Wednesday, October 29, 2008
Verizon has lost an infringement lawsuit against Cox
Below is a news item that Verizon has lost an infringement lawsuit against Cox, with a jury ruling that there was no infringement. The lawsuit was the classic "troll" tactic - sue a little guy (Cox) before going after the big companies. Now one reason trolls are so labeled (I prefer patent yakuzas to troll) is that they are falsely criticized for not practising the technology in the patent. But assuming that is a legitimate criticism, what do you call it when the patent tr-ll denies
the technology .... TO ITS CUSTOMERS? From the article:
"Verizon has been aggressively asserting its patents in Internet
phone technology, despite not promoting the service to its own
customers."
Sounds like a tyrant to me - and thus making Verizon a tyrant troll. If one is going to engage in silly labeling of problems in the patent world.
Verizon Loses Patent Lawsuit Against Cox
By AMOL SHARMA
Verizon Communications Inc. lost its patent-infringement case against Cox
Communications Inc., signaling that Verizon may have a difficult time
extracting royalties from cable providers for Internet-based telephony.
A federal jury in the Eastern District of Virginia found that Cox didn't
infringe on six Verizon patents related to Internet telephony. Cox, which
has more than three million residential and business phone customers, said
in a statement it would "look forward to competing vigorously with Verizon
in the marketplace, not the courtroom."
Verizon has been aggressively asserting its patents in Internet phone
technology, despite not promoting the service to its own customers. Many
analysts and patent lawyers said its case against Atlanta-based Cox, which
was filed early this year, was a prelude to further lawsuits against bigger
cable rivals. Verizon was seeking past damages from Cox of $404 million.
"Despite the decision, we believe our patents were infringed," Verizon said
in a statement. "We will continue to innovate and protect our intellectual
property." The New York company said it hasn't decided whether to appeal the
decision.
Cox argued that it wasn't liable because it doesn't actually offer Internet
phone service. While its call traffic is broken into digital voice
"packets," it isn't routed over the public Internet, the company said. Cox
said it controls the calls through its own cable network.
A Verizon spokesman declined to say whether the company would target other
major cable providers like Time Warner Cable Inc. and Cablevision Systems
Corp. with patent lawsuits. Verizon recently reached a deal with Comcast
Corp. in which both companies agreed not to sue each other for patent
infringement for a period of five years. That agreement covers all patents
the companies hold.
Write to Amol Sharma at amol.sharma@wsj.com
Copyright 2008 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved
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