On February 10, 2006, American time, Netac entrusted Morgan Lewis, an American lawyer, to file a complaint in the U.S. federal court for the Eastern District of Texas, accusing PNY of infringing Netac's U.S. patent (U.S. Pat.No. US6829672). In February 2008, Netac and PNY reached an out-of-court settlement. Netac signed a patent license agreement with PNY, and PNY paid Netac a patent license fee of $654.38+million. This is the first time that a China enterprise has obtained a huge patent license fee in the United States. It further proves that Netac is the global inventor of USB flash drive.
Most flash drives support USB2.0 standard; However, due to the technical limitation of NAND flash memory, their reading and writing speed can not reach the maximum transmission speed of 480Mbit/s supported by the current standard. At present, the fastest flash drive has used four or more channels of controllers, but it is still a little worse than the maximum transmission rate provided by hard disk or USB2.0. In contrast, USB3.0 is faster and can beat ordinary mechanical hard disks. At present, the highest transmission rate is about 220MB/s, while the average transmission rate of very small files is about100 MB/s. The transmission rate of older 12Mbit/s devices is only about 1MB/s at most.