Nokia on Tuesday announced that it had reached a settlement with  Apple on the two companies’ patent licensing dispute. Under the terms of  the settlement, Apple is required to make a one-time payment to Nokia,  followed by ongoing royalties to be paid for the term of the agreement.
The sum of these payments and the nature of the non-financial  aspects of the contract have not be disclosed by either company. Both  Nokia and Apple have agreed to withdraw their respective complaints to  the U.S. International Trade Commission.
In a press release put out by the company,  Nokia CEO and president Stephen Elop said, “We are very pleased to have  Apple join the growing number of Nokia licensees. This settlement  demonstrates Nokia’s industry leading patent portfolio and enables us to  focus on further licensing opportunities in the mobile communications  market.”
Apple spokesman Alan Hely said the company is happy the dispute  with Nokia is over, and that they can now get back to focusing on their  respective businesses.
“Apple and Nokia have agreed to drop all of our current lawsuits and  enter into a license covering some of each others’ patents, but not the  majority of the innovations that make the iPhone unique,” Hely said.
Nokia first sued Apple in October 2009  for having violated ten of its patents by making non-licensed use of  Nokia’s technologies in various aspects of the iPhone. Apple responded  to Nokia’s suit a few months later, in December 2009, by launching its own countersuit against the company, alleging that the Finland-based company had violated thirteen of Apple’s patents.
Since then, the two companies had been engaged in a fierce battle before the ITC, with Nokia filing another suit against Apple in May 2010 for infringing on five more of its patents  with the iPad and iPhone. It was a series of legal filings by two tech  industry heavyweights that intellectual property activist Florian  Mueller described as “the most bitterly contested patent dispute that  this industry has seen to date,” but Nokia has finally emerged  victorious.
However, Mueller goes on to suggest that this may ultimately end up being a win for both sides  as Nokia, buoyed by its win against Apple—despite the latter’s  formidable patent portfolio—goes on to companies like Google, possibly  inflicting more serious damage to Apple’s competitors. For now though,  it looks like Apple has some paying up to do.
[IDG News Service's Agam Shah contributed to this report.]
source: http://www.macworld.com/article/160518/2011/06/nokia_apple_settle.html 
 
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