Gotta love the East Texas Federal District Court...or
posted on
Jul 10, 2007 10:26AM
or...Why DM took the case on a contingency basis...LOL !!
Patent defeat for Microsoft and Autodesk Tags:
Product Activation, Autodesk, Microsoft, Patent Caroline McCarthy CNET News.com Published: 24 Aug 2006 09:20 BST A federal judge in Texas has delivered a setback to Microsoft and Autodesk in their patent infringement battle with product activation start-up Z4 Technologies. US District Judge Leonard Davis turned down the software makers' request for a new trial in a patent infringement lawsuit filed by Z4 Technologies and awarded enhanced damages, ordering Microsoft and Autodesk to pay a combined total of $158m. The initial suit was filed nearly two years ago by David Colvin, owner of Michigan-based Z4, over two product activation technologies. One of those technologies is designed to prevent unauthorised use of software; the other is used to combat piracy. In a verdict reached on 19 April, a jury found that Microsoft and Autodesk had violated Colvin's patents; the companies' subsequent request for a new trial was turned down on Friday. Microsoft is expected to challenge the verdict in the US Court of Appeals. Representatives for Microsoft and Autodesk, which had asked for a new trial on the basis that the patents were unenforceable because of inequitable conduct, were not readily available. The counsel for Z4 declined to comment. Not only has the original verdict been upheld, but Microsoft's patent penalty has also been increased by $25m for enhanced damages, bringing its total bill to $140m. It also must pay an estimated $2m in legal fees. It's the second-biggest patent infringement fee that Microsoft has had to fork out to a smaller company, surpassed only by the $500m-plus that the software behemoth was ordered to pay to Eolas Technologies in 2003. Microsoft's fines in antitrust cases, however, have reached into the billions of dollars. The penalty for Autodesk, originally $18m, has been increased by $322,000. The East Texas Federal District Court is a frequent destination for patent infringement complaints, like this summer's Red Hat-JBoss lawsuit, because of its reputation for efficiency on cases in that field.