Analyzing Tech Regulation: Shapiro's Critique and Policy Recommendations
UPCOMING EVENT: Automated Decision-Making Technology and Artificial Intelligence
Free Speech and Trademark Law Clash in Vidal v. Elster
Using Technical Solutions to Address Issues in Privacy Law: A Talk by Professor Zubair Shafiq
An Introduction to Venture Capital
California AB 1844 and the Role of Social Media in the Employment Process
Mobile Patent Wars Heat Up as USPTO Invalidates Key Apple Patents
Star Wars v. Finding Nemo: Did Disney Overpay for Lucasfilm?
The Rise and Growth of Crowdfunding Websites
Zappos, Online Contracts, and the Perils of Browsewrap Agreements
A General History of Western Trade Secret Law from the Time of Preliterate Society to Today - Pt. 2
Apple and Google Consider Arbitration for Worldwide Patent Disputes
A General History of Western Trade Secret Law from the Time of Preliterate Society to Today - Pt. 1
Apple's Slide to Unlock Patent and the Issue of Patent Continuations
Funding Your Project Pt. 1: Kickstarter and Lockitron
Apple's Double Standard: Apple's Contentions with MySpace and Samsung Icons
Sprinting Towards Success? SoftBank’s Investment in the US Market
Google News Under Fire Around the World
Court Fines Man $1.5 Million for Uploading 10 Porn Flicks to BitTorrent
Posted By Jaewon Lee, Feb 20, 2013
In March 6, 2009, Carnegie Mellon University (CMU) filed a suit against Marvell in U.S. District Court claiming patent infringement of two CMU patents. The patents at issue concerned noise predictive technology that enhanced the speed and accuracy of signal processing in hard drives. At trial, Marvell argued that CMU’s patents were invalid because they were anticipated by a prior Seagate patent. CMU countered Marvell’s claim by producing an e-mail at trial from one of Seagate’s engineers sent prior to the lawsuit saying that the CMU patent was different than the Seagate patent. After four weeks of trial, on December 26, 2012, a federal jury unanimously found that CMU’s patents were valid and that Marvell had intentionally infringed those patents. The jury awarded CMU $1.17 billion in damages, making CMU’s award one of the largest patent awards in history. Because the jury found Marvell intentionally infringed, federal law gives the judge discretion to triple the damage award. Mark Lemley, a professor at Stanford Law School, wrote an article titled, Are Universities Patent Trolls?, wherein he discussed whether universities like CMU are akin to patent trolls. On the one hand, both patent trolls and universities enforce their patents without actually manufacturing the inventions covered by those patents. Additionally, both patent trolls and universities focus on maximizing licensing revenue through exclusive licenses. On the other hand, Lemley found that universities are not exactly the same as patent trolls because universities are creators of new inventions, often as a result from the extensive research they do. Patent trolls, however, do not create, but rather manipulate patents to extract as much financial gain as possible for inventions they did not discover. Patent trolls, therefore, solely impose costs on the market whereas universities, like CMU, also provide the benefit of new inventions. Thus, even though CMU does not manufacture the inventions covered by its patents, CMU is not a patent troll because CMU actually invented the patents at issue in the trial. Source (SSRN): http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=980776 Source (Invention-Protection): http://www.invention-protection.com/ip/publications/docs/Damage_Relief_for_Patent_Infringement.html Source (Gigaom): http://gigaom.com/2012/12/26/chip-maker-marvell-smacked-with-1-17-billion-patent-verdict/ Source (PatentlyO): http://www.patentlyo.com/patent/2012/12/carnegie-mellon-v-marvell-another-1b-verdict.html Source (ArsTechnica): http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2012/12/jury-slams-marvell-with-mammoth-1-17-billion-patent-verdict/