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    Apple halts "push" email services in Germany

    (Reuters) - Apple Inc has been forced to de-activate "push" notification features for mobile users of its iCloud and MobileMe services in Germany, after an injunction was issued in favor of rival Motorola Mobility Holdings Inc.

    Customers using push services -- which automatically inform users about new messages on iPhones, iPods or iPads -- will now not be able to use them within the borders of Germany, Apple said on its German support website.

    However, users can get around that suspension of push services by adjusting their settings so that devices download new email at regular intervals, it added.

    Apple said its push email service on Mac desktops, laptops and the Internet is not affected.

    Apple and Motorola -- which Google Inc is in the process of acquiring -- are engaged in global patent litigation, part of a broader legal fight over the smartphone market, with billions of dollars at stake.

    A court in Mannheim three weeks ago granted a permanent injunction against the push-email service of Apple's iCloud, and any devices that can access it.

    According to patent expert Florian Mueller, Motorola sent Apple an enforcement letter demanding compliance with the patent injunction.

    Mueller said on his widely watched blog, Foss Patents, that the "Motorola patent at issue in that litigation harks back to the time of pagers, a predecessor of text messages."

    "Apple believes this patent is invalid and is appealing the decision," the company said on the website.

    The same court ruled in December that Apple Sales International -- the company's European sales subsidiary in Cork, Ireland -- must stop selling or distributing mobile devices that infringe upon certain Motorola cellular communications patents.

    That forced Apple to briefly halt the sale of the iPhone 3G and 4 models and some iPads on its German online store. Apple was cleared to resume selling the older models via its online store on February 3.

    (Reporting By Nicola Leske; Editing by Gerald E. McCormick)

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    5 comments

    • R.D. H  •  2 months ago
      A patent for pagers on "pushing" a signal to a piece of hardware. Gee Ma Bell should sue Motorola as she was pushing signals to a hardware device a long time before Motorola was. "Ring, ring. You have a phone call." And what about AOL and "you have mail"? Why would any judge think there is any difference between pushing data to your device simply because the data is a phone call rather than text, e-mail or a picture?
      • Mark 2 months ago
        I'm sure they are all just magic to you but there is engineering behind.
    • Steven  •  2 months ago
      More proof that intellectual property laws are increasingly irrelevant, archaic, and obstructive.
    • Dave  •  Fort Worth, United States  •  2 months ago
      Another article that doesn't rate being posted under the Apple tab on the tech news at yahoo
    • Here's what I think.. ...  •  Malden, United States  •  2 months ago
      Push, push in the bush.... push, push in the bush (what type of pushing are you thinking about? Ahhhhh".... I guess Adam and Eve don't need to hide behind the "apple" in Germany anymore! Anyway, people keep on moving... there's nothing to see around here!!
    • Mark  •  Longueuil, Canada  •  2 months ago
      Nice to see the shoe on the other foot for a change.
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