Apple sued over infringement of camera tech patents; Sony, Canon forced to pay millions for same IP

“A lawsuit filed by St. Clair Intellectual Property Consultants has targeted Apple for allegedly using camera technology protected by several patents,” Electronista reports. “The four patents, each relating to digital camera systems, were originally issued to a company named Personal Computer Cameras, although St. Clair purchased the technology between 1995 and 2001.”

Electronista reports, “Soon after finishing its acquisition of the patents, St. Clair in 2001 filed an infringement suit against Sony. The jury reportedly awarded the patent holder $25 million in damages. A similar suit aimed at Canon lead to over $34 million in damages, while Fuji was forced to pay $3 million.”

Read more in the full article here.

24 Comments

  1. I seem to remember an Apple Quicktake that I used to own about 1995. Why was nobody suing since then? Perhaps Apple doesn’t use that exact IP. If so, they’re going to make enough off of the sales to pay anyway. But I think Apple would’ve researched that.

  2. “St. Clair Intellectual Property Consultants”? Yeesh… that name just screams “patent vultures.”

    The patent system should reward companies which bring actual products to market. Instead, all it’s doing is rewarding patent vultures, who do nothing but get rich at the expense of the companies who do make actual products – an “innovation tax” with no upside for anyone except those banking on getting rich from the “lawsuit lottery” system.

  3. The patent process is broken and will eventually crush society (and you thought Wall Street or Social Security or Climate Change would be the doom of humanity). I am sickened every time I see one of these lawsuits. I have no doubt that at least a few of them have merit, but I suspect that the patent trolls dominate the courts.

    From the article:
    “The “‘459 patent,” “‘219 patent,” and “‘010 patent” hold the title “Electronic Still Video Camera with Direct Personal Computer (PC) Compatible Digital Format Output,” while the “‘899 patent” is entitled “Process for Use in Electronic Camera.”

    I haven’t read the patent. But it seems pretty darn obvious to me based on the title.

  4. This is Absolutly Disgusting! These Lawsuits are getting out of hand. Many people dont even want to do business anymore because greedy dumb people sit back with imaginary inventions waiting to take advantage of actual productive people who make things happen. The patent system should be for actual products that are in production . Not just ideas that sit in a vault waiting to sue a company that is productive. I am to the point that being American is becoming an Embarrasment.
    People sue and whine and complaine about everything and demand more more form the people who work.
    Very sad in deed!
    Apple is no dumb company, payback is going to be a pain .

  5. While I have no doubt that most of these suites are from patent trolls. The statement that patents should only be for those that can produce a product is going just a little overboard. There are legitimate reasons that some inventors can not produce what they have invented. Some time you may have the brains and technology to say design something unique using a simulator you can prove your invention has merit but maybe a prototype would cost hundreds of thousand of dollars so they approach a large company with an idea that they wisely got a patent for and that company rejects the request and builds the product without compensating the inventor. These things do happen but their needs to be a time limit on when you can state your claim and 10 years is way to long.

  6. Given the size of those awards and the number of digital cameras those companies have sold, I’d wager, Apple owes less than $1M. Why haven’t they sued Nokia? Everyone says they have great digital cameras on their phones and they sell so many!

  7. @KenC… nearly every Mac sold in the past 4 years and a few iPods have built-in digital cameras capable of producing still and video.

    @BMW… “I am to the point that being American is becoming an Embarrasment.” What took you so long?

    While traveling, it’s frustrating AND irritating trying to explain the systemic idiocy of the American populace and the government… regardless of who sits in the White House, although that’s improved considerably since 2008!!

  8. Don’t discount Kodak – they have managed the transition to digital in consumer devices quite well, and are still very important for non-consumer imaging. Add to that that real photographers still prefer film, and I think Kodak will be around for quite some time.

  9. Steve516 Kodak in the last ten years has seen their stock go from 70 to about zero and they waited so late to get on the digital bandwagon they are almost gone. The revolution in high quality digital photography has given pro photographers so much more control that now and in the future they will use film about as often as you will use a polaroid. Film is a very antiquated process and all but gone! In January 2009, Kodak posted quarterly loss and planned to cut up to 4,500 jobs. On June 22, 2009, Eastman Kodak Co announced that it will retire Kodachrome color film by the end of 2009, ending its 74-year run after a dramatic decline in sales. They are toast!

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