Apple on Thursday resumed selling its Watch Series 9 and Ultra 2 online and in stores, with a key change: The blood oxygen feature at the heart of a long-simmering patent dispute has been disabled.
In late December, Apple was banned from selling the two watches in the United States after an October decision by the ITC went uncontested by the Biden administration.
“Apple’s appeal is ongoing, and we believe the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit should reverse the USITC’s decision,” the company said in a statement. “We strongly disagree with the USITC decision and resulting orders.”
The development is the latest in a long line of legal maneuvers that began in earnest just after Christmas, when the Biden administration declined to overturn the ITC’s decision.
At the core of the dispute is a feature in recent Apple smartwatches that monitors and displays the user’s blood oxygen saturation. In January 2020, Masimo sued Apple, alleging, among other things, misappropriation of trade secrets and patent infringement.That prompted a protracted set of legal battles that ultimately led to the ITC’s October decision.
The company’s chosen fix doesn’t remove the blood oxygen app from affected Apple Watches entirely — its telltale red, white and blue app icon remains where it always was. But when users try to open the app, they will see a message saying the service is “no longer available” and prompting them to learn more in the iPhone Health app.
Apple’s blood oxygen measurement feature first appeared in the company’s Watch Series 6 in 2020 and continued to be featured in many subsequent models. Earlier versions of the Apple Watch capable of tracking blood oxygen would not be affected, the company said, which means owners can continue to take measurements on demand and allow their watches to periodically take readings in the background and store that data in Apple’s Health app.
Disabling the blood oxygen feature would mean that modified watches would no longer violate Masimo’s patents.
But the simplicity of that fix comes at a cost. It’s a notable setback for a company that has largely managed to negotiate its way around patent disputes and, perhaps more importantly, a potential blow to Apple’s insistence that its watch can function as a comprehensive consumer health tool.
Since the blood oxygen feature’s debut on Apple Watch models in 2020, it has periodically appeared in ads and promotional videos designed to tout the wearable’s value as a window into its wearer’s well-being.
Apple, for its part, believes that Masimo’s legal strategy is designed at least partially to carve out space in the wearables market for its own health-tracking watch with a blood oxygen measuring feature.
Masimo did not immediately respond to a request for comment.