news4geeks.net
11Jul/120

Motorola, Microsoft suspend some patent disputes until trial


Motorola Mobility and Microsoft have agreed to suspend their patent claims against each other in three U.S. cases until a November trial on Microsoft claims that Motorola has not lived up to promises to license some video and Wi-Fi patents on RAND (reasonable and non-discriminatory) terms.

The two companies, involved in three patent lawsuits in U.S. District Court for the Western District of Washington, agreed to stay their lawsuits against each other while the two sides concentrate on the RAND license issues to be addressed in Nov. 13 trial, according to court documents. On Tuesday, the two companies filed a joint motion to stay all patent infringement claims.

The patent claims will be suspended until the trial, and a possible appeal, is resolved, according to the joint motion.

Representatives of the two companies didn't immediately respond to a request for comments. The FOSS Patents blog originally reported the agreement.

Microsoft's November 2010 RAND complaint against Motorola Mobility, now owned by Google, accuses the company of not licensing its patents for the 802.11 Wi-Fi standard and the H.264 video codec standard on RAND terms, as it had promised to standards bodies.

In November 2010, Motorola filed a complaint against Microsoft for allegedly infringing seven patents. A month later, Motorola filed another complaint, alleging that Microsoft has infringed three Motorola patents related to mobile computing and telepresence.

(Source: infoworld.com)

 

Google-owned Motorola Mobility is infringing a Microsoft patent related to text input, a lower regional court in Munich decided on Thursday. The verdict will result in a sales ...
READ MORE
Google claims Microsoft improperly showed Android code to expert
Google asked the USITC (U.S. International Trade Commission) yesterday to block the testimony of a Microsoft expert witness in the latter's 10-month-old action against Motorola over patents ...
READ MORE
Microsoft conceals job ad in Bing homepage
Microsoft are looking for a new Bing developer - but you'll need to be pretty smart to apply. Oh, and you can only use Internet Explorer, which rules ...
READ MORE
Microsoft late Friday confirmed that a "zero-day," or unpatched, vulnerability exists in Internet Explorer 8 (IE8), the company's most popular browser. According to multiple security firms, the vulnerability ...
READ MORE
China's ZTE has become the latest firm to sign a licensing deal with Microsoft for its Android and Chrome patent portfolio. The firm, which is one of the world's biggest smartphone ...
READ MORE
Microsoft scores victory in German patent fight with
Google claims Microsoft improperly showed Android code to
Microsoft conceals job ad in Bing homepage
Microsoft admits zero-day bug in IE8, pledges patch
Microsoft hoists ZTE onto the Android patent bandwagon

Comments (0) Trackbacks (0)

No comments yet.


Leave a comment

Trackbacks are disabled.