Nokia, Lenovo Conclude Patent Cross-license Deal, Settle Litigation

Finnish telecom equipment maker Nokia Corp. said it concluded a multi-year, multi-technology patent cross-license agreement with Chinese PC and mobile maker Lenovo Group Ltd. The companies now agreed to settle all pending litigation over video-compression technology patents.

According to the agreement, Lenovo will make a net balancing payment to Nokia. The deal terms remain confidential.

Nokia had launched legal proceedings against Lenovo in 2019 over alleged infringement of 20 video-compression technology patents. The company filed cases in the United States, Brazil, India, as well as in Germany, where there were six cases between the parties.

In September last year, a Munich court ruled that Lenovo infringed one of Nokia’s patents, and ordered an injunction and a recall of products from retailers. However, a German appeals court stayed that order in November.

Lenovo also had filed a lawsuit against Nokia in a Californian court.

Nokia now said the latest agreement resolves all pending patent litigation and other proceedings between the two parties, in all jurisdictions.

John Mulgrew, Chief Intellectual Property Officer of Lenovo, said, “Our agreement with Nokia reflects the value of both Nokia’s technology leadership and Lenovo’s continued investment in 5G innovation. The global accord struck will enable future collaboration between our companies for the benefit of customers worldwide.”

Nokia said its patent portfolio comprises around 20,000 patent families, including over 3,500 patent families declared essential to 5G. The company contributes these and other inventions to open standards in return for the right to license them on fair, reasonable and non-discriminatory or FRAND terms. Companies can license and use these technologies without the need to make their own substantial investments in R&D.

Nokia in early March had signed a patent license agreement with South Korea’s Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd. that covers the use of Nokia innovations in video standards.

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