Skip to main content

The context you need, when you need it

When news breaks, you need to understand what actually matters — and what to do about it. At Vox, our mission to help you make sense of the world has never been more vital. But we can’t do it on our own.

We rely on readers like you to fund our journalism. Will you support our work and become a Vox Member today?

Join now

Samsung Designer Denies Apple Influence: “Absolutely Not”

Real-time marketing, Android origins and some directly relevant testimony about “slide-to-unlock” at the Apple-Samsung trial.

Did Samsung steal its slide-to-unlock feature from Apple’s smartphone software?

“Absolutely not,” said Samsung senior UI designer Youngmi Kim, who has worked on user experience strategy on the Samsung design team since 2004.

“If we were to work on the same thing as Apple, that would not give us any advantage in terms of differentiating our products, so that would not make any sense,” Kim said, speaking through a translator.

Apple’s patent on slide-to-unlock is one of five over which Apple has sued Samsung, saying that the Korean electronics giant owes it more than $2 billion for using its patented technology in various phones and tablets. Samsung denies its products infringe and also says the patents at issue are invalid. Meanwhile, it has countersued Apple for infringing on two of its patents.

On the stand Monday, Kim discounted an internal document uncovered in the trial that showed a usability study had recommended that Samsung make its overly sensitive unlocking system perform like the iPhone, because the system had already been fixed in 2009, and the document is from 2010.

As for another document, Kim said Samsung never widely implemented a usability test’s recommendation to add text that would guide people about how to use the slide-to-unlock motion.

caption

Kim seemed particularly well equipped to answer the slide-to-unlock origin question, given she actually works on Samsung software. The rest of Monday’s courtroom session in the ongoing patent dispute in San Jose, Calif., was devoted to questioning three engineers who work for Google, two Samsung marketing executives, an Apple patent inventor and a prior art witness.

In other words, people who don’t work on Samsung software.

Samsung’s larger goals were to show that 1) it got to its position in the U.S. smartphone market through marketing and hardware innovation, but especially marketing; 2) Google thought up various Android frameworks before Apple launched the iPhone.

To its credit, Samsung did a nice job of explaining that after 2011, it stepped up its marketing efforts by hiring Nike exec Todd Pendleton and diverting dollars from spending with carriers to advertising its own brands directly to consumers.

Pendleton oversaw a shake-up in ad campaigns at Samsung. He said he didn’t know Samsung made smartphones when he first interviewed for the gig at CES in Las Vegas three years ago. Samsung didn’t even have a Twitter account when he joined.

Back in 2011, before the company underwent a marketing “paradigm shift,” it was the fourth-place smartphone seller in the U.S., behind Apple, HTC and RIM.

Under Pendleton’s direction, the company developed a “real-time marketing” approach of “attaching our brand to cultural moments,” he said.

Some highlights of that approach include Samsung’s ad-libbed 2013 Super Bowl campaign — the same ad that prompted Apple marketing head Phil Schiller to demand better from his own ad agency — and Ellen Degeneres tweeting the “selfie seen around the world” at the Oscars earlier this year.

But as Apple lawyer Bill Lee of WilmerHale said to Pendleton on the stand, “No one’s accused your marketing or advertising program of infringing any patents.”

Lee’s argument was that internal emails showed that Pendleton and other Samsung executives, including former Samsung Telecommunications America CEO Dale Sohn, were focused on Samsung’s deficiencies versus Apple.

“Beating Apple is no longer an objective, it is our survival strategy,” wrote Sohn in a 2012 internal planning memo.

Meanwhile, three Google engineers and product leaders talked about aspects of Android’s framework and default applications that concern some of Apple’s patented software: Searching for information stored locally on the phone, changing text into hyperlinks that are opened in other apps and synchronizing information.

The Google people portrayed those features as 1) having been developed before Apple did and 2) either totally fundamental or not particularly important.

For instance, Björn Bringert, who oversees the Google search box on Android search screens, said that a feature that searches across the Web as well as local information is used only two percent of the time, and furthermore, since 92 percent of Android users have Google accounts, that information is mostly already stored in the cloud, so it doesn’t have to be searched locally.

Meanwhile, Dianne Hackborn, the engineer responsible for the way Android helps apps talk to one another, said she dreamed up this idea of “intents” in 2006, before the iPhone was ever introduced.

Apple lawyer Rachel Krevans of Morrison Foerster had the same line of questioning for each of the Google witnesses: “Google’s not a defendant in this case, right?”

This article originally appeared on Recode.net.

More in Technology

Podcasts
Are humanoid robots all hype?Are humanoid robots all hype?
Podcast
Podcasts

AI is making them better — but they’re not going to be doing your chores anytime soon.

By Avishay Artsy and Sean Rameswaram
Future Perfect
The old tech that could help stop the next airborne pandemicThe old tech that could help stop the next airborne pandemic
Future Perfect

Glycol vapors, explained.

By Shayna Korol
Future Perfect
Elon Musk could lose his case against OpenAI — and still get what he wantsElon Musk could lose his case against OpenAI — and still get what he wants
Future Perfect

It’s not about who wins. It’s about the dirty laundry you air along the way.

By Sara Herschander
Life
Why banning kids from AI isn’t the answerWhy banning kids from AI isn’t the answer
Life

What kids really need in the age of artificial intelligence.

By Anna North
Culture
Anthropic owes authors $1.5B for pirating work — but the claims process is a Kafkaesque messAnthropic owes authors $1.5B for pirating work — but the claims process is a Kafkaesque mess
Culture

“Your AI monster ate all our work. Now you’re trying to pay us off with this piece of garbage that doesn’t work.”

By Constance Grady
Future Perfect
Some deaf children are hearing again because of a new gene therapySome deaf children are hearing again because of a new gene therapy
Future Perfect

A medical field that almost died is quietly fixing one disease at a time.

By Bryan Walsh