Apple also warned that the ban would hurt Chinese manufacturers like Foxconn and suppliers.
Apple
Inc said a Chinese ban on the sale of some models of the iPhone
will force it to settle a long and bitter licensing battle with
Qualcomm Inc., according to a recent legal filing.
Earlier
this week, a court in China ruled that Apple is infringing two
Qualcomm patents and issued injunctions against the sale of six
versions of the iPhone in the country. Apple said on Monday it had
filed a request for reconsideration with the court.
"Apple
will be forced to settle with the Respondent, causing all mobile
phone manufacturers to relapse into the previous unreasonable
charging mode and pay high licensing fees, resulting in unrecoverable
losses in the downstream market of mobile phones," the iPhone
maker said in the Dec. 10 filing to the court. The document was
submitted in Mandarin with an English translation.
Apple
didn’t respond to a request for comment. The technology giant has
given no indication that it intends to settle with Qualcomm.
The filing shows how important the U.S. company is to the Chinese
economy, and vice versa.
The
ban would cost Apple millions of dollars a day and affect both the
Chinese government and consumers, the company added, noting it has
created 5 million jobs in China across the supply chain and
third-party software developers.
The
Chinese government "may suffer hundreds of thousands of tax
losses" from the iPhone ban because of lost taxes from sales of
the devices, the company also said, citing estimates of 50 million
units sold in the country in 2017.
Apple
also warned that the ban would hurt Chinese manufacturers like
Foxconn and suppliers.
"Apple
and many other companies, consumers, and government will suffer truly
irreparable harm," the company said in the filing.
The
two U.S. companies are locked in a worldwide dispute over licensing
fees that Qualcomm charges for use of technology that the chipmaker
says underpins all modern phone systems. Apple has argued that its
former supplier unfairly leverages its position as the biggest
supplier of chips for smartphones to force payment of the fees.
Qualcomm
has countered that Apple
is using its intellectual property without paying for it and the
legal cases are aimed at forcing it to lower licensing charges.
Qualcomm
has brought patent suits in China and other jurisdictions seeking
bans on the sale of iPhones to force Apple to the negotiating table.
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