Skip to main content

Apple's 3D Touch and Force Touch form basis of a patent infringement action

Apple iPhone 3D touch
Jeffrey Van Camp/Digital Trends
Force Touch on the Apple Watch and recent MacBooks, as well as 3D Touch on the recent iPhones, has shown Apple’s interest in changing how haptic feedback works in technology. This functionality has also landed the company in hot water, however, as Apple now faces a lawsuit over these features, reports The Next Web.

According to Immersion, the plaintiff in the lawsuit, Apple’s iPhone 6 and 6S smartphones, as well as every Apple Watch model, infringe on Immersion’s “shared feedback” patent. Even though this patent doesn’t talk about how a device would recognize the intensity of a touch, it does cover how software could offer previews and actions through light and hard presses, respectively.

Recommended Videos

In addition, Immersion accuses Apple of infringing on its patent covering how a handheld device with a touch screen could offer “tactile sensations.” Finally, Immersion alleges that Apple’s devices infringe on a patent that details a specific kind of feedback in response to a user performing a specified action.

According to Immersion CEO Victor Viegas, the company wants to protect its 2,000 issued and pending patents, and the lawsuit is an attempt to do just that.

“While we are pleased to see others in the industry recognize the value of haptics and adopt it in their products,” a statement by Immersion reads, “it is important for us to protect our business against infringement of our intellectual property in order to preserve the ecosystem we have built and the investments that we have made in continuing to advance haptic experiences.”

Interestingly, Immersion isn’t just seeking damages from Apple — the company also wants a sales injunction covering Apple’s allegedly offending devices through a complaint the firm has filed with the International Trade Commission (ITC).

Based in San Jose, California, Immersion has been in operation since 1993 and claims that its haptic technology has been incorporated in over 3 billion devices, from medical devices to video game systems and electronics, around the world. AT&T and AT&T Mobility were also listed in the lawsuit. Neither Apple nor AT&T could not be immediately reached for comment.

Williams Pelegrin
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Williams is an avid New York Yankees fan, speaks Spanish, resides in Colorado, and has an affinity for Frosted Flakes. Send…
AMD teases performance of its revolutionary 3D V-cache chip
AMD CEO holding 3D V-Cache CPU.

AMD is currently readying its new Ryzen 7 5800X3D, featuring a 3D V-cache, and it looks like we may soon have a powerful processor on our hands. AMD has teased that we can expect an up to 15% performance boost over the base Ryzen 7 5800X.

The tech giant talked about the new chip during the International Solid-State Circuits Conference (ISSSC) and revealed more information about its architecture. While the Ryzen 7 5800X3D will certainly be an improvement, will it be enough to compete with Intel's best processors?

Read more
Fighting football injuries with 3D-printed, hyper-personalized pads
The Protect3d 3D scanning process.

If you’ve ever watched a movie about sports, you’ve seen it. It's that moment that occurs two-thirds of the way into the story, when the protagonists’ inevitable victory suddenly seems a lot less certain. Maybe the inspirational mentor winds up in the ER, muttering motivational slogans from a hospital bed. Perhaps the unorthodox coach wins over the team, only to be fired by management for thinking too far outside the box. Possibly the star lacrosse player has a crisis of faith and realizes he wants to be an acapella singer rather than a jock.

For the three co-founders of Protect3D, a real-life version of that moment took place between the second and fifth game of Duke University's football season several years ago, back when the company's founders were engineering students. The team’s starting quarterback was the recipient of a particularly tough sack during a game. He went down hard, and stayed down. Things looked bleak.

Read more
AMD’s 3D-stacked Ryzen 7 5800X3D is ‘world’s fastest gaming processor’
AMD CEO presenting new CPU.

The first processor to use a 3D V-Cache technology was announced at the big AMD CES 2022 keynote. The tech was first announced at Computex 2021, and fans have been eagerly awaiting a processor that will put it to use.

That processor is the Ryzen 7 5800X3D, which seems like a strange place to start a new range of processors. AMD has its Ryzen 9 chips, after all. That's because the new Ryzen 7 can outclass AMD's Ryzen 9 5900X while gaming, despite using the same architecture.

Read more