Samsung finally agreed to pay $548 million to Apple for copying (Stealing) the iPhone design and concept after Apple won the infringement suit against the iPhone-Galaxy patent controversy on 3rd December.
Finally, Samsung agreed to pay $548 million to Apple for copying (Stealing) the iPhone design and concept after Apple won the infringement suit against the iPhone-Galaxy patent controversy on 3rd December. The US-based Apple company knocked on the back door of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California to sue Samsung for the patent right.
Samsung said it had arranged to fulfill the damages worth $548,176,477. After the patent was it won by Apple on 3rd December and the next day, Samsung agreed to pay reasonable damages, and another part of the damages will be made next year. The payment process will be made after afthe her Completed compreceiveseive an Invoice officially from Apple to Samsung headquarter in Korea.
Samsung Agree to Pay $548 Million to Apple For Copying iPhone Design.
However, the cases started in 2012 – when Apple already started production of the iPhone series in 2007 and realized that Samsung was copying its iPhone design. So Ap,ple 2012 filed a case against the Korean company Samsung. The US-based Apple company knocked on the back door of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California to sue Samsung for the patent right.
And now, Samsung has to pay $548 million, but an insider story says that Samsung might have given $2.5 billion in the first damage call. Still, after a specific appeal from Samsung, it fell to $1 billion, and then again, Samsung called for another litigation which dimtodiminished $930 million. Then down, it was $548 million.
According to Apple Insider officials, the previous report charge sheet claims that Samsung had a lot of lookalike iPhone concepts and designs. Soon after iPhone was released,e first series of the iPhone in 2007. Samsung also changed its strategy to an identical iPhone in 2008, which bought Samsung to U.S. federal court. Soon after the case was registered in 2012, Samsung showed off that they were not copying Apple’s concept and design, launched upgraded flagship, Galaxy S6 Edge, and then followed by S6 Edge Plus; both were similar but had a more authenticated setup than the iPhone series.