Samsung
has disabled an advanced search function in an update to the
international version of its flagship Galaxy S3 smartphone, following a
patent dispute with Apple.
Once
the software is installed the phones no longer search contacts, apps
and other on-device material using software developed by Google.
Apple
claims the innovation infringes its patent to a single search
interface which it uses in its Siri app to collate results from a range
of sources.
The
iPhone maker had already managed to enforce a brief sales ban on
another Samsung handset - the Galaxy Nexus - in the US because of the
patent.
That
dispute will be considered again by a Washington-based court on 20
August - but whatever the ruling, it would not have applied to the
GT-i9300 (S3) model sold in the UK and other places outside the US.
A spokeswoman for Samsung was unable to provide more detail.
"Samsung
may be doing this as a precautionary measure to prevent it having to
pay damages on devices sold outside the US in case Apple prevails in the
States and then pursues a similar suit elsewhere," said Simon Clark,
head of intellectual property at law firm Berwin Leighton Paisner.
"Generally
speaking a multinational company like Apple will have patent protection
in all its key countries, and the wording will be very similar in each
area. Although patent law can vary across territories it's quite likely
that a ruling in one country will lead to similar decisions in others."
California clash
The
move marks the latest development in a long string of lawsuits between
the two firms over the technologies and designs of their mobile devices.
Apple
was defeated in a London court earlier this month when it tried to have
Samsung's Galaxy Tab tablets banned in the UK after it failed to
convince a judge that the South Korean firm had copied the look of its
iPad.
The
California-based company was ordered to publish the fact that its
competitor had not infringed its registered design on its website and in
magazines as a consequence.
However,
it was more successful in Germany on Tuesday when an appeals court in
Dusseldorf extended a preliminary injunction against Samsung's Galaxy
Tab 7.7 across the EU because of a related claim.
The
two firms are set to clash again in the US on Monday when a jury will
hear patent infringement suits filed by both companies against the
other.
Samsung
later responded with its own filing, alleging that Apple was trying "to
stifle legitimate competition and limit consumer choice to maintain its
historically exorbitant profits".
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