SAN JOSE, California
(Reuters) - An insurance agent, an unemployed video game enthusiast and
a project manager for wireless carrier AT&T were among the 10
jurors selected to decide a high-stakes U.S. patent battle between Apple Inc and Samsung Electronics Co Ltd, with billions of dollars in the balance.
U.S. District Judge Lucy Koh
on Monday spent several hours examining jurors about their backgrounds
and biases, as the companies began the trial after more than a year of
pretrial jousting. Opening statements by the lawyers are expected to
begin on Tuesday.
Apple and Samsung,
the world's largest consumer electronics corporations, are waging legal
war around the world, accusing each other of patent violations as they
vie for supremacy in a fast-growing market for mobile devices.
The fight began last year when Apple sued Samsung in a San Jose, California, federal court, accusing the South Korean company of slavishly copying the iPhone and iPad. Samsung countersued.
Long lines outside
the federal courthouse in San Jose marked the beginning of the trial as
lawyers, media and analysts flooded the building to watch the
proceedings.
Seven men and three women were eventually picked for
the 10-member jury, which also includes a store operations manager for a
cycling retailer, a systems engineer and a benefits and payroll manager
who works with startups.
The jury was
selected after Koh questioned nearly three dozen members of the jury
pool on a host of issues, including their choice of phones, how the
economic downturn impacted their lives, experience with the legal system
and connections to either Samsung, Apple, Google Inc or its Motorola Mobility unit.
Google is a
background actor in the trial as Samsung's smartphones run on Google's
Android operating system. Many analysts see Apple's global patent wars
as a proxy war against Google.
The questioning of
prospective jurors on Monday demonstrated the unique challenge of
finding a Silicon Valley jury with no bias toward either Apple or
Google, companies that are headquartered just a few miles away from the
federal courthouse. Both Apple and Google employ thousands in Northern
California.
A Google employee in the pool did not make it onto the jury, and an Apple employee was excused after he said he hoped his employer would win.
Another juror was
excused after saying the case reminded him of Apple's legal war against
Microsoft over Windows in the 1990s, in which Apple was largely
unsuccessful. The potential juror said he couldn't understand how such a
similar case could be brought again.
"In my mind this is practically the exact same thing,
but now just dealing with slightly different technology," he said.
A few holders of technology patents -- including one
man with over 120 patents -- were also excused by lawyers for the
companies, who get a handful of peremptory challenges to eliminate
individual jurors.
The stakes are high
for Samsung, which faces potential U.S. sales bans of its Galaxy
smartphones and tablet computers, and for Apple, for which this is a
pivotal test of its worldwide patent litigation strategy.
It has been tough
going so far for Samsung in the case. Judge Koh halted U.S. sales of the
Galaxy Tab 10.1, giving Apple a significant early win. This was
followed by a pretrial ban on the Galaxy Nexus phone. Samsung has
appealed both orders.
The trial is expected to last at least four weeks.
The case in U.S.
District Court, Northern District of California, is Apple Inc v. Samsung
Electronics Co Ltd et al, No. 11-1846.
Resource : Yahoo News
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