It's an upgrade in the relationship between two
companies.
Nokia and Apple said Tuesday they were burying the
hatchet in a bitter patent dispute with a cooperation agreement and an
undisclosed cash payment by the U.S. tech giant to the Finnish group.
By settling their ongoing intellectual propertydispute, the two companies would "move the relationship... from being
adversaries in court to business partners," Nokia's chief legal officer
Maria Varsellona said.
Following years of clashes, Nokia and Apple
originally signed a licensing agreement in 2011.
But last December, the Finnish group, once the
world's top mobile phone maker, complained that Apple was using Nokia
technology in many products without paying for it. And it filed lawsuits in Germany and in the United
States.
Concretely, the dispute concerned 32 patents for
innovations related to displays, user interface, software, antennae, chipsets
and video coding.
The deal reached on Tuesday would put the two
companies' relationship back on an even keel, with Nokia providing
"certain network infrastructure products and services to Apple," the
statement said.
Apple would "resume carrying Nokia digital
health products (formerly under the Withings brand) in Apple retail and online
stores, and Apple and Nokia are exploring future collaboration in digital health
initiatives," it continued.
"Regular summits between top Nokia and Apple
executives will ensure that the relationship works effectively and to the
benefit of both parties and their customers."
Apple's chief operating officer Jeff Williams said
the U.S. giant was "pleased with this resolution of our dispute and we
look forward to expanding our business relationship with Nokia."
The two sides did not disclose the financial details
of the deal.
But Nokia would receive "additional revenues
during the term of the agreement," the Finnish group said.
The up-front cash payment would allow Nokia to
"provide a comprehensive update of its capital structure optimisation
programme," a restructuring plan launched in late 2015, which may now be
lighter thanks to the payment by Apple.
Nokia's shares were showing a gain of more than
seven percent stake on the Helsinki Stock Exchange at around 10:00 GMT, while
the overall market was up by just 0.8 percent.
Source: e.vnexpress.net
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