Apple’s trial with Samsung continued today with Apple using two expert witnesses to testify on its behalf. The company today brought in industrial designer Alan Ball and the original Macintosh icon designer Susan Kare to try to sway the jury…

As a quick refresher, the case centers around whether or not design patents are “powerful tools to keep competitors at bay or relatively limited in power,” as CNET puts it. A key point is the term “article of manufacture.”

Apple yesterday relied on Greg Joswiak and other executives to defend its position on the matter. Those testimonies brought some insight into the iPhone design process and more.

Alan Ball kicked things off today by arguing that one of the patents in question, which covers to a “black, rectangular, round-corded front face for an electronic device,” applies to the finished product. In his argument, he cited the “entire smartphones” as the articles of manufacture.

Meanwhile, Susan Kare – who played an instrumental role in the design of the original Macintosh software – defended a patent that describes a grid of colorful icons. “To me, no question – in each case, the [patent] was applied to each of these finished phones – the whole phone,” she said.

Samsung lawyers, of course, argued that phones are made of components – even if the finished product that consumers buy is the complete smartphone. Kare, however, held her ground:

Kare continued to by saying “it’s an organic, holistic design” which infringes upon Apple’s patent. Just because you can take things apart and reveal components, she said, doesn’t mean that’s how it was intended. “If you replace [a component], you’re trying to get back to that thing that you bought,” she concluded.

As Samsung’s lawyers interrogated Apple’s witness today, one law school professor sided with Samsung on the issue – saying it’s clear someone can’t patent a design for a screen and subsequently receive profits from the entire device:

Closing arguments in the case will be presented on Friday with jury deliberations on Monday.

“I agree with Samsung on this one,” she said. “After looking into the historical meaning of the phrase ‘article of manufacture,’ it’s clear Congress didn’t intend for someone to be able to patent a design for a screen and get the profits from the whole phone.”

More on Apple v Samsung in 2018: 

  • Greg Joswiak testifies in Samsung case, says Apple was ‘betting the company’ on iPhone
  • Why it took a full day to find unbiased jurors in the latest Apple/Samsung trial …
  • Apple versus Samsung patent battle which started in 2011 is back in court today
  • Apple v Samsung opening statements reveal details of iPhone design process & more