Reading all the news about the Apple, it’s hard not to feel like the world as we know it has just changed forever.
Ever Since the Verdict of the Apple vs. Samsung, I’m trolled by friends around for owning a copied product or it’s just another Korean product which is well marketed. But my attempts of convincing them with all the information I have got isn’t successful either. It’s all personal; let me give opinions about the verdict.
A federal jury ruled on Friday that Samsung has to pay more than $1 billion in damages for infringing on five Apple patents. In an “internal memo” released post verdict, Samsung says it will counter-sue in order to protect the company. Doubts are certain about Apple may have got judicial support since the verdict was in US (who knows attorney may be an Apple freak).
Money aside — the jury said Samsung should pay $1.05 billion to Apple as a result of the finding — the big question on everyone’s mind is what this all will mean for Samsung, Android, and the larger mobile world. Countless blogs and websites are weighing in, predicting everything from the end of Samsung’s sales dominance to a radical change in how manufacturers approach Android. Some are even saying the move will help Microsoft’s Windows Phone get the love and attention it so desperately desires.
For all the hubbub about the billion-dollar jury decision in the Apple-Samsung lawsuit (and despite Apple moving forward with a bid to ban eight specific mobile gadgets), we’re not even close to a final resolution of round one in this case — let alone an appeal.
This is when we’ll find out whether Apple gets to block those eight phones from store shelves, or whether Samsung’s counter-arguments — yet to be filed, but due in the next two weeks — are more persuasive.
The one good thing that could come from this money- and time-wasting mess? It’s bringing an awful lot of attention to just how absurd the U.S. patent system really is. Apple “owns” the concepts of minor UI interactions? It alone possesses the right to “determine when a user is using one finger to scroll versus two or more fingers to zoom”? The list of silly-sounding claims goes on and on, but you get the point: The trial is bringing a renewed focus to the need for a major overhaul to our current patent system, and that’s something we can all celebrate.
Shit on your face people behind lawsuit and the jury who approved it.
Technology may move at the speed of electrons, but the law tends to slouch stubbornly along like — well, like an ass.



