LONDON, May 12 (Reuters) – Nokia won an appeal to block London lawsuits by Taiwanese tech companies Acer and ‌Asus on Tuesday in a case which is part of ‌a global dispute over video coding technology.

Acer and Asus had previously obtained a ​High Court declaration that a willing licensor in Nokia’s position would agree to an interim licence until the court decided the “reasonable and non-discriminatory” terms of a patent licence.

But Nokia challenged that ruling ‌and the Court of ⁠Appeal on Tuesday permanently “stayed” the cases, effectively ending the lawsuits brought against the Finnish technology company.

A Nokia ⁠spokesperson said the ruling meant that a trial due to take place in June and July will not now proceed. Acer and ​Asus did ​not immediately respond to requests ​for comment.

The Court of ‌Appeal said that Nokia had offered a licence to Acer and Asus to use its patents on reasonable and non-discriminatory terms to be determined at arbitration, meaning their London lawsuits should not continue.

China-based Hisense had also sued Nokia, but settled its case before ‌the appeal was heard.

Disputes over the ​fair, reasonable, and non-discriminatory (FRAND) terms of ​a patent licence have ​frequently led to global legal battles in the ‌telecoms industry.

English courts can set global ​FRAND terms, following ​a landmark 2020 UK Supreme Court ruling, as can courts in China.

Before Acer and Asus sued Nokia in London ​in June 2025, ‌Nokia had filed its own lawsuits in the United States, ​as well as Brazil, Germany and India.

(Reporting by Sam ​Tobin; Editing by Alexander Smith)