Apple loses patent lawsuit to University of Wisconsin, faces hefty damages
Oct 13, 2015 -- Apple Inc could be facing up to $862 million in damages after a U.S. jury on Tuesday found the iPhone maker used technology owned by the University of Wisconsin-Madison's licensing arm without permission in chips found in many of its most popular devices.
The jury in Madison, Wisconsin also said the patent, which improves processor efficiency, was valid. The trial will now move on to determine how much Apple owes in damages.
To read the full article, click here
Related Semiconductor IP
- Temperature Glitch Detector
- Clock Attack Monitor
- SoC Security Platform / Hardware Root of Trust
- SPI to AHB-Lite Bridge
- Octal SPI Master/Slave Controller
Related News
- Jury Awards Core Wireless $7.3 Million in Patent Litigation Against Apple
- Nokia expands patent litigation against Apple in Asia, Europe and the US
- How Apple will dodge an Imagination lawsuit
- Qualcomm Files Answer and Counterclaims to Apple Lawsuit
Latest News
- RaiderChip NPU for LLM at the Edge supports DeepSeek-R1 reasoning models
- The world’s first open source security chip hits production with Google
- ZeroPoint Technologies Unveils Groundbreaking Compression Solution to Increase Foundational Model Addressable Memory by 50%
- Breker RISC-V SystemVIP Deployed across 15 Commercial RISC-V Projects for Advanced Core and SoC Verification
- AheadComputing Raises $21.5M Seed Round and Introduces Breakthrough Microprocessor Architecture Designed for Next Era of General-Purpose Computing