Swedish telecommunication maker Ericsson, who has tussled with Apple in the U.S. over tech licensing issues, has now taken its legal action to Europe, filing lawsuits in the U.K., Germany, and the
Chinese telecom company ZTE recently agreed to pay a licensing fee to the Swedish company Ericsson to settle long-running intellectual property disputes. As part of the settlement, both sides also
Swedish telecoms company Ericsson has filed seven cases against Apple at the US District Court for the Eastern District of Texas, claiming that the Californian tech company’s products including the
The English High Court has said that a trial must determine whether a patent sale from Ericsson to licensing company Unwired Planet breached EU competition law, in a dispute related to the alleged
Context: Ericsson and Lenovo have been embroiled in a 5G standard-essential patent (SEP) as well as non-SEP dispute since October 2023. After Ericsson obtained preliminary injunctions (PIs) over 5G
Ericsson has filed a lawsuit against Samsung in the United States, accusing the South Korean giant of not adhering to its contractual commitments for various licensing patent agreements. It claims
Chinese telecoms giant Huawei said Friday it had renewed a licensing agreement with Ericsson to use each other's technologies, in a rebuff to US warnings about the risk of espionage by Beijing.
In its first judgment, the UPC local division Lisbon has proven it is a force to be reckoned with. The judges dismissed Ericsson's application for a PI against AsusTek, but also commented on the
Ericsson and OPPO have signed a global patent license agreement. This initial agreement includes a cross license covering the 2G, 3G and 4G patent portfolios from both companies. OPPO, the fifth
Lenovo and its subsidiary Motorola have taken the global dispute with Ericsson over 5G patents to the Unified Patent Court. In doing so, the Chinese mobile phone manufacturer is pursuing an unusual