Vapor
A lawsuit filed by Chinese telecommunications equipment maker Huawei Technologies Co Ltd against Verizon Communications alleging patent infringement is set to begin jury selection on Wednesday.
In
February 2020, Huawei sued Verizon in two U.S. District courts in Texas,
alleging the company used a dozen Huawei patents without authorization
in areas such as computer networking, download security, and video
communications, seeking an unspecified amount of compensation and
royalty payments.
Verizon last year called the lawsuits "nothing
more than a PR stunt" and "a sneak attack on our company and the entire
tech ecosystem" and filed counterclaims against Huawei, claiming the
Chinese company violated Verizon patents.
Huawei said in 2020
that it "is simply asking that Verizon respect Huawei's investment in
research and development by either paying for the use of our patents, or
refraining from using them." Huawei declined comment Tuesday.
Huawei
has been a flashpoint in the U.S.-China relationship for several years.
The United States placed the company on an economic blacklist in 2019
over what it said were national security concerns.
Jury selection
is scheduled to begin Wednesday in Huawei's suit filed in the Eastern
District of Texas that involves a small number of patents related to
optical transport networks, while the other Texas lawsuit, related to
wireless patents, is set for trial in October. The jury selection could
be delayed by a day or two depending on the status of an unrelated case.
In
June 2019, Reuters reported that Huawei told Verizon it should pay
licensing fees for use of more than 230 Huawei patents and was seeking
more than $1 billion.
Source:news.yahoo.com
Author:David Shepardson
Editor:IPRdaily-Vapor