时间:2026-02-21 18:59:34 来源:网络整理编辑:綜合
Huawei has yet another legal skirmish on its hands.The Chinese telecom giant announced in a press re
Huawei has yet another legal skirmish on its hands.
The Chinese telecom giant announced in a press release on Thursday that it had filed a lawsuit against Verizon. The suit, filed in U.S. District Courts for Eastern and Western Districts of Texas, accused Verizon of repeatedly using 12 Huawei patents without permission or, more importantly, paying licensing fees.
"Verizon's products and services have benefited from patented technology that Huawei developed over many years of research and development," Huawei chief legal officer Dr. Song Liuping said in the statement.
SEE ALSO:Verizon launches privacy-oriented search engine OneSearchHuawei pointed out that it spends a lot of money on research and development, and as such, deserves a cut when its ideas get used elsewhere. According to the Chinese firm, it only seeks a "legal remedy" when agreements can't be reached.

That sounds fair enough with no other context, but Verizon doesn't see it that way. In a statement to Mashable, Verizon vigorously criticized Huawei's handling of the issue.
“Huawei’s lawsuit filed overnight, in the very early morning, is nothing more than a PR stunt. This lawsuit is a sneak attack on our company and the entire tech ecosystem. Huawei’s real target is not Verizon; it is any country or company that defies it. The action lacks merit, and we look forward to vigorously defending ourselves."
This isn't the first time these two companies have gone toe-to-toe on this exact issue. Huawei demanded licensing fees from Verizon less than a year ago, but didn't quite take it to the courts. After Apple and Qualcomm settled their years-long patent infringement case last year, it was probably about time for the tech world to produce another one.
Huawei, of course, has been involved in plenty of legal hang-ups in the western world recently. In December, Huawei sued the U.S. government over new FCC regulations on its equipment. In just the past week or so, both the U.S. and E.U. reportedly took steps to box Huawei out of 5G deployment in their respective territories.
Wherever this Verizon lawsuit goes, it's safe to say Huawei's already-tenuous footing in the U.S. might not improve in the immediate future.
TopicsHuaweiVerizon
Katy Perry talks 'Rise,' her next batch of songs, and how to survive Twitter2026-02-21 18:44
British man trolls neighbour with brutally honest note about a stolen parcel2026-02-21 18:22
'Games for girls' shelf nails the ridiculousness of gender stereotypes2026-02-21 18:16
Classic birthday cakes will give you a dose of nostalgia and a sugar high2026-02-21 18:08
Samsung Galaxy Note7 teardown reveals the magic behind the phone's iris scanner2026-02-21 17:44
Classic birthday cakes will give you a dose of nostalgia and a sugar high2026-02-21 17:28
Lawyer who hates drunk drivers gets charged with DUI2026-02-21 16:52
Tougher, more rugged 'Galaxy S7 Active' is likely an AT&T exclusive2026-02-21 16:48
Australian football makes history with first LGBT Pride Game2026-02-21 16:48
A new code of conduct to protect animals from drones2026-02-21 16:17
Give your kitchen sponge a rest on this adorable bed2026-02-21 18:57
Python takes bathroom break in national park ladies' room2026-02-21 18:49
Young Muslim woman trolls anti2026-02-21 18:43
Fireworks explode in south England sky after fire at warehouse2026-02-21 18:33
This coloring book is here for all your relationship goals2026-02-21 17:52
'Orphan Black' packed three huge reveals into one emotional episode2026-02-21 17:47
This plate will absorb excess calories from your meals2026-02-21 17:29
8 Asian budget airlines form 'world's biggest' low2026-02-21 17:15
We asked linguists if Donald Trump speaks like that on purpose2026-02-21 17:12
Disturbed let Nyle DiMarco use their song on 'DWTS' after reading his powerful letter2026-02-21 16:13