Apple-Samsung smartphone clash heads to jury

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Individuals line up to watch Apple and Samsung face each other in federal district court in San Jose, California in July. The case is headed to a jury. (AFP Photo/Beck Diefenbach)

The mammoth Apple-Samsung patent trial headed to the jury Tuesday, setting the stage for a verdict that could have huge implications for the hot market in smartphones and tablet computers.

In closing arguments, Apple lawyer Harold McElhinny said that the story of Samsung’s copying was laid out in the company’s own internal documents.

In “three intense months of copying,” Samsung had stolen four years of Apple’s hard work on the iPhone, McElhinny told jurors.

“At the very top of Samsung’s corporate structure, those executives were determined to cash in on the iPhone’s success,” he said.

“Samsung was able to copy Apple’s four-year investment, without taking any of the risks, because they were copying the world’s most successful product,” the lawyer said.

McElhinny brushed aside Samsung’s contention that the Apple designs stemmed from earlier tablet computers which could not be held in one’s hand and used as a phone like the iPhone.

Apple, which accuses the South Korean electronics giant of copying the iPhone and iPad too closely, is seeking damages of up to $2.75 billion and an injunction that could knock some Samsung products off the US market.

Even a delay in sales could endanger Samsung’s position in the US market, where it is currently the top seller of smartphones.

Samsung has countered by arguing that its patents on wireless communication were infringed by Apple, and is demanding up to $422 million from the Silicon Valley manufacturer.

McElhinny outlined four damage scenarios, in which jurors could award Apple anywhere from $521 million to $2.75 billion, depending on whether the jury agrees with Apple on the trademark issues and the timing of the alleged infringement.

Samsung’s lawyer was to deliver the company’s argument after a courtroom break.

The trial is wrapping up after 10 days of testimony over three weeks, in which Apple put its own designers and executives on the stand, along with experts, all of whom accused Samsung of illegally copying Apple designs.

Samsung witnesses said meanwhile that they had come up with the designs and icons they used on their own.

However, internal Samsung documents introduced as evidence did show they were aware that they were behind Apple’s iPhone when it came to some user-interface features.

The jury was expected to begin deliberations in the case on Wednesday, and will have to pore over a complicated 20-page form addressing hundreds of separate allegations, that Samsung violated Apple’s patents and trademarks.

Last week, Judge Lucy Koh asked for one more settlement conference, with the chief executives of the two companies speaking directly by telephone.

“I see risk for both sides,” Koh said at the time. “It’s time for peace.”

On Monday a Samsung lawyer confirmed that Apple chief Tim Cook and Samsung boss Kwon Oh-Hyun did talk but no settlement was reached.

This is one of several court cases around the world involving the two electronics giants in the hottest part of the tech sector — tablet computers and smartphones.

While the results so far have been mixed in courts in Europe and Australia, Samsung has a lot at stake in the US case, which could result in large damages or injunctions against its products in the American market.

A survey by research firm IDC showed Samsung shipped 50.2 million smartphones globally in the April-June period, while Apple sold 26 million iPhones. IDC said Samsung held 32.6 percent of the market to 16.9 percent for Apple. –AFP