Non-practicing entity Portal Communications has filed a lawsuit against Apple
for alleged infringement of three patents related to natural language
voice query systems - the technology being used by the iPhone-maker in
its products in the form of the Siri virtual assistant.
According to tech website AppleInsider,
in its filing with the Eastern Texas District Court, Portal
Communications said that the three related patents were invented by Dave
Bernard, CEO of technology solutions firm The Intellection Group. All
the patents titled "Multimodal natural language query system and
architecture for processing voice and proximity-based queries," were
transferred from The Intellection Group to Portal Communications in
January.
The company alleged that Apple's Siri infringes on each
of the patents-in-suit, as the voice assistant is capable of
understanding - or makes an attempt to understand - natural language
queries and returns their answers.
Portal Communications'
complaint targets all iPhone and iPad models, Mac computers dating back
to 2009, iPod touch, Apple Watch Series 3, the fourth-generation Apple TV, Apple TV 4K and HomePod.
Along with devices not compatible with Siri, including iPhones older than the iPhone 4S
and iPads older than the third-generation model, the suit targets
devices running iOS 3.1 or later, but does not specify what programmes
or technologies are in infringement. Siri debuted with iOS 5, the report
said.
Apple purchased Siri in 2010 and integrated it into its
products' hardware with iPhone 4S in 2011 - nearly three years after one
of the patents was granted. The company expanded the voice assistant's
capabilities to its other devices, including iPad, Mac, Apple Watch and its smart speaker HomePod.
Each
patent deals with methods of parsing user queries from natural language
patterns into machine decipherable commands -- in the form of voice or
text. It also details the methods of further processing requests using
GPS location data, or other proximity information, to provide a context
and environment for narrowing down a response.
Parsing is the
method of receiving input in the form of sequential source programme
instructions, interactive online commands, markup tags, or some other
defined interface and then breaking them up into parts that can be
managed by other programmes and return a meaningful response.
A non-practicing entity (NPE) is someone who holds a patent for a product or process but has no intentions of developing it.
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