In his complaint, Nokia requests the Commission to ban commercial imports of the Apple device patent violation of Nokia, especially the iPhone 3G and iPod Nano.
Judge James Gildea of the International Trade Commission ITC initially said his decision clearly does not violate Apple copyrights. Apple's complaint against Nokia were submitted in 12/2009. ICT's final verdict will be announced on 01/08/2011.
In a separate recent decision, the ITC said the committee would review the judge's ruling on RIM and Apple did not "steal" technology has been patented by Kodak. The final decision is expected to be announced in May next.
"Nokia does not agree with the initial ruling of the court today that Apple is not piracy but we will wait to see the final verdict before deciding any next steps that, " spokesman Said Mark Durrant of Nokia.
Nokia and Apple has filed another complaint issues surrounding copyright infringement patent in the U.S. and Europe. ITC was selected as the agency to resolve disputes because the commission can block the import of equipment violations. The lower level is often the case submitted to the state courts seeking damages for financial losses.
"The decision on the ICT gives Apple a first point in the legal battle with Nokia, but the lawsuit will continue because of disputes over copyright are still stirring up the mobile industry, " said Ben Wood, director research at CCS Insight said.
The iPhone and the device run on Google's Android operating system are accounted for "pie" larger attractive smartphone on the market and rapid expansion. Meanwhile Nokia Left is losing its way as still "stuck" with the Symbian operating system of their aging.
In addition to the iPhone 3G and iPod, Nokia's complaint also studied the different generations of iPhone, iPod Touch, iPod Classic and iMac, Mac Mini, Mac Pro, Mac Book, MacBook Pro and MacBook Air.

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