Eastman Kodak Co said on Wednesday it has ended a long-standing patent dispute with Sony Corp over digital-camera inventions dating back to 1987 and entered a cross-licensing deal giving the companies access to each other's patents.
The photography company also said that it has signed a cross-license agreement with cell-phone maker Sony Ericsson Mobile Communications AB, a joint venture of Sweden's LM Ericsson and Sony, the Japanese electronics and entertainment company.
The agreements, signed on Friday, are royalty bearing to Kodak, the company said, but further financial terms of the deals were not disclosed.
"It made sense to conclude the patent litigation and separately enter into this broad technology cross-license agreement," Kodak spokesman David Lanzillo said. "It does allow each company broad access to the other's patent portfolio."
The deal "essentially tells me that Kodak more or less won," said Ulysses Yannas, a broker with investment firm Buckman, Buckman & Reid in New York. "It means you collect some money up front and then you keep getting royalties on the use of your technology."
In a federal lawsuit filed in March 2004, Kodak alleged that Sony infringed on 10 patents for digital camera inventions issued from 1987 to 2003 involving digital and video technologies such as image compression and digital storage.
The lawsuit named Sony and two US subsidiaries, Sony Corp of America and Sony Electronics Inc, which is based in San Diego.
Sony countersued three weeks later, alleging that Kodak violated 10 patents covering digital camera features, from an indicator that displays the number of pictures taken to an electronic shutter with adjustable speeds.
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