Judge denies Apple request for U.S. ban on Samsung gadgets | Mobile – CNET News

In the ongoing global patent battle between Apple and Samsung over smartphones and tablets, a U.S. judge has denied Apple a preliminary injunction that would have temporarily prevented Samsung from selling four of its devices in the United States.

In a ruling issued late Friday, U.S. District Judge Lucy Koh decided that allowing Samsung’s Galaxy S 4G, Infuse 4G, Droid Charge, and Galaxy Tab 10.1 devices to remain on sale would not harm Apple enough to justify the injunction. She also said such an injunction would likely benefit other gadget makers at Samsung’s expense.

In an around-the-world-in-80-lawsuits scenario, Apple has been arguing that Samsung’s products infringe its design patents and copy the iPhone and the iPad. Samsung, meanwhile, has fired back with its own patent-related claims against Apple. In addition to the U.S., the battle has touched down in Australia; the Netherlands; Germany; parts of Asia, and France and Italy; among other places.

In a statement about Friday’s ruling, reported by PCMag.com, Samsung said Koh’s decision on the preliminary injunction “confirms our long-held view that Apple’s arguments lack merit. In particular, the court has recognized that Samsung has raised substantial questions about the validity of certain Apple design patents. We are confident that we can demonstrate the distinctiveness of Samsung’s mobile devices when the case goes to trial next year. We will continue to assert our intellectual property rights and defend against Apple’s claims to ensure our continued ability to provide innovative mobile products to consumers.”

via Judge denies Apple request for U.S. ban on Samsung gadgets | Mobile – CNET News.

RT @mashable: United Arab Emirates Drops BlackBerry Ban – http://mash.to/2QOEm

RT @mashable: United Arab Emirates Drops BlackBerry Ban – http://mash.to/2QOEm

UPDATE: RIM: Can’t Discuss Confidential UAE Agreement – WSJ.com

Following a deal with the United Arab Emirates to avert a ban of key BlackBerry services, Research In Motion Ltd. (RIMM) said Friday that it can’t discuss the details of confidential regulatory matters in specific countries.

The U.A.E. ban would have come into effect Monday, but Friday its government said that Blackberry services “are now compliant with the U.A.E.’s telecommunications regulatory framework,” and that a “regulatory compliant solution” has been “applied.”

Waterloo, Ont.-based RIM said in a brief statement that it continues to approach lawful access matters internationally within the framework of core principles that it issued in mid-August.

Details of the solution between RIM and UAE couldn’t immediately be learned.

via UPDATE: RIM: Can’t Discuss Confidential UAE Agreement – WSJ.com.

SFO Anti-Corruption Chief Talks Grease Bribes – Corruption Currents – WSJ

Since the passage of the U.K. Bribery Act — a caffeinated sibling of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act — companies have been trying to take measure of the Serious Fraud Office’s appetite for enforcing the law’s ban on small bribes, known as facilitating payments.

The FCPA permits such payments for routine government actions, like processing paperwork or speeding up phone hookups, but many U.S. companies have adopted policies that prohibit all bribes. Why risk crossing the line?

The international community is also trending toward an outright ban — at least on paper — with the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development condemning facilitating payments as “corrosive” to development and the rule of law.

Parliament passed the U.K. law in April. It was expected to take effect this fall, but its implementation was delayed until April 2011 to allow for a consultancy period, which runs through Nov. 8.

via SFO Anti-Corruption Chief Talks Grease Bribes – Corruption Currents – WSJ.

Technolog – University bans Facebook, Twitter for one week

If you pass through Pennsylvania’s Harrisburg University of Science and Technology this week and see some glassy-eyed, numbed and twitching students walking around, they aren’t stressed from an early onslaught of all-nighters.

They’re probably dealing with withdrawal from a week-long ban on Facebook, Twitter and IM’s imposed campus-wide by Provost Eric Darr, who is conducting the experiment as an exercise that will culminate in a survey and students writing essays about their experience. Faculty and staff won’t have access either, at least not through the campus system.

One thing is for sure: the experiment is inspiring a lot of chatter on those networks. It’s already burning up on Twitter.

In an interview this morning, Darr told me that this experiment is not a criticism of social media, but about observing habits and behaviors in the way we use technology.

via Technolog – University bans Facebook, Twitter for one week.

Law.com – 9th Circuit Rules Tattoos Are Protected Speech

Getting inked is protected speech, and a Southern California coastal city’s blanket ban on tattoo parlors is unconstitutional, an appeals panel has found.

The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in an opinion published Thursday had no trouble deeming tattoos and the business of tattoo parlors forms of pure expression fully protected by the First Amendment, which it notes conflicts with the findings in at least six previous cases from various jurisdictions.

In what a fellow judge deemed a “robust” defense of the values of the First Amendment, 9th Circuit Judge Jay Bybee, writing for the panel, called Hermosa Beach’s zoning restrictions outlawing tattoo parlors facially unconstitutional.

via Law.com – 9th Circuit Rules Tattoos Are Protected Speech.

Dow Agro faces ban on bribery charge – The Economic Times

Dow AgroSciences India Ltd, the Indian subsidiary of Dow Chemicals, is likely to be blacklisted by the government following its persistent refusal to respond to show-cause notices over charges of bribery.

The agriculture ministry had asked the company why action should not be initiated against it for bribing officials to push three sub-standard pesticides in the country.

The Central Bureau of Investigation, which had investigated the case, had earlier this year held the Mumbai-based Indian arm of Dow Chemicals guilty of bribing a senior central government employee and his aides, and had recommended that the firm be blacklisted. The three pesticides were identified as Dursban 10G, Nurelle-D and Pride.

The details of the bribes paid by Dow AgroSciences — known earlier as DE-Nocil — have been mentioned in the charge sheet filed by CBI in the case.

The charge sheet was filed on the basis of information furnished by the US authorities to the Indian government in response to a letter rogatory, a formal request from a court to a foreign court for judicial assistance.

via Dow Agro faces ban on bribery charge – The Economic Times.

Blackberry gets 60-day India ban reprieve | BBC News

India has said it will delay a ban on Blackberry devices for 60 days while it reviews proposals from the gadget’s maker, Research in Motion (RIM).

A ban had been threatened from Tuesday, as India said its security services needed greater access to encrypted services.

It wants the ability to monitor secure e-mail and instant messaging services provided by the firm.

RIM has said it will support the country’s need for “lawful access”.

But it maintains that it does not do “specific deals” with countries.

The firm said earlier that it had offered to “lead an industry forum focused on supporting the lawful access needs of law enforcement agencies”.

It said that the forum – which would include other telecoms firms – would work with the Indian government to develop “policies and processes aimed at preventing the misuse of strong encryption technologies”.

via BBC News – Blackberry gets 60-day India ban reprieve.

UAE says BlackBerry ban will also apply to visitors – The China Post

The Emirates’ looming ban on BlackBerry e-mail, messaging and Web browsing services will extend to foreign visitors too, said the country’s telecom regulator, raising the stakes in its dispute with the maker of the popular business tools.

via UAE says BlackBerry ban will also apply to visitors – The China Post.