Showing posts with label patents. Show all posts
Showing posts with label patents. Show all posts

Sunday, December 30

Bankrupt Kodak sells patents for $525 million

Bankrupt Kodak sells patents for $525 million

Reuters

Bankrupt camera maker Eastman Kodak Co agreed to sell its digital imaging patents for about $525 million to a consortium led by Intellectual Ventures and RPX Corp, a key step to ending its bankruptcy.

The photography pioneer said a portion of the payment will come from 12 intellectual property licensees organized by Intellectual Ventures and RPX Corporation.

A sale of the roughly 1,100 patents, which Kodak has said could be worth as much as $2.6 billion, has been a key element of the Rochester, New York-based company's plans to shift its focus to commercial packaging and printing from photography.

The agreements are subject to approval by the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Manhattan.

The Kodak bankruptcy case is in Re: Eastman Kodak Co. et al, U.S. Bankruptcy Court, Southern District of New York, No. 12-10202.

Saturday, April 14

BlackBerry maker RIM sued by NXP over patents

A Dutch semiconductor company said on Tuesday it had filed a patent infringement suit against Research In Motion Ltd, adding to the BlackBerry maker's troubles and sending its shares tumbling.


An affiliate of NXP Semiconductors NV alleges that versions of RIM's BlackBerry phone and PlayBook tablet infringed on patents issued to it between 1997 and 2008. The patents in question relate to design, data transmission and other features of the devices.


NXP demands a halt to the alleged infringements and seeks to recover what it claims as lost profit, reasonable royalties and triple damages for willful infringements.


It has not specified a dollar amount it is seeking from the struggling smartphone maker, whose share price has dropped about 80 percent in the past year as its market share has eroded.


"It's a lawsuit aimed at extracting some money from RIM at a time when RIM is most vulnerable," said Alex Poltorak of General Patent Corp, a firm that provides patent consulting.


RIM is no stranger to patent litigation. It was almost brought to its knees by a five-year patent fight that began in 2001 and at one point threatened to shut down RIM's U.S. operations. RIM eventually paid out more than $600 million to NTP Inc, a patent holding company, to settle the case.


NXP filed its lawsuit on Monday in the U.S. District Court in Orlando, Florida. RIM plans to hold its annual BlackBerry World conference there in early May.


A RIM spokeswoman declined to comment on Tuesday, citing the Canadian company's policy of not discussing litigation.


Litigation has become a major weapon in a global patent war being waged among makers of mobile phones, tablet computers and their operating software in a market worth billions of dollars.


Apple, Microsoft, Oracle and numerous hardware companies using Google's Android software are locked in court battles over patents aimed at extracting licensing fees from their rivals.


RIM teamed up with Apple, Microsoft and others to outbid Google for a trove of patents sold last year by bankrupt network equipment company Nortel Networks. Google later bought Motorola Mobility in a move many suggested was a play for its patents.


MORE PRESSURE ON HEINS


Based in Eindhoven, Netherlands, NXP was spun off from Koninklijke Philips Electronics NV in 2006. It said it now owned 11,000 issued or pending patents, and generated $4.2 billion of annual revenue.


Up against fierce competition from Apple Inc and phones running on Google Inc's Android, RIM has watched its once-dominant market share erode and sales performance decline.


Last week, RIM said it will stop issuing financial forecasts and that it was reviewing strategic options, such as entering partnerships and joint ventures.


Thorsten Heins, who became chief executive in January when the company's longtime co-CEOs resigned under pressure, would not rule out a possible sale of the company.


General Patent Corp's Poltorak said RIM may seek a quick settlement in the NXP case as pending litigation could complicate any sale talks. Two sources told Reuters last week that RIM has avoided talks with potential suitors since Heins took over.


In afternoon trading on the Nasdaq, RIM fell $1.10, or 7.6 percent, to $13.27; and NXP fell 67 cents, or 2.6 percent, to $25.45.


The case is NXP BV v. Research In Motion Ltd et al, U.S. District Court, Middle District of Florida, No. 12-00498.


Copyright 2012 Thomson Reuters.

Wednesday, September 7

Taiwan's HTC Sues Apple over patents

NEW YORK-Smartphone HTC Corp. Apple Inc. sued, U.S. want to stop developer imports and sales of Macintosh computers, iPads, iPods, iPhones and other devices on the basis of the alleged infringement.

HTC said that it filed complaints with the U.S. International Trade Commission and the U.S. District Court in Delaware.


Relate to this alleged violations against three patents 2008 and 2010 and Wi-Fi capability, and other functions. It is to compensation, as well as triple damages for willful infringement.


Apple has not on comment searches multiple requests replied.


Tuesday the lawsuit between the companies escalate complaints. Apple has accused of patent infringement by its smartphones HTC and filed several patent lawsuits against the Taiwan-based company in Delaware in the last two years.


HTC, said meanwhile that it has now brought three cases against Apple before the ITC.


"We take this action against Apple for the protection of our intellectual property, our industry partners and above all our customers to use the HTC devices," said General Counsel grace HTC Lei in a statement.


HTC his complaints filed one day after Google Inc agreed to $12.5 billion in cash for Motorola mobility Holdings Inc. access to thousands of patents and protect its fast-growing Android mobile operating system.


This merger, when completed, can pressure on HTC and other androids licensees, that a risk to promote direct competitor.


Google developed the nexus phone with HTC, but disappointing sales last year.


HTC has its headquarters in Taoyuan City, Taiwan, and Apple in Cupertino, California.


Afternoon, trade dropped Apple shares $4.21 for $379.20 on the NASDAQ. HTC shares closed unchanged at NT$ 827 in Taiwan.


The Delaware case is HTC Corp. v. Apple Inc., U.S. District Court, district of Delaware, no. 11-00715.


Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters.

Site Search