Microsoft may face another round of legal hurdles in the patent-infringement case leveled against it by Uniloc, despite winning an appeal on Sept. 29 that spared Redmond from having to pay $388 million in damages to the smaller software company.
Uniloc plans on appealing that most recent decision.
“We are disappointed by the decision the trial judge has made to overturn the jury’s unanimous verdict in Uniloc’s patent infringement case against Microsoft,” read Uniloc’s official statement, emailed to eWEEK on Sept. 30. “We believe that the jury’s verdict in April was thoughtful, well-reasoned and supported by the evidence presented.”
“Since the patent status remains unchanged,” the statement added, “Uniloc will continue to protect its intellectual property and appeal the Judge’s decision to override the jury’s verdict to the U.S. Court of Appeals.”
In its original lawsuit, Uniloc argued that Microsoft’s anti-piracy registration system for Windows XP and certain parts of Office violated their own patent for product activation. Three years after the case was submitted, in 2006, U.S. District Judge William Smith ruled in favor of Microsoft, setting off an immediate Uniloc appeal.
As part of its appeal, Uniloc suggested that Judge Smith had appointed an “evening law student who was finishing his Ph.D. in computer science” instead of an independent expert to review the intricacies of the case. As insult to injury, Uniloc insisted in court documents, “the intern had numerous ties to Microsoft.”
Uniloc’s appeal initially bore fruit, with the U.S. District Court for the District of Rhode Island ruling in August 2008 that Microsoft had violated the patent. However, Microsoft appealed the case and won, erasing the $388 million it would have had to pay in damages.
“We are pleased that the court has vacated the jury verdict and entered judgment in favor of Microsoft,” Kevin Kutz, a Microsoft spokesperson, told Reuters.
Uniloc’s appeal could represent another legal entanglement for Microsoft, which is already fighting another patent-infringement case with Canadian firm i4i. In August, an East Texas court found that certain coding in Microsoft Word violated i4i’s patents, and ordered Redmond to pay $300 million and pull all copies of Word from store shelves within 60 days.
A full breakdown by eWEEK of the i4i-Microsoft patent dispute can be found </p> <p>Microsoft obtained some relief in the i4i case on Sept. 3, when the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit ruled that the company could continue selling Word while its appeal worked its way through the system. For their part<a title=” href=”/c/a/Windows/Microsoft-Case-Not-Aimed-At-OpenSource-Community-Says-i4i-Execs-565642/”>, i4i executives indicated in an interview with eWEEK that they plan to fight the case in court to the bitter end.