Microsoft Corp and Google Inc have agreed to bury all patent
infringement litigation against each other, the companies announced on
Wednesday, settling 18 cases in the United States and Germany.
In
another sign of the winding down of the global smartphone wars, the
companies said the deal puts an end to court fights involving a variety
of technologies, including mobile phones, wi-fi, and patents used in
Microsoft's Xbox game consoles and other Windows products.
The
agreement also drops all litigation involving Motorola Mobility, which
Google sold to Lenovo Group Ltd last year while keeping its patents.
However,
as Microsoft and Google continue to make products that compete directly
with each other, including search engines and mobile computing devices,
the agreement notably does not preclude any future infringement
lawsuits, a Microsoft spokeswoman confirmed.
"Google and Microsoft
have agreed to collaborate on certain patent matters and anticipate
working together in other areas in the future to benefit our customers,"
the companies said in a joint statement. They did not disclose the
financial terms of the deal.
The companies said they have been
cooperating on such issues as the development of a unified patent court
for the European Union, and on royalty-free technology for speeding up
video on the Internet.
One of the most bitter disputes between the
rivals began in 2010 when Microsoft accused Motorola, later acquired by
Mountain View, California-based Google, of breaching its obligation to
offer licenses to its wireless and video patents used in Xbox systems at
a reasonable cost.
In July, a U.S. appeals court ruled that the
low licensing rate Microsoft pays to use the patents had been properly
set by a federal judge in Seattle.
Wednesday's agreement
is not the first among smartphone heavyweights to settle their patent
disputes. In 2014, Samsung Electronics Co Ltd and Apple Inc agreed to
drop all litigation against one another outside the United States.
© Thomson Reuters 2015