Nokia wins UK ruling to stop Acer, Asus video-streaming lawsuits
UK court permanently halts Acer and Asus lawsuits against Nokia, ruling the dispute over video coding patents should go to arbitration under FRAND terms
Nokia, one of the world's pioneer cellphone companies, is streaming a lawsuit against tech companies over a global technological dispute.
The most widely used cellular company won an appeal to block London lawsuits by Taiwanese tech companies Acer and Asus on Tuesday in a case that is part of a global dispute over video coding technology.
The news came after Acer and Asus had previously obtained a High Court declaration that a willing licensor in Nokia's position would agree to an interim license until the court decided the "reasonable and non-discriminatory" terms of a patent license.
But Nokia challenged that ruling, and the Court of Appeal on Tuesday permanently "stayed" the cases, effectively ending the lawsuits brought against the Finnish technology company.
A Nokia spokesperson said the ruling meant that a trial due to take place in June and July will not now proceed.
The Court of Appeal said that Nokia had offered a license to Acer and Asus to use its patents on reasonable and non-discriminatory terms to be determined at arbitration, meaning their London lawsuits should not continue.
China-based Hisense had also sued Nokia but settled its case before the appeal was heard.
Disputes over the fair, reasonable, and non-discriminatory (FRAND) terms of a patent license have frequently led to global legal battles in the telecoms industry.
English courts can set global FRAND terms, following a landmark 2020 UK Supreme Court ruling, as can courts in China.
Before Acer and Asus sued Nokia in London in June 2025, Nokia had filed its own lawsuits in the United States, as well as Brazil, Germany and India.
Notably, Nokia shares hit a near 10-year high after Nvidia invests $1 billion in an AI push.
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