That’s a bullshit argument, practically it’s the same as if Nuvia sold their license to Qualcomm, which they obviously wouldn’t have the right to do.
I don’t see how Arm lost this suit, they did NOT grant that license to Qualcomm. The judgement seems ridiculous.
There’s a difference between an order contract an a license.
The license to make Arm CPU was granted to Nuvia not to Qualcomm.
Qualcomm using the license, is the same as transferring or selling it, and that’s NOT normal with a patent or copyright license. Except if it is kept within the intended scope.
Qualcomm taking over the license changes the scope, and that would usually be clearly enough to invalidate it.
Buying a company because they have a license you want is not remotely unusual. It’s perfectly standard behavior, and the entire enterprise world would fall apart if an acquisition lost the rights to licenses the purchased business owned.
That’s a bullshit argument, practically it’s the same as if Nuvia sold their license to Qualcomm, which they obviously wouldn’t have the right to do.
I don’t see how Arm lost this suit, they did NOT grant that license to Qualcomm. The judgement seems ridiculous.
No, it’s not the same.
Companies being acquired for their contracts is a daily occurrence.
There’s a difference between an order contract an a license.
The license to make Arm CPU was granted to Nuvia not to Qualcomm.
Qualcomm using the license, is the same as transferring or selling it, and that’s NOT normal with a patent or copyright license. Except if it is kept within the intended scope.
Qualcomm taking over the license changes the scope, and that would usually be clearly enough to invalidate it.
No, there is not. A license is just a contract.
Buying a company because they have a license you want is not remotely unusual. It’s perfectly standard behavior, and the entire enterprise world would fall apart if an acquisition lost the rights to licenses the purchased business owned.