Shenzhen was recently restrained by the High Court from selling its
devices in India on Gurgaon-based phonemaker Micromax Informatics Ltd's
plea that its exclusive rights were being infringed by the Chinese
company.
The Chinese company said that while its handsets were embedded with the CM11S version of the Cyanogen software, Micromax had a different version, and added that this point was not submitted before the single judge who had passed the restraining order.
It also argued before a bench, headed by Justice Pradeep Nandrajog, that the exclusivity clause in the agreement between Micromax and US-based software firm Cyanogen only means that Cyanogen cannot collaborate with any another mobile maker in India.
"It does not mean that we cannot do business," senior advocate Kapil Sibal, appearing for Shenzhen, said.
The Chinese company said that while its handsets were embedded with the CM11S version of the Cyanogen software, Micromax had a different version, and added that this point was not submitted before the single judge who had passed the restraining order.
It also argued before a bench, headed by Justice Pradeep Nandrajog, that the exclusivity clause in the agreement between Micromax and US-based software firm Cyanogen only means that Cyanogen cannot collaborate with any another mobile maker in India.
"It does not mean that we cannot do business," senior advocate Kapil Sibal, appearing for Shenzhen, said.
Source: Gadget Reviews India and view more Automotive News
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