A U.S. judge has ordered Apple to disclose the details of a global licensing and patent deal with HTC to rival firm Samsung.
The iPad and iPhone maker reached an agreement with Taiwanese handset maker HTC
 after a drawn-out battle over patent infringement and design claims 
pulled in a number of tech giants, including HTC, Google's Motorola unit
 and Samsung in courts worldwide.
The terms of the deal, which includes a 10-year licensing agreement, 
were not disclosed by either firm -- but HTC CEO Peter Chou did mention 
that rumored figures which suggested HTC would have to pay Apple between
 $6 and $8 for every smartphone the company produced was an "outrageous" figure.
In addition, the executive said the Taiwanese firm was "happy" with the terms of the patent settlement.
Samsung filed a court order asking its rival Apple to disclose the 
terms of the agreement after the deal was made public, and says it is 
"almost certain" that the HTC deal has relevance to its own continuing 
court cases with Apple -- and therefore should be privy to the 
information. The U.S.-based court agreed, and has now ordered Apple to 
reveal a full copy of the agreement immediately, based on an 
attorneys-eyes-only status, according to Reuters.
Apple and Samsung are still embroiled within legal battles worldwide 
over mobile phone patents, although the iPad maker did win a $1.05 billion verdict
 over Samsung in the United States this year. In addition to a request 
to see the HTC and Apple deal, Samsung has also filed with a Californian
 court to add the iPod Touch 5, the new iPad and the iPad mini to the list of devices which allegedly infringe on the firm's patents.








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