On Monday, A Chinese court had ordered a sales ban of some older
Apple iPhone models for violating two patents of Qualcomm,
though intellectual property lawyers said enforcement of the ban
was likely still a distant threat.
"We plan to use the same patents to file suit against the three
new iPhone models," Jiang Hongyi, a lawyer at Lexfield Law
Offices who is representing Qualcomm in its patent suits, told
the FT.
The case, brought by Qualcomm, is part of a global patent
dispute between the two U.S. companies that includes dozens of
lawsuits.
Apple said on Monday that all of its phone models remained on
sale in mainland China and that it had filed a request for
reconsideration with the court, the first step in a long appeal
process that could end up at China's Supreme Court.
Apple had also said its three models released in September were
not part of the case.
Qualcomm and Apple did not immediately respond to Reuters'
requests for comment.
(Reporting by Arjun Panchadar in Bengaluru; Editing by Maju
Samuel)
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