Hey, remember how Samsung and Apple were in legal wranglings with one another? Yeah, we almost forgot, too. They’re still suing each other across the globe, but a recent revelation that Samsung executives may have been privy to the Apple-Nokia agreement is a big problem — for both Apple and Samsung.


According to a Magistrate Paul Grewal, it was Apple who may have shown Samsung the terms of the deal. This all had to do with Apple’s patent licensing agreement with Nokia regarding the iPhone, which may have had precedence in the Samsung/Apple litigations. According to the filing, obtained by Foss Patents, Samsung made no bones about their knowledge:

According to a declaration from Nokia’s Chief Intellectual Property Officer, Paul Melin, on June 4, 2013, in a meeting between Samsung and Nokia licensing executives, Dr. Seungho Ahn informed Nokia that the terms of the Apple-Nokia license were known to him. Specifically, according to Mr. Melin, Dr. Ahn stated that Apple had produced the Apple-Nokia license in its litigation with Samsung, and that Samsung’s outside counsel had provided his team with the terms of the Apple-Nokia license.

Mr. Melin recounts that to prove to Nokia that he knew the confidential terms of the Apple-Nokia license, Dr. Ahn recited the terms of the license, and even went so far as to tell Nokia that “all information leaks.” Mr. Melin also reports that Dr. Ahn and Samsung then proceeded to use his knowledge of the terms of the Apple- Nokia license to gain an unfair advantage in their negotiations with Nokia, by asserting that the Apple-Nokia terms should dictate terms of a Samsung-Nokia license.

This seems like a strong-arm tactic by Apple, as the order went on to note that Apple asked for confidentiality from Samsung in disclosing the information to them. Grewel also claims that lawyers made the information available via email to several Samsung employees, and available for download via their FTP site.

The judge in this case wants to depose Dr. Ahn as soon as possible to discuss this matter. It’s not clear whether a settlement or agreement from another case can be considered work product, but it doesn’t fit the traditional definition, and a sealed court order would have implications on that. It seems that, moving forward, the Apple v. Samsung waters have been muddied a great deal.

VIA: Cnet

6 COMMENTS

  1. Sorry, but Apple only disclosed the information due to a court order. The documents were labeled confidential and were only to be seen by the lawyers. Samsung is in the wrong here.

    • Maybe so, but according to the FRAND, they are to offer everyone the same rate for the same rights; so if Nokia( Microsoft) & Apple had a secret pact where they was giving a better rate vs any other OEM, that’s a ptoblem.

      Could you imagine if Moto (Google) charge Apple & Nokia a higher FRAND fee vs an Android OEM?, they would scream blood murder.

      • Except not all the licenses in the deal were under FRAND. As reported:

        Nokia’s first claims covered technology for wireless data,
        speech coding, security and encryption. Subsequent claims
        asserted rights to wiping gestures on a touchscreen and on-
        device application stores, both of which Nokia said it filed to
        patent more than 10 years before the iPhone launch.

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