Samsung said that it will not now bring certain cases of infringement of patent against rivals for the next five years, ending a long-lasting conflict with the European Commission about the alleged abuse of the patent system.
The company, which has a major rivalry in course with Apple, be cast back as it faces a significant EU fine, since he was accused of use patent claims to ahead of its arch-rival.
The Commission said in a statement on Thursday hoped the move "will bring clarity" to the industry.
Under the terms of the deal, Samsung said that it will not seek measures precautionary based on "essential standards patent - necessary for interoperability between devices and necessary for the industry - against a company that is committed to a framework licensed under terms (FRAND) fair, reasonable and non-discriminatory."
A license agreement fails for more than 12 months, the courts may be involved to referee the dispute.
But still it is far from a done deal. The move is part of the latest round of concessions offered by Samsung in an attempt to finally a huge competition well in block 28 State members.
Rivals and competitors in the smartphone space will give their comments, and based on that, the Committee is the best course of action in the future.
Korean smartphone manufacturer seeks to lawsuits and measures interim sales in several European countries in 2011 against the use of Apple's patents. But because patents are considered vital for the technology industry, the EU hit back claiming that the move was anti-competitive.
Samsung faces a fine of up to $18.3 billion - or 10 percent of its global turnover in 2012.
"To enforce the patents through measures precautionary can be perfectly legitimate", said EU competition Commission Joaquin Almunia in observations. "However, when standard essential patents, abuse should prevent this legislation it is working properly and consumers do not have to suffer the negative consequences of the so-called patent wars."
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