Intellectual Ventures rails against Motorola

Intellectual Ventures also rails against Android and Motorola filed a complaint in the U.S. puts the robot back corner of the green.

The acquisition has not yet been totally fine, but Google is already looming on the horizon the first trouble: Motorola Mobility is over because the target of Intellectual Ventures, a company operating in the field of intellectual property thicker in the world, which has thrown a series of patents to the group recently finished in the hands of the search giant.

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According to the statement of an official spokesman, Intellectual Ventures, Motorola would have challenged the misuse of technology covered by patents owned by the company. Patents that were proposed licensed to the U.S. group, who you would start a table for negotiations, only to blow up all because of the absence of an agreement that would agree to all the parties involved. The situation has thus evolved over time to arrive at the decision by the Intellectual Ventures to file a complaint with the Court of Delaware.

“We have a responsibility to our customers and our lenders to defend our intellectual property rights against companies like Motorola Mobility that use unlicensed,” said Melissa Finocchio, Chief Litigation Counsel IV. “Our goal is to provide our portfolio companies through patent licensing, and will not tolerate any further violations.” The intention of Intellectual Ventures is therefore to precede to the end, in order to find a solution that will put an end to the issue, pacific-type or not.

At the center of new controversy and legal there would be any Android smartphones made by Motorola based on the operating platform created by Google, which continues to be involved in issues related to the infringement of patents owned by other companies. The robot is so green in the middle of a veritable siege, with many parties involved that have managed to get by solely by economic agreements. Agreements, one after the other, make less and less attractive Android thus opening new opportunities for the emerging OS (Windows Phone in the first place).

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