
US Supreme Court tells Apple to go away again
You did not really invent it, deal with it
The US Supreme Court declined to hear Apple's bid to revive an effort to cancel three Qualcomm smartphone patents.

Supreme Court tells Apple to sling its hook
Refuses to hear Apple patent appeal
The US Supreme Court took time out of its busy schedule of turning the country into a US fundamentalist Christian state by telling US women what they may do with their own bodies to tell Apple it could not be bothered listening to its Appeal against two Qualcomm patents (US Patent No. 7,844,037 and US Patent No. 8,683,362).

FTC did not appeal against Qualcomm to the Supreme Court
Decided not to pursuit
The four year legal battle is over. The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) has decided not to appeal the 9th Circuit's decision, against the claim that Qualcomm's business model and practice were anti-competitive. To refresh your memory, the verdict that included a vote from three judges was unanimous in Qualcomm's favor.

Supreme Court tells Apple to pay up
You stole it now pay for it
The US Supreme Court snubbed an Apple bid to avoid paying about $440 million in damages for using patent licensing firm VirnetX Inc’s internet security technology without permission in features such as FaceTime video calling.

Supremes tell Apple to stop trying to gerrymander antitrust law
The antitrust case should proceed
Fruity Cargo cult Apple’s bid to get an antitrust case thrown out by the Supreme Court before any evidence was made public has failed.

Supremes listen to Apple anti-trust case
Is a 30 percent cut too high for apps?
Apple’s 30 percent cut on software distribution at its iPhones store is being looked at by the US Supreme Court today.

Supremes will decide if Apple is a monopolist
Repeat offender
The Supreme Court will review a 2011 class-action lawsuit against Apple, accusing the company of operating an illegal monopoly by not allowing iPhone users to download mobile apps outside of its own App Store and reduce consumer choice.

Supremes might shut down East Texas
Patent troll hunting might be a thing of the past
A Supreme Court appeal could mean an end to East Texas’s control of patent trolling is going to be heard soon.

Apple hopes the Supremes will believe in them
We are not gangsters really
Fruity Cargo cult Apple is hoping that the US Supreme Court will throw out a case in which its Messiah, Steve Jobs was found guilty of running an illegal cartel with the leading publishers which conspired to push up the price of books.

Software APIs eligible for trollage
Because the US courts are ignorant
The Software industry is in big trouble after the US Supreme Court did not step into Oracle's battle with Google over whether APIs were copyrightable.