Who should win the Apple/Samsung case?
(MoneyWatch) COMMENTARY As the jury retires to deliberate over the Apple vs. Samsung case, much will be written about what the law demands. A verdict is expected this week and it will likely rest on legal minutiae and a complex examination of the copious evidence and numerous witnesses presented by both sides. But who should we - as business people and consumers, want to win?
It was Apple which brought this $2.5 billion suit against Samsung and it is asking that the court bar Samsung from selling products which infringe its patents. That sounds straightforward enough - until you realize that, as Kirby Ferguson pointed out in his TED talk, Apple itself has (at times) been quite bold in its own borrowings. Much of the original interface for the early Apple Macs came from Xerox which did not pursue the startup for the scroll bars, drop down menus and folders that Steve Jobs had so blatantly borrowed. As Ferguson notes, in 1996 Jobs was still happy to borrow: "We have always been shameless about stealing great ideas." By 2010, however, the tune was quite different: "I'm going to destroy Android because it's a stolen product. I'm willing to go thermonuclear war (sic) on this."
It is pretty remarkable that, among its other grievances, Apple claims that the rectangular shape and the rounded edges of its iPhone have been copied; I can't remember the last time I saw any phone that was circular, triangular or even square. Most laptops have rounded edges too; this makes them safer and more durable; is that also a design element Apple will now claim to own?
From a business perspective, any company wants to be able to protect the innovation it has paid for. We won't have high level research and development without some kind of assurance that we can own what we've invented, at least for awhile.
From a consumer perspective, we don't want companies merely to copy each other. The whole point of a competitive market is supposed to be that it provides variety and choice.The fact that most smartphones today look identical is disappointing and lazy. If Android is so great, why can't it do anything different?
Those two conclusions argue against a Samsung victory. Having Samsung in the market hasn't, in fact, generated competition or a diversity of product offerings; it's actually just making the market more uniform and more boring.
I'm rather sad to find myself on Apple's side, since I believe that threatening to go "thermonuclear war" on any consumer product is pretentious, hypocritical bombast. But while I agree with Kirby Ferguson that all creativity derives from other things we've seen and heard, that (as he puts it) everything is a remix, I also believe that you have to add something to that mix. When T.S. Eliot wrote the mashup that we now know as The Waste Land, he quoted a lot of sources but he brought to them a unique sensibility, tempo and imagination. We're all inspired by work outside of us but we have to work on it internally before we can claim to have made something new.
The people who truly understand this, of course, are scientists. They're acutely aware that every experiment, each finding and non-finding, derives from the work done by other scientists who came before. Just one small data point can change everything. But before you can call it yours, you have to do some work of your own. And most of them are outspoken about their debt to others. Not something you'll find, in this case, from either protagonist.
Related Articles:
6 lessons from Steve Jobs
Steve Jobs's leadership legacy
What's next for Apple?
Popular on MoneyWatch
- Reverse cell phone lookup service is free and simple
- Amy's Baking Company could face legal 'nightmare'
- When it comes to vacations, the U.S. stinks 117 Comments
- 4 Things Not to Buy at Costco
- Top 10 professional life coaching myths
- TGI Fridays nailed for doctoring booze
- Amy's Baking Company: Post-meltdown PR campaign
- Online learning gets fresh look from a heavyweight













Apple has simply out ran its time as the best smart phone and is now suing to stay in the game because its unable to maintain a leading position in tablets and smartphones and can no longer compete. Like other corporations before them this strategy will ultimately fail. Even if Apple were to win this case which his unlikely they will the perception of Apple has now changed without Steve Jobs. They will be perceived no more than a business and no less than a greedy and arrogant company that acts like a cry baby. How does that help Apple?
The problem with this whole war against Google and Android that they have partaken, is that it will never end with Apple being the victors. They may win battles here and there but they will be appealed over and over, and even if they win a battle the war is far from over. Did android copy Iphone and that is why Android is out selling iPhones the answer is no. It is outselling iPhones, because consumers want choice, and while Apple is one choice, it is a choice of closed systems, and use restrictions, and an ecosystem of propitiatory hardware and software. And like a proprietary platforms it cant survive with out fresh ideas and lately the only fresh ideas Apple has is suing. In the long run we can compare the iphone to android the same way we compare macs it PCs and this is why macs have always been a niche market of overpriced computers with less power can control of pcs. same with iphone.