Patent seal
A Columbia University professor claims to own a patent for widely used LEDs and laser diodes

ITC investigates blue laser patent claim

30 major consumer electronics firms under the spotlight

Written by Ian Williams

Dr Rothschild made a seminal breakthrough in the production of blue and ultraviolet LEDs

Albert Jacobs Jr Attorney

The US International Trade Commission has begun an investigation into certain short-wavelength light emitting diodes and laser diodes following a patent infringement complaint.

Gertrude Neumark Rothschild, an emeritus professor at Columbia University, claims to own a patent on a method of producing wide-band gap semiconductors for LEDs and laser diodes at the blue and ultraviolet end of the light spectrum.

Rothschild alleges violations of section 337 of the Tariff Act of 1930 and is seeking to block the import of all LEDs and lasers that fall foul of the patent, as well as any products which use the technology.

These include hand-held mobile devices, instrument panels, billboards, traffic lights, Blu-ray disc players and data storage devices.

Companies under investigation include Avago Technologies, Everlight Electronics, Hitachi, LG, Lite-On Technology, Matsushita, Motorola, Nokia, Pioneer, Samsung, Sanyo, Sharp, Sony, Sony Ericsson and Toshiba.

"Dr Rothschild made a seminal breakthrough in the production of the blue and ultraviolet LEDs that are essential to a wide variety of consumer electronics products today," said Albert Jacobs Jr, an attorney representing Rothschild.

"She richly deserves scientific as well as commercial recognition for her work."

The ITC said that the case will be handled by the Honourable Paul J. Luckern, an ITC administrative law judge, who will schedule and hold an evidentiary hearing to make an initial determination as to whether there is a violation of section 337.

Further reading

Activision slams Gibson Guitar Hero lawsuit

Strumming its pain with the finger   More...

Inventor files iPhone patent suit

Caller ID is apparently patented   More...

UK High Court rules Qualcomm patents invalid

Nokia cleared of infringement   More...

Barracuda bites back in ClamAV spat

Patent row with Trend Micro escalates   More...

Related articles

Japanese boffins claim ultraviolet breakthrough

Better optical disks, light sources and flat-panel displays   More...

ITC investigates US Flash market

SanDisk patent complaint names 47 companies   More...

US boffins promise cheaper and brighter LED displays

Researchers create record-breaking 18 lumens per watt   More...

Do you agree?

Advertisement

Job of the week

Search thousands of IT jobs :

Search thousands of IT jobs:

Advanced search

Hiring now on ComputingCareers:

Related IT jobs

Search thousands of IT jobs :

Search thousands of IT jobs:

Advanced search

Advertisement

Watch

09 May 2008

2.51 MBWiMax muddle, Google tactics and asteroid bunkum More...

08 May 2008

3.26 MBBroadband Anywhere, phone-free transport and Web 3.0 More...

07 May 2008

3.19 MBUK success, a paucity of IT women and robot wars More...

Poll

DATA ENCRYPTION

DATA ENCRYPTION

Should encryption be mandatory for all personal data held by companies and governments?

Previous poll results

Newsletter signup

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

Existing User

Newsletter user login:

Enter email address to edit your newsletter preferences

Spotlight

Ofcom

Ofcom outlines future wireless vision

Wi-Fi healthcare and intelligent car brakes in the pipeline   More...

HP

HP Labs opens doors to academia

Innovation Research Program invites proposals related to current research   More...

Advertisement

Asteroid

Nasa plans manned mission to asteroid

Bruce Willis thankfully not going   More...

MySpace

MySpace offers opt-in data sharing

Deals signed with Photobucket, Twitter, eBay and Yahoo   More...

Advertisement