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Apple Pays Nokia $2 Billion in Cash as Settlement in Patents Row

The lawsuit covered 32 patents, including display, user interface, software and video-coding technology.

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After a patents row that escalated between Nokia and Apple in December last year and was settled in May, Nokia has received a $2 billion upfront cash payment from the Cupertino-based tech company as part of the settlement terms.

According to a report in TechCrunch on Friday, Nokia will not get $2 billion every quarter – this was a non-recurring catch-up revenue and Nokia hasn't said what it plans to do with all this cash.

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The spat began last year when the tech giants locked horns over patents, with Apple filing an anti-trust lawsuit against third-party Patent Assertion Entities (PAEs) that act on Nokia's behalf, and the Finland-based firm suing Apple directly.

According to the Cupertino-based tech giant, Nokia was conspiring with Acacia Research and Conversant Property Management – a PAE – in an "illegal patent transfer scheme" to wring money out of Apple because Nokia's cell phone business was failing.

Nokia also filed a suit directly against Apple in Europe and the US, claiming the company was still infringing on Nokia patents.

The lawsuit covered 32 patents, including display, user interface, software and video-coding technology.

Amid the escalating patents row with Nokia, Apple had also pulled all products made by Withings – a French company and now a Nokia subsidiary – from Apple Stores, be it online or retail.

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