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Apple v. Samsung: The infringing device scorecard

In the end, a jury found that a broad selection of Samsung devices infringed on Apple's patents. Here's the full list.

Kent German Former senior managing editor / features
Kent was a senior managing editor at CNET News. A veteran of CNET since 2003, he reviewed the first iPhone and worked in both the London and San Francisco offices. When not working, he's planning his next vacation, walking his dog or watching planes land at the airport (yes, really).
Kent German
3 min read
Samsung Galaxy Prevail (Boost Mobile)
Samsung's Galaxy prevail could cost it $57 million in damages. Josh Miller/CNET

It was a big win for Apple today when a jury in San Jose, Calif., awarded the company $1 billion in damages in its patent lawsuit against Samsung Electronics. The jury also decided that 26 Samsung Android smartphones and tablets violated several of Apple's design and utility patents.

What follows is a list of the contested patents and the devices that were found to infringe.

'381 patent
Besides the "rubber band" effect where a page "bounces" when a user scrolls to the bottom, '381 also includes touch-screen actions like dragging documents and multi-touch capabilities like pinch to zoom and twist to rotate.

    Captivate
    Continuum
    Droid Charge
    Epic 4G
    Exhibit 4G
    Fascinate
    Galaxy Ace
    Galaxy Indulge
    Galaxy Prevail
    Galaxy S
    Galaxy S 4G
    Galaxy S II (AT&T)
    Galaxy S II (unlocked)
    Galaxy Tab
    Galaxy Tab 10.1
    Gem
    Infuse 4G
    Mesmerize
    Nexus S 4G
    Replenish
    Vibrant

Samsung's infringing devices (pictures)

See all photos

'915 patent
Also a touch-screen patent, '915 relates to a device capable of distinguishing between a single-touch scroll operation and a multi-touch pinch-to-zoom operation.

    Captivate
    Continuum
    Droid Charge
    Epic 4G
    Exhibit 4G
    Fascinate
    Galaxy Indulge
    Galaxy Prevail
    Galaxy S
    Galaxy S 4G
    Galaxy S II (AT&T)
    Galaxy S II (T-Mobile)
    Galaxy S II (unlocked)
    Galaxy Tab
    Galaxy Tab 10.1
    Gem
    Infuse 4G
    Mesmerize
    Nexus S 4G
    Transform
    Vibrant

'163 patent
You know how you can double-tap a touch screen to enlarge and center portions of Web page, photo, or document? That's what this patent covers. The jury found that the Intercept did not violate patents '915 or '163.

    Droid Charge
    Epic 4G
    Exhibit 4G
    Fascinate
    Galaxy Ace
    Galaxy Prevail
    Galaxy S
    Galaxy S 4G
    Galaxy S II (AT&T)
    Galaxy S II (T-Mobile)
    Galaxy S II (unlocked)
    Galaxy Tab
    Galaxy Tab 10.1
    Infuse 4G
    Mesmerize
    Replenish

D '677 patent
Switching to hardware, D '677 relates to the front face of an electronic device, as embodied by the iPhone.

    Epic 4G Touch
    Fascinate
    Galaxy S
    Galaxy S 4G
    Galaxy S Showcase
    Galaxy S II (AT&T)
    Galaxy S II (T-Mobile)
    Galaxy S II (Unlocked)
    Galaxy S II Skyrocket
    Infuse 4G
    Mesmerize
    Vibrant

D '087 patent
Similar to D '677, the D '087 patent concerns the general outline or "ornamental" design of a phone.

    Galaxy S
    Galaxy S 4G
    Vibrant

D '305 patent
Jumping to the user interface, the D '305 patent centers on a grid of rounded square icons against a black background.

    Captivate
    Continuum
    Droid Charge
    Epic 4G
    Fascinate
    Galaxy Indulge
    Galaxy S
    Galaxy S Showcase
    Galaxy S 4G
    Gem
    Infuse 4G
    Mesmerize
    Vibrant

For the final patent, D '889, which relates to the industrial design of a tablet computer, the jury found that neither Wi-Fi nor the 4G LTE versions of the Galaxy Tab 10.1 infringed.

This post was corrected at 12:48 p.m. PT on August 27: Under patent '677, it was the Epic 4G Touch that was found to infringe, not the Epic 4G.