Broadcom wins injunction against Qualcomm By Robert Daniel, MarketWatch Last update: 6:49 a.m. EST Jan. 2, 2008 PrintPrint EmailE-mail Subscribe to RSSRSS DisableDisable Live Quotes TEL AVIV (MarketWatch) -- Qualcomm Inc. warned Wednesday that it expects an "immediate, short-term impact" to result from a federal court's ruling that it must stop producing and marketing cellular-phone chipsets and software that infringe three Broadcom Corp. patents. QCOM 39.35, 0.00, 0.0%) didn't specify the impact in a statement. The company also said it's assessing its legal options, including appeals. Chart of BRCM U.S. District Judge James Selna in Santa Ana, Calif., on Dec. 31 issued an injunction against Qualcomm, Broadcom (BRCM: br Broadcom brought the case in May 2005. Two years later, a jury found that Qualcomm had infringed three Broadcom patents and awarded $19.6 million of damages. Broadcom, the Irvine, Calif., producer of semiconductors for wired and wireless communications, and Qualcomm, producer of digital-communication technologies, have been locked in a prolonged legal struggle over their products. The latest order prohibits Qualcomm from using Broadcom's technology that enables a wireless handset to work simultaneously over two or more networks, and Broadcom's technology designed for push-to-talk functionality, which enables a handset to work like a walkie-talkie. The order also enables Qualcomm to use certain Broadcom video-processing chips if it pays royalties, Broadcom said. Qualcomm said it's developing workaround solutions for two of the patents in question, covering simultaneous-network-access and push-to-talk technologies. For products infringing Broadcom's video-encoding patent, Qualcomm unveiled new chips and said it expects to have hardware and software workarounds available in the first quarter. End of Story |