It’s been a while since Nokia and BlackBerry were bitter smartphone rivals, but there’s plenty of bad blood left between the two companies. This morning, BlackBerry threw in the towel on the battle, agreeing to pay $137 million to the Finnish company.

The award stems from a 2016 dispute over patent licensing contract. The details of the contract aren’t clear, but the one-time smartphone maker agreed to pay the amount specified by the International Court of Arbitration — with one major caveat. That whole intellectual property lawsuit is far from done.

“BlackBerry is disappointed that the Court of Arbitration did not agree with our arguments in the case but we accept their decision,” the company said in a prepared statement issued this morning. “This ruling does not change BlackBerry’s assertion that Nokia is infringing on our intellectual property and we are continuing to vigorously pursue legal remedies in both the U.S. and Germany.”

The two suits are actually unrelated, and BlackBerry’s still committed to the charges it filed back in February, accusing Nokia of infringing on 11 patents that run the gamut in mobile networking products. IP has always been a cornerstone of BlackBerry’s business model, and has become increasingly more important as the company has shifted away from making its own hardware.

CEO John Chen has pointed to the mobile company’s patent portfolio as a key to its strategy, as BlackBerry has pivoted its plans to software, security and licensing to companies like TCL, which has begun to release products under its name.