I'm sure a few famous cases might pop into your mind! The latest courtroom clash grabbing headlines is between Arm and Qualcomm, two major players battling it out over chip technology. Now, for us ...
October 24, 4:30am ET: We've updated this story with statements from Arm and Qualcomm. Qualcomm is the company behind the chips found in smartphones, laptops and many other devices we use daily.
Chip firm Arm is cancelling an architectural license agreement that allows Qualcomm to use its intellectual property to design chips, a person familiar with the matter said, amid an ongoing legal ...
Roula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter. On paper, Arm and Qualcomm look like natural allies in some of the chip industry’s most important new ...
Arm sued its longtime partner for breach of contract in 2022 The company gave Qualcomm a 60-day notice of cancellation Arm Holdings Plc is canceling a license that allowed longtime partner Qualcomm ...
Update: Adds Qualcomm stock move in premarket trade. According to Arm's (ARM) lawsuit, Qualcomm (QCOM) failed to renegotiate the terms of the license deal after its acquisition of Nuvia ...
Any company that makes Arm chips must license technology from Arm Holdings plc, the British company that develops the instruction set. Companies can license the instruction set and create their ...
What just happened? The long-simmering battle between British chip designer Arm and American semiconductor superstar Qualcomm has just reached a boiling point. Arm has now given Qualcomm notice ...
Chip designer Arm has reportedly warned chipmaker Qualcomm it will soon cancel its license to produce processors using its IP. News of that drastic step emerged on Tuesday in a Bloomberg report that ...
It’s no secret that 2024’s batch of AI PCs owes much of their success to the excellent batch of Qualcomm Snapdragon chips, which has the best version of Windows Arm running as the OS.
Arm sends Qualcomm a 60-day notice of cancellation for an architectural license agreement that—if executed—could throw the chip and smartphone industries into disarray.