Google has said that it does not want the ruling in the Apple-Samsung patent lawsuit to "limit" consumers' access to Android devices.
A US jury ordered Samsung to pay Apple over $1bn (£664m) on Friday
after ruling it had infringed several of the iPhone maker's software and
design innovations.
Samsung said it intended to appeal.
There has been speculation that the news could encourage handset makers to install the rival Windows Phone system.
Google released its statement late on Sunday in the US.
"The court of appeals will review both infringement and the validity of the patent claims," it said.
"Most of these don't relate to the core Android operating system, and several are being re-examined by the US Patent Office.

Apple has indicated it will seek sales bans on the 17 phones at the heart of the lawsuit at a hearing on 20 September.
The list does not include Samsung's current flagship handset, the Galaxy S3, but does include earlier versions of the model.
However, Apple could also use the verdict to try to halt sales of other models that infringe its pinch-to-zoom patent.
During the court case Apple revealed it had licensed some of
its technologies to Microsoft. Its lawyers also showed pictures of
Nokia's Lumia - which runs Windows Phone 7 - as an example of a handset
that looked distinctive from its own.
In contrast, Apple continues to be involved in lawsuits
against two other Android-handset makers: Motorola - which is owned by
Google - and HTC.
Microsoft's opportunity
Following the Samsung verdict, Bill Cox, marketing director for Microsoft's Windows Phone Division tweeted: "Windows Phone is looking gooooood right now."
Dell, HTC, Samsung, LG and ZTE have already created Windows
Phone 7 devices, but only Nokia has concentrated its efforts on the
system.
One analyst said that the US ruling presented Microsoft with
an opportunity to convince others to put their weight behind the next
version of its mobile system.
"I think this will force a reset on Android products as they
are re-engineered to get around Apple's patents," said Rob Enderle,
principal analyst at the tech consultancy Enderle Group.
"[It should also] provide a stronger opportunity for both of
Microsoft's new platforms - Windows 8 and Windows Phone 8 - because
they come with indemnification against Apple, suddenly making them far
safer."
However, manufacturers will have to weigh up Android's popularity before making a move.
Cross-licensing
According to recent data from analysts at
IDC, Android had a 68.1% of the global smartphone market between April
and June. Apple's iOS had 16.9% and Windows Phone/Windows Mobile had
5.4%. The data was based on shipments rather than sales.

And there is another alternative: Apple could ultimately seek
a patent cross-licensing deal with Google despite its late chief
executive Steve Jobs' vow to "destroy Android".
Part-way through the Samsung case Google filed its first
lawsuit versus Apple since taking over Motorola. It alleged seven patent
infringements, one of which involves the technology used in the
iPhone's Siri voice-activated search tool.
Were Google to succeed it could call for a import ban on Apple's iOS products, potentially forcing its rival into a deal.
The case is driving share prices in a number of technology stocks.
Samsung's shares fell 7.5% in Seoul on Monday - their biggest
drop since October 2008, wiping about $12bn off the companies value.
Nokia's shares rose about 10% on the Frankfurt Stock Exchange.
In New York, Apple's stock was about 2% higher in pre-market trade, Microsoft's about 1% up and Google's about 1% down.
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