The Register®

Biting the hand that feeds IT

California judge says Californian company can infringe patents

At least until 2009

A federal judge in California has ruled that Qualcomm is allowed to sell chips infringing the Broadcom patents, until the end of January 2009 at least, while paying a mandatory royalty to Broadcom during that period.

The two companies have been at loggerheads over the patents throughout 2007, though Qualcomm has been on the losing side recently with the courts ruling against them and Bush deciding against a presidential intervention.

This ruling, reported by Reuters, means that Qualcomm can at least shift their stock of chips, but could be challenged by Broadcom depending on the royalties they receive.

It would seem that 2007 has not dulled Qualcomm's taste for court action, and this is unlikely to be the end of the dispute between the two companies. ®

Free whitepaper: Comparing Data Center Batteries, Flywheels, and Ultracapacitors

Don’t Miss

Warning: roadworksNetbooks and Mini-Laptops

Buyer's Guide They're little and we love 'em. But which ones are best?

How the fate of the US economy rests on a Dell workstation

Quick, someone send Bernanke a supercomputer

Hard DriveHow many terabytes can you fit on a 2.5-inch hard drive?

Fun with areal densities

Flag ChinaChina's nonstop music machine

Exclusive Baidu versus business