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Samsung sues Australia’s patent commissioner over Apple IP clash

“Samsung is suing the Australian patent commissioner in the latest twist in its intellectual property clash with Apple,” BBC News reports.

“The South Korean firm is seeking to invalidate four patents which Apple claimed had been infringed by Samsung’s Galaxy Tab 10.1 tablet computer,” The Beeb reports. “Samsung alleges that the patents should never have been granted as they duplicated earlier intellectual property filings. A judge will hold a hearing into the matter on 25 June. The Australian news site said the four patents involved slide-to-unlock, photo management, scaling and rotation features found on the iPhone and iPad.”

The Beeb reports, “Australia has two types of patents: standard and innovation. The standard-type is tougher to secure, and offers 20 years of protection. It is designed to cover ideas that require longer development and will be on the market for a prolonged time. The innovation-type is easier and quicker to obtain, but only offers eight years of protection. It is designed for products that are only small advances over existing technology and may have a short commercial life.”

“Australian rules say innovation patents can only be converted to standard patents in the period before they have been accepted,” The Beeb reports. “Samsung claims the commissioner was at fault because he granted Apple’s inventions standard patents after they had already secured innovation ones.”

Read more in the full article here.

[Thanks to MacDailyNews Reader “Brawndo Drinker” for the heads up.]

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