Google executive chairman Eric Schmidt on
Thursday criticised raging patent disputes in the global mobile
industry, warning that they stifled innovation and reduced consumer
choice.
"Google stands for innovation as opposed to
patent wars... The last thing we want to see are innovation and
particular products being stopped," he said at an event in Seoul to
launch Google's new Nexus 7 tablet PC.
Global smartphone giants Samsung Electronics
and Apple are currently locked in a long-running patent battle over
design and technology in 10 nations including the United States and
Japan.
Schmidt declined to comment on any specific
case, but was due to meet Samsung's mobile chief JK Shin later on
Thursday. The South Korean firm uses Google's Android platform on its
smartphones and tablets.
Last month, a California jury ordered Samsung
to pay Apple $1.05 billion in damages for illegally copying iPhone and
iPad features for its Galaxy S smartphones.
Apple, which has filed patent infringement
actions on earlier versions of the Galaxy S series, added the newest
Galaxy S III to the list in a fresh complaint filed on September 1.
Schmidt pointed to estimates that there are
some 200,000 mobile patents with "complicated" and "overlapping"
technical specifications.
"I think one of the worst things that has
happened in the last few years is the belief that somehow, because there
are so many patents... that one vendor could stop the sale of another
vendor's devices," Schmidt said.
This "literally prevents choice, prevents innovation. And I think that's a very bad outcome", he added.
Google's launch of the Nexus 7 tablet in
South Korea is aimed at expanding its share of a lucrative market led by
Apple's iPad with devices that use the Internet search firm's own
software.
The seven-inch tablet, powered by the latest
generation of Android software called "Jelly Bean", is being made for
Google by Taiwan-based Asus and weighs about as much as a paperback
book.
The device -- already launched in the United States, Canada, Australia, Britain and Japan -- is priced at 299,000 won ($268).
It will be available for pre-order in South Korea this week before hitting shelves in mid-October.
The number of mobile gadgets powered by
Android has now reached 500 million globally, with 1.3 million new
Android devices being activated each day, said Schmidt, who described
South Korea as a "leading" market.
"In 2011, Korea had 30 percent smartphone
penetration... Right now in 2012, 60 percent of Koreans have
smartphones. This gives you the sense of how fast this is happening," he
told reporters.
South Korea is being ranked second in the
world in the number of apps downloaded at the Google Play app store,
Google's Android team head Hugo Barra said, calling the growth "really
phenomenal".
© 2012 AFP
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© 2012 AFP
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