German court rules against Intel in patent row over chips


FILE PHOTO: Intel logo is seen near computer motherboard in this illustration taken January 8, 2024. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo

BERLIN (Reuters) -A court in Germany has issued an injunction against the sale of some of Intel's chips, in a patent dispute between the U.S. tech giant and a U.S. rival that filed the complaint.

The regional court in Dusseldorf ruled in favour of the California-based R2 Semiconductor in a case involving voltage regulators, a court spokesperson said, confirming an earlier report in the Financial Times.

The court has ordered Intel to refrain from applying the patent in question in Germany, the spokesperson said.

"We are disappointed with the Regional Court of Duesseldorf's decision, and we intend to appeal," an Intel spokesperson said in an emailed response to Reuters.

The spokesperson said that R2 had already filed an unsuccessful suit against the company in the United States and had since "shifted its campaign against Intel to Europe".

R2 CEO David Fisher said in a statement the company plans to, "enforce this injunction and protect our valuable intellectual property."

(Reporting by Tom Kaeckenhoff and Supantha Mukherjee, Writing by Rachel More and Max A. Cherney; editing by David Evans, Elaine Hardcastle)

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In Tech News

New York Times sues Perplexity AI for 'illegal' copying of content
Senator Elizabeth Warren calls Netflix-Warner Bros deal an antitrust 'nightmare'
Analysis-Europe forges ahead with Big Tech crackdown with X fine, defying Trump
Apple, Google send new round of cyber threat notifications to users around world
Cloudflare restores services after minor dashboard outage
Netflix to buy Warner Bros Discovery's studios, streaming unit for $72 billion
X hit with $140 million EU fine for breaching content rules, TikTok settles
AI bubble to be short-lived, rebound stronger, NTT DATA chief says
SoftBank's Arm plans to set up chip training facility in South Korea
Shein hits back at French government in court hearing over sex dolls, weapons

Others Also Read