Potem ko s(m)o na spletu poročali o patentni tožbi in prepovedi prodaje sistema Tech Air, je Alpinestars podal tudi svojo uradno izjavo.
Alpinestars v svoji uradni izjavi poudarja, da v okviru razvoja in lansiranja sistema Tech-Air ni uporabljal tujih patentov, ampak je celoten sistem plod lastnega znanja, lastnih raziskav in lastnih testiranj. Kot navajajo, spoštujejo intelektualno lastnino drugih proizvajalcev.
Odločitev sodišča, s katero je prepovedana prodaja sistema Tech-Air, velja samo na nemškem trgu, drugje po Evropi pa Tech-Airovi centri za usposabljanje, vzdrževanje in prodajo sistema delujejo brez kakršnihkoli omejitev.
Celotna zadeva seveda še zdaleč ni zaključena, saj vsi sodni postopki še niso končani. Več o zadevi si lahko preberete v njihovi uradni izjavi, ki je objavljena v angleškem jeziku.
Uradna izjava Alpinestarsa (v angleškem jeziku)
On February 7, 2019 the Higher Regional Court of Munich issued judgment upholding the claim that Alpinestars' Tech-Air® vest infringes upon patent EP 2 412 257 B1 held by Dainese S.p.A.
Alpinestars wants to clarify that this action never involved the core of Alpinestars Tech-Air® technology; at no point, either past or present, has any action or patent infringement involved the electronic management, algorithm, or deployment mechanism, or any other part employed within Alpinestars entirely unique and advanced Tech-Air® technology.
Furthermore this judgment is limited to the territory of Germany only. It has no bearing on any other territories within Europe or the wider world market where Tech-Air® is available throughout Alpinestars’ Dealer network.
Originally Dainese alleged infringements based on three patents in Germany, none of them refer to Tech-Air® technology: one complaint was withdrawn by Dainese on 22nd December 2016, relating to patent EP 2 373 188, after this patent was revoked by the European Patent Office. The remaining two patents have been contested in Germany. The second, EP 2 373 190, concerning only some specific features of the air bladder used in the Tech-Air® vest , was wholly annulled by the German Federal Patent Court on 15 May 2018. Dainese appealed this decision.
The third, EP 2 412 257 B1, concerning the general installation of an inflatable air bladder construction within a ‘pocket’ of a garment, featuring elastic panels, is the point on which the patent infringement claim was upheld last week. As soon as the Court serves the written judgment, Alpinestars will study the details prior to taking any decision on its next steps.
Alpinestars needs to point out that it has an appeal pending on the validity of this patent (EP 2 412 257 B1) within the German Federal Court of Justice.
As consistently stated throughout this legal process, Alpinestars fully respects and honors third parties' intellectual property rights and expects the same with respect to its own IP rights. Alpinestars' highly innovative Tech-Air® products are based upon years of its in house research and development conducted by its own team of leading research and development staff.
Since the very beginning of the Tech-Air® project, which commenced in 2001, the freedom to ride with the most advanced innovations of performance protection has been the objective relentlessly pursued by Alpinestars and the result is uniquely advanced and capable technology. Tech-Air® is the world’s first airbag providing full upper torso protection in a transferable vest which incorporates a completely independent electronic management system, with no reliance on any external devices (sensors or GPS), to give accident detection and full airbag inflation before the first impact, dual charge for the track and off-road capability as demonstrated in the 2019 Dakar Rally.
Alpinestars' Tech-Air® products represent an enormously innovative contribution to increased rider safety in motorcycling.
- ends -