Apple, Samsung pushed to settlement talks

Apple and Samsung plan to meet out of court to discuss a possible settlement to their legal fracas, which has centred on intellectual property infringements of each others’ patents.

In a court order — relayed by intellectual property blog FOSS Patents — US District Court judge Lucy Koh referred the two companies to a magistrate judge settlement conference that will take place within the next 90 days.

According to the referral, both Samsung’s and Apple’s CEOs will be at the settlement session, as well as their general counsels.

Apple did not respond to a request for comment. Samsung said that there were no new updates to the dispute.

The news follows a report last month saying that top-level executives at both companies were warming to the idea of discussing “potential settlement” options.

“Apple CEO Tim Cook does not seem to share his predecessor’s passion about laying all foes to waste,” Bloomberg reported, citing information from an unnamed source. “Cook appears to view litigation as a necessary evil, not a vehicle of cosmic revenge.”

According to Walter Isaacson’s authorised biography on Steve Jobs released last year, Jobs viewed Google’s Android operating system as a “stolen” product, making it a personal mission to wipe it out.

“I will spend my last dying breath if I need to, and I will spend every penny of Apple’s US$40 billion in the bank to right this wrong,” Jobs told Isaacson. “I’m going to destroy Android, because it’s a stolen product. I’m willing to go thermonuclear war on this.”

Apple proceeded to take aim at Android, first through HTC, then later expanding its efforts to Samsung, beginning with a lawsuit that accused the Korea-based technology company of copying the look, feel and underlying technologies of the iPhone and the iPad.

The legal battle is of intense interest, given the business relationship between the two companies. While Apple and Samsung compete with one another fiercely for consumer dollars and market share, Samsung’s components have been the backbone of some of Apple’s most popular products. For example, both the processor and screen in Apple’s latest iPad are Samsung-made. Samsung also supplies components for Apple’s iPhone, and its Mac computer line.

As mentioned in previous coverage, Apple has struck cross-licensing agreements with foes in the past. That includes a patent deal with Microsoft as part of its investment in Apple in 1997, as well as one with Nokia in 2011 that gave the companies the option to license certain patents from one another.

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