Archive for the ‘Litigation’ Category

Can a non-exclusive patent licensee sue?

Monday, January 3rd, 2011

Recently, the Court of Appeals for the Federal District clarified this question in its ruling regarding the 2009 WiAV v. Motorola, et al case.

In that case, the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia had dismissed the counts of WiAV’s complaint concerning the Mindspeed Patents for lack of constitutional standing.  The Defendants’ position, with which the District Court agreed, was that WiAV (which owns 2  US Patents and is the exclusive licensee in a specific field of use of seven patents owned by Mindspeed Technologies) lacked constitutional standing to assert the Mindspeed Patents because WiAV was not an exclusive licensee of the patents.  Their argument pointed to the fact that some of the other defendants in the overall lawsuit had limited rights to the same patents.

The Federal Circuit found that, on the question of standing, the analysis should be focused on whether WiAV has shown that it has the right under the patents to exclude the Defendants from engaging in the alleged infringing activity.  If that is the case, then its patent rights under the license  are infringed and, consequently, the Defendants’ conduct causes damages.  The court concluded that WiAV situation satisfies this condition.

As Speedy Federal Circuit Briefs blogger C. Allen Black, Jr. points out in his recent post on the matter, “The ability to sue comes from the ability of the licensee to prevent the infringement and subsequent injury, not the label attached to [the] contract that controls the license.”

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Case: WIAV SOLUTIONS LLC, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. MOTOROLA, INC., et al. Defendant-Appellee, 2010-1266, Appeal from the the Eastern District of Virginia in case No. 09-CV-0447, Senior Judge Robert E. Payne. (Decided: December 22, 2010), Before RADER, LINN and DYK.

Apple, Pandora, The Weather Channel, and others in privacy class action suit

Wednesday, December 29th, 2010

Just before Christmas Apple, Inc, Backflip, Dictionary.Com, Pandora, Inc, and The Weather Channel were the named defendants in a class action lawsuit filed  by Jonathan Lalo, through the KamberLaw, LLC firm.  The complaint points to the alleged responsibility of the device maker and gatekeeper of the App Store for allowing applications for the iPhone and iPad to transmit, without consent, users’ personal information to advertising networks, and also names some of the prominent applications as the main perpetrators.

The central allegation in this class action is the collection and sale by the accused applications of user-identifying information such as their location, age, gender, income, ethnicity, sexual orientation and political views.  Ultimately, these are claims of computer fraud and invasion of privacy.  For example, under the 1984 Computer Fraud and Abuse Act,

the unauthorized access of a computer to obtain protected financial or credit information is a criminal act.  Other federal laws may come into play as the case develops, such as the 1986 Electronic Communications Privacy Act, the 2002 Cyber Security Enhancement Act, as well as civil penalties under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act.

Mainstream media attention to this phenomenon hit a high note earlier this month when  Scott Thurm and Yukari Iwatani Kane published their report “Your Apps Are Watching You” on the Wall Street Journal.  Joel Rosenblatt, writing for Bloomberg|BusinessWeek, has also reported on the lawsuit.


Case Info: 5:10-cv-05878-PSG Lalo v. Apple, Inc et al (Filed 12/23/2010) U.S. District Court – Northern District of  California.