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Message: $600+ million settlement

Nice settlement. I wonder if they went as far as the Markman, trial or was this a pre-verdict settlement?

I see NOKIA already licenses their technology, but not Apple.

Hopefully DM and EDIG get the next headline. Sure would be a game changer.

NTP files patent suits against technology giants

WASHINGTON (AFP) - – NTP, a patent-holding firm which won a 600-million-dollar settlement from Blackberry maker Research in Motion, now has Apple, Google, HTC Corp., LG Electronics, Microsoft and Motorola in its sights.

The Richmond, Virginia-based NTP filed lawsuits against the six technology giants on Thursday accusing them of infringing its wireless email patents in mobile phones.

NTP, in the suits filed in the US District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, accused the companies of infringing eight patents it holds for wireless email.

"Use of NTP's intellectual property without a license is just plain unfair to NTP and its licensees," NTP co-founder Donald Stout said in a statement.

He said legal action "is necessary to ensure that those companies who are infringing NTP's patents will be required to pay a licensing fee."

NTP describes its other co-founder, the late Thomas Campana, as the "inventor of wireless email."

In 2006, Canada's Research in Motion, maker of the Blackberry, agreed to pay 612 million dollars to NTP to settle patent infringement claims and to license NTP-patented technology.

NTP has separately filed suits against mobile phone manufacturer Palm and several telecom companies accusing them of patent infringement. Those cases, launched in 2006, are ongoing.

NTP has a licensing agreement with Nokia and the Finnish mobile phone giant was not named in Thursday's suits.

Patent lawsuits are a regular occurrence among technology giants and Apple is currently being sued by Nokia for patent infringement. Apple has fired back a countersuit against Nokia.

Taiwan's HTC and Apple are also currently suing each other over patent claims.

Analyst Jon Ogg of 247WallSt.com said the latest NTP lawsuit could prove to be good news for RIM.

"If RIM has paid its ransom, the others have not," Ogg said.

"This suit could ultimately lead to injunctions and sales halts of competing brands, which could ultimate leave RIM in the most extreme of all outcomes as the only 'legal' smartphone that could be sold via wireless carriers in the US," he said.

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