InterDigital Communications Inc. et al v. Nokia Corporation et al

  1. May 15, 2017

    Nokia, InterDigital End IP Row As Microsoft Drops FRAND Suit

    InterDigital Communications Inc. agreed to drop infringement claims over a wireless technology patent against Nokia Inc. in Delaware federal court Monday after the patent was found invalid, while Nokia parent Microsoft agreed to drop antitrust claims against InterDigital over an alleged failure to offer fair licensing terms.

  2. September 15, 2015

    Nokia, ZTE Get PTAB To Nix InterDigital Wireless Patent

    The Patent Trial and Appeal Board on Monday invalidated many claims of a InterDigital Communications Inc. wireless communications patent in an America Invents Act review requested by Microsoft Corp.'s Nokia unit, which is accused of infringing it, and ZTE Corp., which has been found to infringe.

  3. June 03, 2015

    InterDigital Seeks Summary Judgment In Microsoft, Nokia Spat

    InterDigital Communications Inc. wants a Delaware federal judge to declare that devices manufactured by Microsoft Corp. unit Nokia match the claims of its wireless communications patent, according to a Tuesday motion for partial summary judgment.

  4. May 01, 2015

    Microsoft Says InterDigital Expert Shows It Can't Infringe

    Microsoft Corp. has asked a Delaware federal judge for permission to move for a ruling that smartphones made by its Nokia unit cannot infringe an InterDigital Communications Inc. wireless patent based on the testimony of InterDigital's expert, which has put an infringement trial on hold.

  5. April 23, 2015

    InterDigital Trims Nokia Patent Case After ZTE Verdict

    Citing a noninfringement verdict this week in a different case against ZTE Corp., InterDigital Communications Inc. on Thursday dropped some of its patent claims against Nokia Corp., leaving only one patent at issue in a trial set to begin Monday in Delaware.

  6. May 30, 2014

    InterDigital Gets Wireless Patent FRAND Claims Scrubbed

    InterDigital Communications Inc. will not have to face claims that it failed to license its standard-essential wireless patents on fair, reasonable and nondiscriminatory terms, after a Delaware federal judge threw out counterclaims by accused infringers Nokia Corp. and ZTE Corp. Wednesday, saying that addressing them would serve "no useful purpose."

Hello! I'm Law360's automated support bot.

How can I help you today?

For example, you can type:
  • I forgot my password
  • I took a free trial but didn't get a verification email
  • How do I sign up for a newsletter?
Ask a question!