Apple and Corellium Settle a four-year Court Battle
Patently Apple has followed the legal battle between Apple vs. Corellium over four reports that you could review to get some background. The first report was posted in August 2019 titled "Apple Files a Copyright Infringement Lawsuit against Virtualization Software Company Corellium; the second report was posted in December 2019 titled "Apple Amends their Lawsuit against Corellium by adding a Claim of 'Unlawful Trafficking' of their Copyrighted Works; the third report was posted in May 2020 titled "Apple Sued Corellium last Summer and the case is taking a Strange Twist involving Apple Photos that touch on 'National Security;'" The fourth report was titled "While Apple Loses Copyright Claims against 'Virtual iPhone' maker Corellium, the company may have violated the Copyright Act (DMCA)."
On Thursday, the court announced that a settlement had been reached. “The parties reached a full and complete settlement of all remaining causes of action and issues in this case,” a note on the docket read. “The court congratulates the parties and their counsel on reaching an amicable settlement in this case.”
The case had a number of surprises, with Corellium’s lawyers revealing that Apple had attempted to buy the startup for $23 million in 2018. In an unusual move, the tech giant also subpoenaed defense giant L3Harris so it could demonstrate how it was using Corellium’s technology.
For more, read the full report by Forbes
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