The Register reports that Microsoft has settled a patent infringement case by cutting a licensing deal and paying $60 million to ImagExpo GmbH, a Munich-based subsidiary of SPX Corporation. SPX, a large US industrial manufacturer, successfully sued last November on its complaint that Microsoft's now defunct NetMeeting software infringed its whiteboard patent. A jury in a Virginia district court decided in favour of SPX in November.
The IPKat notes that, despite allegations that US juries tend to favour US corporations over foreign ones in patent litigation, This was a case in which the jury gave a German company the decision over a home-grown one. This either shows that juries in patent trials are not so biased after all, or that they really don’t like Microsoft.
Read the result of one NetMeeting here
Technologically advanced whiteboard here
Visit the Patent Jury Forum here
The IPKat notes that, despite allegations that US juries tend to favour US corporations over foreign ones in patent litigation, This was a case in which the jury gave a German company the decision over a home-grown one. This either shows that juries in patent trials are not so biased after all, or that they really don’t like Microsoft.
Read the result of one NetMeeting here
Technologically advanced whiteboard here
Visit the Patent Jury Forum here
MICROSOFT PAYS OUT $60 MILLION FOR PATENT LICENCE
Reviewed by Verónica Rodríguez Arguijo
on
Sunday, January 04, 2004
Rating:
No comments:
All comments must be moderated by a member of the IPKat team before they appear on the blog. Comments will not be allowed if the contravene the IPKat policy that readers' comments should not be obscene or defamatory; they should not consist of ad hominem attacks on members of the blog team or other comment-posters and they should make a constructive contribution to the discussion of the post on which they purport to comment.
It is also the IPKat policy that comments should not be made completely anonymously, and users should use a consistent name or pseudonym (which should not itself be defamatory or obscene, or that of another real person), either in the "identity" field, or at the beginning of the comment. Current practice is to, however, allow a limited number of comments that contravene this policy, provided that the comment has a high degree of relevance and the comment chain does not become too difficult to follow.
Learn more here: http://ipkitten.blogspot.com/p/want-to-complain.html