Smart speaker wars: judge rules that Google infringed on five Sonos patents

Sonos One (and, initially, won)
(Image credit: Sonos)

Google is guilty of infringing Sonos’s patents, according to an initial ruling from a US International Trade Commission judge. 

Sonos has been embroiled in a back and forth legal tussle with Google since January 2020, when it sued the search giant claiming that, under the guise of looking over Sonos's blueprints in order to make its own music service compatible with the products, Google stole five of its patents relating to smart speakers – including one that lets wireless speakers sync with and communicate with each other.

In a statement to The Verge on Friday, Sonos said that the ruling “is only a first step in a lengthy battle” – the company is also aiming to sue Google on five further counts of infringement – but added that it is an “important milestone in the ongoing effort to defend Sonos’s technology against Google.”

An International Trade Commission judge found that Google had infringed on all five of the patents cited in the original suit but, as noted by the New York Times, it isn’t a final decision – the ITC will consider the case as well and issue its own ruling, which is set to happen on December 13th. 

The case continues. 

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Becky has been a full-time staff writer at What Hi-Fi? since March 2019. Prior to gaining her MA in Journalism in 2018, she freelanced as an arts critic alongside a 20-year career as a professional dancer and aerialist – any love of dance is of course tethered to a love of music. Becky has previously contributed to Stuff, FourFourTwo, This is Cabaret and The Stage. When not writing, she dances, spins in the air, drinks coffee, watches football or surfs in Cornwall with her other half – a football writer whose talent knows no bounds.