The last time the Supreme Court heard a design patent case, it involved carpets—and there were only 38 states in the USA. The long-running Apple vs. Samsung battle over the latter company's alleged copying of iPhone design elements made it to the country's top court Tuesday, and the Wall Street Journal reports that the court seemed "frustrated" by its first such case since 1885 as the justices tried to figure out how much individual design features like the iPhone's round corners and app grid could be worth. A roundup of coverage:
- Samsung argues that it shouldn't have to turn over all its profits on products that infringed on Apple patents, and Reuters reports that the justices struggled with the question of how lower courts should assess design patent damages. "If I were a juror, I wouldn't know what to do," Justice Anthony Kennedy said. The case revolves around how the phone looks, not how it works, and Justice Elena Kagan used the example of the shape of the VW Beetle.