Listen, I'm only human and I love a big business slap fight about as much as the next guy. Unfortunately, these legal bouts sometimes end with a bit of an anticlimax, and that brings us to the current state of British semiconductor design company Arm's throwdown with Qualcomm.
Rather than keep fighting, Arm has decided to stop trying to terminate Qualcomm's license to produce chips based on its technology (via ). This means that Qualcomm is free to continue producing its Arm-based range of laptop chips, the , thereby bringing some closure to a legal dispute that's been raging since August 2022. Alas, there are no knockouts here—I should've stuck to watching pro-wrestling.
Arm felt that sharing these designs based on their tech without their say-so seemed like a breach of both Nuvia and Qualcomm's ALAs. This, among a number of unsuccessful legal challenges over the years, has most recently resulted in to issue Qualcomm with a 60-day notice in October 2024. In January of this year, Arm notified Qualcomm it would be withdrawing this notice. Anticlimactic, right?
This doesn't mean the dust has settled by [[link]] any stretch of the imagination though. As previously referenced, litigation is still ongoing from a court case brought before a jury back in December 2024. , but the jury found that Qualcomm had not violated its ALA as claimed (via ).
According to a , both sides are still seeking to clarify exactly where they stand in light of the jury's verdict [[link]] through post-trial motions—with another legal rumble potentially on the cards in the future. Time will tell.