One Alcatel-Lucent claim against Microsoft dismissed
No patent violation found on speech-recognition technology; appeal is planned
March 2, 2007 12:00 PM ETIDG News Service -
A judge in a San Diego court late yesterday dismissed one of several patent claims Alcatel-Lucent SA made against Microsoft Corp. in several high-profile cases against the vendor.
According to Microsoft spokesman Jack Evans, a judge in the U.S. District Court in San Diego ruled that Microsoft does not infringe a patent for speech-recognition technology asserted by Alcatel-Lucent. A spokeswoman for Alcatel-Lucent said the decision would be appealed.
This is the only patent that was to be considered during a second trial in the series of claims. The trial, which had been scheduled for March 19, has been canceled.
"This ruling reaffirms our confidence that once there's judicial review of these complex patent cases, these Alcatel-Lucent claims ultimately won't stand up," said Tom Burt, Microsoft corporate vice president and deputy general counsel, in an e-mail statement.
Last week, a jury in the first of what had been six separate patent-infringement cases, ordered Microsoft to pay $1.5 billion in damages to Alcatel-Lucent for infringing on patents for MP3 encoding and decoding technology.
It was believed to be the largest patent-infringement damage award in history in the case that the former Lucent Technologies first filed against Microsoft and partners Dell Inc. and Gateway Inc. in 2003. Many believe the decision could put other companies that use MP3 technology at risk for patent-infringement claims from Alcatel-Lucent.
Microsoft had asked the judge last week for a summary judgment in the patent-infringement case that was to go to trial this month, and the judge granted that yesterday, said Alcatel-Lucent spokeswoman Mary Lou Ambrus. She said the company plans to appeal the decision.
"We invest billions in research and development every year, which yields inventions that we make available to any company on reasonable terms," she wrote in an e-mail to IDG News Service. "Through these upcoming trials, we are seeking fair and reasonable compensation for developing our inventions and making them available."
The next patent-infringement case, which focuses on user-interface technology and lists Microsoft, Dell and Gateway as defendants, is scheduled for May 21, Evans said. Three other trials on Alcatel-Lucent patent-infringement claims will follow this year, with Microsoft listed as a defendant in two of them.
Reprinted with permission from
Story copyright 2009 International Data Group. All rights reserved.
Alacatel Lucent
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