US Court Orders Samsung to Pay $191M Over OLED Patent Infringement
Samsung is fighting a bunch of lawsuits. One of them was with Pictiva Display, which claims that Samsung was infringing patents relating to OLED technology. There’s now a verdict on this. A US federal court jury in Texas has found in favor of Pictiva and ordered Samsung to pay a total of $191.4 million in damages for patent infringement.
Samsung is ordered to pay $191.4 million for OLED patent infringement
A lawsuit was filed against the tech giant in 2023. Pictiva alleged that many Galaxy smartphones, wearables, computers, TVs, and other devices infringed on the patents for improving OLED displays. Samsung argued that the patents were invalid and denied the allegations. Pictiva asserted infringement of a total of five patents. However, the jury reportedly found three of them to be non-infringing and two as infringing, resulting in $191.4 million in damages.
The new ruling suggests that the jury in a Texas federal court sided with Pictiva. It believes that Samsung devices indeed violated the patents to enhance the brightness, resolution, and power efficiency of OLED displays. Though the jury is out, the US District Court must review the legal merits to issue a final verdict.
Samsung will reportedly appeal the US court ruling
As you’d expect, Samsung is clearly not happy about the ruling. It reportedly intends to appeal the verdict. To that extent, it has filed a petition with the United States Patent and Trademark Office to invalidate the relevant Pictiva patents.
Pictiva is a subsidiary of patent licensing firm ‘Key Patent Innovations.’ It holds hundreds of patents acquired from the lighting company Osram during the “early commercialization phase” of OLED technology in the 2000s.
For Samsung, this is the second-largest award against it in recent times. To recall, a jury had hit Samsung with $445.5 million in damages for infringing on Collison Communications patents on 5G, 4G, and Wi-Fi standards.
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