According to the article this settlement is limited to the Motorola unit that is being sold to Lenovo and does not include any cross patent license. The title makes it seem like Job's "Thermonuclear War" was finally at an end, and that doesn't seem to be the case at all. The title ought to qualify it with "Google's Motorola" or something.
The article doesn't actually say that, it differentiates between the handset business that was sold and the remainder Motorola Mobility unit which holds the patents:
"Google acquired Motorola Mobility in 2012 for $12.5 billion, and this year announced was selling Motorola Mobility's handset business to Lenovo, while keeping the vast majority of the patents."
I'm sorry if I missed it... What does that mean though? Does it mean that Lenovo will be acquiring a litigation free company, or just that Apple wants a time-out with Google, and the game will continue once Lenovo is holding the ball?
It simply means that Google and Apple has agreed to stop all current lawsuits against each other (Google still owns the patents that Apple filed lawsuits on) at the moment.
These lawsuits can restart any time.
Apple and Google promises to work together on certain patent reform areas. IMO, that's most likely related to IP trolls, those two companies are in the top three list of companies constantly getting sued by IP trolls.
It's competition that is driving cell phone development, not a profusion of many thousands of government-granted monopolies over aspects of each phone.
If you thinking this is a "kumbaya" moment, think again. They've merely determined that the best they can do is litigate each other into a stalemate, or that they don't have a enough of a competitive overlap to warrant a war. This might be more of an "oligopoly" moment.
You have to wonder though: what would Steve Jobs have done?
> If you thinking this is a "kumbaya" moment, think again. They've merely determined that the best they can do is litigate each other into a stalemate, or that they don't have a enough of a competitive overlap to warrant a war. This might be more of an "oligopoly" moment.
I don't think anyone thinks that mutually assured destruction as applied to patent lawsuits are based on a desire for world peace or anything like that. Patent stalemates always work this way because it's (unfortunately) the best way to work around the broken system[1]. Jobs was just a lunatic and this is a reversion to a more normal state of affairs for non-patent-troll companies.
[1]other than sticking to a pledge to not use patents offensively, but that's something of a prisoner's dilemma that a lot of companies understandably can't resist, Apple included.
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[ 3.7 ms ] story [ 44.6 ms ] thread"Google acquired Motorola Mobility in 2012 for $12.5 billion, and this year announced was selling Motorola Mobility's handset business to Lenovo, while keeping the vast majority of the patents."
These lawsuits can restart any time.
Apple and Google promises to work together on certain patent reform areas. IMO, that's most likely related to IP trolls, those two companies are in the top three list of companies constantly getting sued by IP trolls.
Lenovo is not involved here.
You have to wonder though: what would Steve Jobs have done?
I don't think anyone thinks that mutually assured destruction as applied to patent lawsuits are based on a desire for world peace or anything like that. Patent stalemates always work this way because it's (unfortunately) the best way to work around the broken system[1]. Jobs was just a lunatic and this is a reversion to a more normal state of affairs for non-patent-troll companies.
[1]other than sticking to a pledge to not use patents offensively, but that's something of a prisoner's dilemma that a lot of companies understandably can't resist, Apple included.