Will Samsung Challenge the $191.4 Million Jury Verdict in the US OLED Patent Dispute?
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
- Samsung Electronics plans to appeal a $191.4 million jury verdict.
- The verdict pertains to alleged OLED patent infringements by Samsung.
- Samsung is simultaneously pursuing another case regarding patent validity.
- This case adds to multiple ongoing patent disputes against Samsung.
- The outcome may influence future technology patent litigations.
Seoul, Nov 4 (NationPress) Samsung Electronics announced on Tuesday that it will contest a U.S. federal jury's verdict that mandates the company to pay $191.4 million in damages for purportedly violating organic light-emitting diode (OLED) display patents held by an Irish display company. The ruling, issued by a jury in Marshall, Texas, on Monday (U.S. time), concluded that Samsung's range of products, including smartphones, televisions, computers, and wearable devices, infringed upon two patents associated with OLED display technology owned by Pictiva Displays.
Samsung Electronics has rejected these allegations and expressed its intention to appeal the jury's decision, as reported by Yonhap news agency. "We plan to challenge the jury's verdict that found the two patents were infringed upon," the company stated.
The South Korean tech giant also highlighted that it is pursuing a separate case asserting the invalidity of the contested patent with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, as indicated in the report.
This lawsuit, initiated in 2023, is among several significant patent litigations against Samsung Electronics in Texas, a pivotal U.S. state for resolving corporate intellectual property disputes.
In a related development, a U.S. federal jury last month mandated Samsung Electronics Co. to pay $445.5 million in damages after determining that the company infringed on multiple wireless network technology patents owned by an American firm, as reported by foreign media.
The jury in Marshall, Texas, ruled on Friday (U.S. time) that Samsung violated four patents held by Collision Communications, a New Hampshire-based company specializing in wireless network efficiency technologies.
The jury found that Samsung's products, including Galaxy smartphones and notebook computers equipped with wireless functions, were infringing on the patents in question.
Collision Communications initiated the lawsuit against Samsung in 2023, alleging infringement of its proprietary technology, according to the report.