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US probes Samsung for alleged infringement of Netlist’s memory-chip patents

By Thomson Reuters Jul 16, 2026 | 5:59 AM

July 16 (Reuters) – U.S. trade regulators have launched a probe into Samsung Electronics’ memory chips and products sold by Google, Nvidia, Broadcom and Super Micro ​Computer that use them following a complaint by ‌Netlist alleging infringement of its patents.

California-based Netlist has accused Samsung and its U.S. units of infringing its patents on dynamic random access memory, a type of chip that temporarily stores data for processors ‌and ​is a critical component in the ⁠servers powering the AI ⁠boom, the U.S. International Trade Commission said on Wednesday.

Netlist has asked the USITC to block imports of the disputed chips and products and order the companies to ​stop selling them in the U.S. An ITC judge will hold an evidentiary hearing and issue an initial ⁠ruling, subject to review by ⁠the commission.

The USITC will set a target ​date for wrapping up the probe within 45 days. Any order ​it issues takes effect immediately and becomes final ‌after 60 days unless the U.S. Trade Representative overrides it on policy grounds.

The investigation is the latest escalation in a years-long patent fight between the companies over high-performance ⁠memory.

A Texas jury had awarded Netlist $118 million from Samsung in 2024 over data-processing technology in memory products, following a $303 million verdict ⁠in a related ‌case in 2023.

Demand for memory chips has ⁠since surged as big U.S. technology companies ​race ‌to build out data centers needed to ​power AI ⁠services, driving up prices of chips made by the likes of Samsung, SK Hynix and Micron.

Samsung, Alphabet-owned Google, Nvidia, Broadcom and Super Micro Computer did not immediately respond to Reuters’ requests for comment.

(Reporting by Aditya Soni in Bengaluru; Editing ​by Shilpi Majumdar)