Microsoft's legal troubles continue with two new lawsuits filed by smaller companies alleging patent infringement, both in East Texas. Microsoft is already wrestling with the verdict of a massive patent-infringement lawsuit filed by i4i that could potentially force Microsoft Word off shelves and force Microsoft to pay close to $300 million.Microsoft
finds itself the target of two new patent-infringement lawsuits, both filed in East
Texas courts.
Filed by a small company named EMG Technology against not only Microsoft but
also Scottrade and Southwest Airlines, the first lawsuit centers on both Patent
7020845,
"Navigating Internet content on a television using a simplified interface
and a remote control," and Patent 7441196,
"Apparatus and method of manipulating a region on a wireless device screen
for viewing, zooming and scrolling Internet content."
The suit alleges that Microsoft Windows CE, PocketPC and Windows Mobile all
violate these patents; EMG Technology wants unspecified damages.
Another company, AllVoice Developments, also filed suit against Microsoft in
East Texas over Patent 5799273,
"Automated proofreading using interface linking recognized words to their
audio data while text is being changed," which AllVoice alleges has been
violated by Windows XP and Windows Vista.
Smaller companies have perhaps been emboldened by the Aug. 11 verdict handed
down by a U.S. District Court in Eastern Texas that
Microsoft had violated an XML-related
patent held by i4i, a small Canadian company.
The judge in that case ordered Microsoft to stop selling "any
Infringing and Future Word Products that have the capability of opening a .DOCX
or .DOCM file ('an XML file')
containing custom XML" within
60 days. That includes copies of Microsoft Word.
In addition, Microsoft has been ordered to pay nearly $300 million in fines,
including $37 million in prejudgment interest. A detailed breakdown of i4i's
patent by eWEEK can be found here.
Patent-infringement lawsuits against larger companies have a
history of being won in that part of the Texas
court system. In 2006, Microsoft and Nintendo were ordered to pay $21 million
to Anascape, a small IT outfit, for violating a patent related to game
controllers; as recently as July, another tiny company, Tsera,
sued Microsoft, Apple and 21 other tech companies over a touch-screen patent.
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