Samsung ordered to pay $191 million to Ireland-based Pictiva for OLED patent infringement, plans appeal

“We intend to appeal the verdict related to the two patents. We have already filed a petition to invalidate the relevant patents, which is currently under review by the United States Patent and Trademark Office,” Samsung Electronics said in a statement.

"We intend to appeal the verdict related to the two patents. We have already filed a petition to invalidate the relevant patents, which is currently under review by the United States Patent and Trademark Office," Samsung Electronics said in a statement.
Pictiva told the jury that several Samsung devices infringed its OLED technology patents for improving resolution, brightness, and power efficiency.

Samsung Electronics owes patent owner Pictiva Displays $191.4 million in damages for infringing two U.S. patents covering organic light-emitting diode technology, a jury in Texas federal court said on Monday.

Pictiva convinced the jury that a wide range of Samsung devices violate Pictiva’s patent rights in technology for enhancing the resolution, brightness and power efficiency of OLED displays.

Pictiva Managing Director Angela Quinlan said in a statement that the verdict “validates the strength of the Pictiva intellectual property.”

Samsung Electronics said it would appeal

“We intend to appeal the verdict related to the two patents. We have already filed a petition to invalidate the relevant patents, which is currently under review by the United States Patent and Trademark Office,” the company said in a statement.

The verdict is one of several recent large awards won by patent owners suing Samsung in the same Marshall, Texas, court over technology in its devices.

Ireland-based Pictiva, a subsidiary of patent licensing company Key Patent Innovations, owns hundreds of patents covering OLED technology invented by photonics company OSRAM in the early 2000s.

Pictiva alleged in its 2023 lawsuit that Samsung’s Galaxy smartphones, televisions, computers, wearables and other products incorporate Pictiva’s technology for improving OLED displays. Samsung denied the allegations and argued the patents were invalid.

This article was first uploaded on November four, twenty twenty-five, at fifty-three minutes past six in the morning.

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