John Albert
Illuminator
- Joined
- Apr 10, 2010
- Messages
- 3,140
That foreman's comments clearly betray an insufficient understanding of software engineering to be able to fairly decide this case.
Consider that a single software program made by a single company (Adobe Photoshop, for example) can be engineered to run on multiple platforms (Apple OSX and Microsoft Windows, for example). Both versions are protected under the same patents portfolio, but of course the version engineered for OSX cannot be installed and run on Windows, and vice versa.
Therefore, platform dependence is irrelevant to the question of whether an implementation is derivative or not.
If it were, then there's no way Samsung could have violated Apple's patents because stock Android will not run on Apple iPhones, and vice versa.
Consider that a single software program made by a single company (Adobe Photoshop, for example) can be engineered to run on multiple platforms (Apple OSX and Microsoft Windows, for example). Both versions are protected under the same patents portfolio, but of course the version engineered for OSX cannot be installed and run on Windows, and vice versa.
Therefore, platform dependence is irrelevant to the question of whether an implementation is derivative or not.
If it were, then there's no way Samsung could have violated Apple's patents because stock Android will not run on Apple iPhones, and vice versa.
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