Obama administration vetoes ban on sales of certain Apple products

The Obama administration on Saturday vetoed a proposed ban on a number of Apple products in the US, including some iPhones and iPads.
  US Trade Representative Michael Froman made the decision to veto
  the ban on the Apple devices over "undue leverage" of
  Samsung, but said that the South Korean giant could still fight
  for their patent rights in courts.
  
  The presidential veto was issued in response to June’s ruling by
  USITC that approved Samsung’s request to ban older iPhones and
  iPads, on which Apple infringed Samsung’s patents. That order
  affected only AT&T iPhone models that included iPhones prior
  to the iPhone 4S that was released in US in November 2011, as
  well as 3G-enabled versions of the iPad 1 and 2, also released in
  2011. The ban was supposed to come into effect this week.
  
  The US giant can now continue to sell older iPads and iPhones
  made to use on AT&T's carrier.

“We applaud the Administration for standing up for innovation
  in this landmark case. Samsung was wrong to abuse the patent
  system in this way,” Apple said in a statement.
  
  Samsung, in turn said the company was disappointed with the
  decision, as ITC earlier ruled that Apple had infringed Samsung’s
  patent which enabled transmission of multiple services
  simultaneously through 3G wireless technology on Apple devices.
  
  “We are disappointed that the U.S. Trade Representative has
  decided to set aside the exclusion order issued by the U.S.
  International Trade Commission (ITC). The ITC’s decision
  correctly recognized that Samsung has been negotiating in good
  faith and that Apple remains unwilling to take a license,”
  the company said.
  













