Trade Commission Eyes Remedies for Smart Eyewear Patents
Published Date: 5/21/2026
Notice
Summary
The U.S. International Trade Commission says MyW Technology, a Chinese company, missed their chance to respond in a patent dispute over electronic eyewear and related gadgets. Now, the Commission is asking for ideas on how to fix the problem, protect the public, and handle money matters. This could lead to changes in what products can be sold in the U.S. soon, affecting companies and shoppers alike.
Analyzed Economic Effects
3 provisions identified: 1 benefits, 2 costs, 0 mixed.
Possible Ban on Eyewear Imports
The Commission may issue an exclusion order that could stop the importation of certain electronic eyewear products, components, and related charging apparatuses into the United States. If ordered, those products could be barred from entry and unavailable to U.S. shoppers and importers.
Cease-and-Desist Could Stop U.S. Sales
The Commission may issue cease-and-desist orders that would require the respondent MyW to stop importing or selling the accused electronic eyewear, components, and chargers in the United States. Such orders could force MyW and related sellers to halt U.S. commercial activity for the products at issue.
Temporary Entry Allowed Under Bond
If the Commission orders a remedy, the U.S. Trade Representative has 60 days to act, and during that 60-day presidential review period the subject articles may enter the United States if imported under bond. The bond amount would be set by the Commission and prescribed by the Secretary of the Treasury.
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