A San Diego, CA jury returned a verdict last Friday against Microsoft in its patent infringement suit with Alcatel-Lucent. The amount: $367 million. Check out my
previous post on this case to get some more background. The patents at issue all involve video coding technology as well as patents related to a form entry system, algorithms for gesture recognition and commands to select video display modes. They are U.S. Patent Numbers 4,958,226; 4,383,272; 4,763,356; 5,347,295; and 4,439,759.
Todd Bishop's Microsoft blog correctly describes this as a partial victory for Microsoft. Alcatel-Lucent was seeking almost $2 billion in damages. Judge Huff had previously granted a motion by Microsoft, dismissing Alcatel-Lucent's claim for willful infringement. That claim, if left in the case, could have tripled the amount awarded by the jury.
So, as Judge Huff put it, "It's kind of a mixed verdict -- everybody wins,'' she said, according to a
Bloomberg news report. "There's something for everybody.''
Labels: alcatel-lucent, Judge Huff, jury verdict, Microsoft
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