San Francisco: A US appeals court ruled on Friday that a lower court should reconsider a sales ban against Samsung's Galaxy Tab 10.1 won by Apple in a patent dispute with the South Korean electronics maker.
The injunction was put in place ahead of a month-long trial that pitted iPhone maker Apple Inc against Samsung Electronics Co Ltd in a closely watched legal battle that ended with a resounding victory for Apple last month on many of its patent violation claims.
However, the jury found that Samsung had not violated the patent that was the basis for the tablet injunction and Samsung argued the sales ban should be lifted. US District Judge Lucy Koh said she could not act because Samsung had already appealed.

The world\'s top two smartphone makers - Apple and Samsung - are locked in patent disputes in 10 countries.
In its ruling on Friday, the Federal US Circuit Court of Appeals in Washington said Koh could now consider the issue.
The decision comes just a month before the South Korean corporation is expected to unveil the second generation of one of its most successful devices, the stylus-equipped Note.
The Galaxy 10.1 is an older model, but the ban still hurts Samsung in the run-up to the pivotal holiday shopping season.
The world's top two smartphone makers are locked in patent disputes in 10 countries as they vie to dominate the lucrative market, which is growing rapidly.
A US jury found during the just-concluded trial that Samsung had copied critical features of the iPhone and iPad and awarded Apple $1.05 billion in damages.
(For updates you can share with your friends, follow IBNLive on Facebook, Twitter, Google+ and Pinterest)













Meiyappan will be grilled over IPL spot-fixing too: Mumbai Police
IPL betting: Finance Ministry responsible for taking action, says BJP
Pawar should replace Srinivasan as BCCI chief: Subrata Roy
Meiyappan neither the owner, nor CEO of CSK: India Cements

Live: Meiyappan being questioned by Mumbai Crime Branch officials
Live Blog: Rajasthan off to a solid start in Qualifier 2
CSK deletes all mentions of Gurunath Meiyappan from its website
Meiyappan neither the owner, nor CEO of CSK: India Cements




