Nikon has filed a patent infringement suit against Sigma regarding the sale of interchangeable lenses with vibration reduction. Previous attempts to resolve the issue were unsuccessful, which is why the lawsuit is being launched. Read more about the details after the jump.
Nikon Corporation (KIMURA Makoto, President, Tokyo, hereafter referred to as “Nikon”) filed a patent infringement suit against Sigma Corporation (hereafter referred to as “Sigma”) to Tokyo District Court on May 25, 2011. Nikon’s lawsuit seeks an injunction against Sigma’s manufacture and sale of infringing interchangeable lenses with vibration reduction for single lens reflex cameras, along with damages for past infringement.
Nikon has invested considerable resources in the form of research and development over a period of many years. Such investments have created intellectual property that are important business assets of Nikon and have enabled Nikon to continuously provide the products and services that satisfy its customers requirements.
Although Nikon attempted to resolve Sigma’s patent infringement through negotiation, a non-adversarial resolution could not be reached. Consequently, Nikon concluded that filing a lawsuit was the only way it could protect its intellectual property.
Link: Nikon Press Release
[via Photoxels]
Oh, sheesh. Now a judge will have to decide if Nikon is the only one that can make stabilized lenses. When are Tamron, Tokina and Canon being sued? I guess it hinges on whether the suit is about stabilized lenses in general or a specific way of designing them.
I was wondering about the same thing myself.