BlackBerry on Tuesday filed a patent infringement lawsuit against Facebook and its WhatsApp and Instagram apps, arguing that they copied technology and features from BlackBerry Messenger.
Litigation
over patent infringement is part of BlackBerry Chief Executive John
Chen's strategy for making money for the company, which has lost market
share in the smartphone market it once dominated.
"Defendants
created mobile messaging applications that co-opt BlackBerry's
innovations, using a number of the innovative security, user interface,
and functionality enhancing features," Canada-based BlackBerry said in a
filing with a Los Angeles federal court.
"Protecting shareholder
assets and intellectual property is the job of every CEO," BlackBerry
spokeswoman Sarah McKinney said in an email. However, she noted that
litigation was "not central to BlackBerry's strategy."
The lawsuit
followed years of negotiation and BlackBerry has an obligation to
shareholders to pursue appropriate legal remedies, she added.
Facebook Deputy General Counsel Paul Grewal said in a statement that the company intended to fight the lawsuit.
"Blackberry's
suit sadly reflects the current state of its messaging business,"
Grewal said. "Having abandoned its efforts to innovate, Blackberry is
now looking to tax the innovation of others."
BlackBerry is trying
to persuade other companies to pay licencing royalties to use its trove
of more than 40,000 global patents on technology including operating
systems, networking infrastructure, acoustics, messaging, automotive
subsystems, cyber-security and wireless communications.
BlackBerry is also selling cyber-security software for self-driving cars.
BlackBerry sued Nokia Corp
in February 2017, alleging infringement of patents relating to 3G and
4G wireless communications technology. That case is still pending in
federal court in Delaware.
Last year Qualcomm Inc agreed to pay
BlackBerry $940 million to resolve
arbitration over royalty payments.
In October 2017
BlackBerry announced a confidential settlement with Blu Products, a
Florida-based maker of low-cost mobile devices it had also sued for
patent infringement.
© Thomson Reuters 2018
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