The
high-stakes battle between the world’s largest smartphone makers is scheduled
to wrap up this week after a monthlong trial that has pulled the curtain back
on just how very cutthroat the competition is between Apple and Samsung.
Closing
arguments in the patent-infringement case are scheduled to begin Monday, with
the two tech giants accusing each other, once again, of ripping off designs and
features. At stake: $2 billion if Samsung loses, a few hundred million if Apple
loses.
Teams
of attorneys on both sides have spent the month trying to poke holes in obscure
and bureaucratic patent legal claims, while keeping the eight jurors engaged.
Drawing the most attention in the courtroom and the media are insider emails
and meeting presentations documenting the frustration each company faced as
they competed for market share.
Less
than a year after Apple unveiled its iPhone in 2007 combining a web browser,
music player and phone in one swipeable device, Samsung officials noted they
were quickly losing customers.
“While
Traditional OEMs are busy fighting each other in the Feature phone space Apple
is busy making the category obsolete,” said one confidential briefing
presentation. “What makes the iPhone unique is software (applications) and
services, beautiful hardware is just a bonus.”
But
Samsung fought back, using Google’s Android system, offering less expensive
smartphones with larger screens.
“Consumers
want what we don’t have,” said a 2013 Apple presentation a few years later,
noting that the low-priced, easy-to-view competition was surging ahead.
Throughout
the three years of litigation, Samsung’s market share has grown. One of every
three smartphones sold last year was a Samsung, now the market leader. Apple,
with a typically higher price, was second, with about 15 percent of the global
market.
Although
it’s impossible to predict what a jury will do, two years ago a federal jury
found Samsung was infringing on Apple patents. Samsung was ordered to pay about
$900 million, but it is has appealed the judgment and has been allowed to
continue selling products using the technology.
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