos of similar looking phones made by several different companies. ââItâs not against the law in this country to be inspired by your competition.ââ
Verhoeven implored jurors to reject Appleâs claims as a way to preserve competition in the United States for smartphones and computer tabs. He said a verdict in Appleâs favor could reverberate throughout the marketplace.
ââConsumers deserve a choice,ââ the lawyer argued.
The jury of nine people will consider the case after hearing three weeks of testimony from technology experts, patent professionals and company executives.
Appleâs damage demands, if awarded, would represent the largest patent verdict in the U.S.
From the beginning, legal experts and Wall Street analysts have viewed Samsung as the underdog. To begin with, Apples headquarters is a mere 10 miles from the courthouse, and jurors were picked from the heart of Silicon Valley where the companyâs late founder Steve Jobs is a revered technological pioneer.
While the legal and technological issues may be complex, patent expert Alexander I. Poltorak says the case will likely boil down to whether jurors believe Samsungâs products at issue look and feel almost identical to Appleâs iPhone and iPad.
ââMost jurors will probably say they look alike,ââ said Poltorak, who is chief executive of General Patent Corp.
In June, U.S. District Judge Lucy Koh called Samsungâs Galaxy 10.1 tablet computer ââvirtually indistinguishableââ from Appleâs iPad and banned its sale in the United States until the resolution of the case.
ââThere was some evidence that Samsung altered its design to make its product look more like Apple's,ââ Koh found two months before the trial started.
To overcome that hurdle, Samsungâs battalion of lawyers has been arguing that many of Appleâs claims of innovation are either obvious ideas or were actually stolen ideas from Sony Corp. and others. Experts called that line of argument a high-risk strategy because of Appleâs reputation as an innovator.Continued...
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