AU Optronics Corp (AUO, 友達光電), the nation’s second-largest maker of LCD panels, sued Samsung Electronics Co and AT&T Inc, claiming they infringed on some of its patents.
“AUO has been damaged” by Samsung’s and AT&T’s alleged infringements on flat-panel displays used in TVs and cellphones, lawyers for the company said in a complaint filed on Monday in the US federal court in Wilmington, Delaware.
The allegation comes almost a month after Samsung, the world’s largest flat-screen panel manufacturer, sued AU Optronics in US federal courts in Delaware and California, alleging infringement on some of its display patents.
Mark Siegel, a spokesman for Dallas-based AT&T, the second-largest US wireless carrier, declined to comment on the AU Optronics suit.
Samsung will “actively” try to protect its patents and customers against “groundless patent-infringement claims,” the company said in an e-mailed statement responding to the AU Optronics suit.
Samsung received the second-largest number of patents in the US last year behind International Business Machines Corp, IFI Claims Patent Services, a Wilmington, Delaware-based research company, said in January.
BUSINESS UPDATE: The iPhone assembler said operations outlook is expected to show quarter-on-quarter and year-on-year growth for the second quarter Hon Hai Precision Industry Co (鴻海精密) yesterday reported strong growth in sales last month, potentially raising expectations for iPhone sales while artificial intelligence (AI)-related business booms. The company, which assembles the majority of Apple Inc’s smartphones, reported a 19.03 percent rise in monthly sales to NT$510.9 billion (US$15.78 billion), from NT$429.22 billion in the same period last year. On a monthly basis, sales rose 14.16 percent, it said. The company in a statement said that last month’s revenue was a record-breaking April performance. Hon Hai, known also as Foxconn Technology Group (富士康科技集團), assembles most iPhones, but the company is diversifying its business to
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Qualcomm Inc, the world’s biggest seller of smartphone processors, gave an upbeat forecast for sales and profit in the current period, suggesting demand for handsets is increasing after a two-year slump. Revenue in the three months ended in June will be US$8.8 billion to US$9.6 billion, the company said in a statement Wednesday. Excluding certain items, earnings will be US$2.15 to US$2.35 a share. Analysts had projected sales of US$9.08 billion and earnings of US$2.16 a share. The outlook signals that the smartphone market has begun to bounce back, tracking with Qualcomm’s forecast that demand would gradually recover this year. The San