Apple sue in ChinaDoesn't Wilan own some Siri patents Apple sued in China over voice assistant patent Aug. 03, 2020 6:14 AM ETApple Inc. (AAPL)By: Douglas W. House, SA News Editor22 Comments Shanghai Zhizhen Network Technology Company, known as Xiao-i, has filed a lawsuit in a Shanghai court against Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) claiming infringement on a patent covering a voice assistant similar to Siri. The company seeks 10B yuan ($1.43B) in damages and, if successful, could prevent the tech giant from selling many of its products in China. In late June, China's Supreme Court ruled that Xiao-i owns the patent, which ended a process that involved several trials since 2012. It is the third time in less than a decade that Apple has faced trademark and patent challenges in its #2 market (behind the U.S.). The company has yet to comment on the matter. Shares up 1% Share Comment Recommended for you Why The Next Market Plunge May Be Worse Than The February Crash Bert Dohmen Apple: Blowout Quarter, Still Overvalued (NASDAQ:AAPL) MangoTree Analysis I Put Half Of My Net Worth Into These Investments Jussi Askola A Classic Bubble KCI Research Ltd. Comments (22) Newest enginiaxia Comments (89) Today, 7:22 AM Ban Apple in China! Reply Like thszda Comments (1.31K) Today, 7:13 AM this is a joke right.... no offense to the Chinese people on SA.... but there are countless american entrepreneurs and even foreign entrepreneurs who have been ripped off and all IP stolen from.... and happened while IN china attempting to do business there. One example comes to mind, a car manufacturer who set his sights on the asian market via china as a manufacturing hub and spent his life and his savings and investor money only in the end to see his product ripped off in front of his eyes and of course he tried to sue to recover but ultimately ended up broke and .... I believe he ultimately died broke as a result. Its on youtube somewhere I forget t then china will hit us companies who has factories over there. a perfect lose-lose situation Unable to sell its products, Xiaomi has tried to bluff and bluster, or litigate its way into profitability. This was 2016. The country had been trying to expand into India, and is now manufacturing there. But all is not well. 'In recent weeks, relations between New Delhi and Beijing were rifled after 20 Indian soldiers lost their lives in a border clash in the Himalayas. Since, a boycott China campaign has spread nationwide, causing Chinese consumer electronics and smartphone maker Xiaomi to board up their stores in fear of vandalism and began promoting their Made in India campaign to protect their brand.' www.forbes.com/... 'Chinas Xiaomi Under Pressure to Prove Value to Investors. Once the worlds most valuable technology startup, the smartphone maker is now facing strai