Home :: Newsletters :: RSS Feeds :: About Us :: Advertise     
The Industry Standard News and Analysis for the Internet Economy
NEWS
METRICS
BLOGS
JOBS
EVENTS
        Internet News for Internet Business Monday, 04th of April, 2005   

  TOPICS
Technology
Media
Money
Politics
Opinion and Blogs


  Newsletter/RSS
Sign up today for the daily email newsletter:





  BLOGS
Denise Howell
JD Lasica
Esme Vos
Scott Rafer
Ross Mayfield
Doc Searls
Seth Godin
Ashlee Vance
Matt McAlister
Tom Hespos
Mark Jones
Jen Muehlbauer
Cringe Worthy
Mark Frauenfelder
Declan McCullagh
Julene Snyder
Mark Glaser
Rafat Ali
Thomas Goetz
Mike Butcher
Jimmy Guterman

>> RSS Feed



  Archive

Recent Entries:
Few details in eBay's Shopping.com plans
Skype, VOIP handsets on show at Computex
Microsoft plans mobile e-mail push upgrade
EBay buys Shopping.com for $620 million
New .xxx domain will be reserved for porn



Previous Story: Supreme Court to hear cable modem case
Next Story: Mark Cuban to finance Grokster's battle against MGM


Sony loses PlayStation patent case, must pay $91M
By Martyn Williams

A U.S. court ordered Sony Computer Entertainment Inc. (SCEI) to pay Immersion Corp. US$90.7 million for patent infringement of touch feedback technology used in PlayStation games consoles, said court documents. The court also ordered a halt to U.S. sales of infringing PlayStation-brand consoles and 47 software titles as part of a patent-infringement lawsuit but put the order on-hold pending an appeal.

The rulings from the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California on Thursday are the results of a lawsuit filed in 2002 by San Jose-based Immersion against SCEI, Sony Computer Entertainment America Inc. and Microsoft Corp.

In the suit Immersion alleged that the three defendants had infringed on its patents covering haptic -- or touch -- feedback. Microsoft licensed Immersion's technology in 2003 but Sony decided to fight on.

In the rulings, U.S. District Court Judge Claudia Wilken ordered SCEI and its U.S. unit to pay US$82 million for infringement of U.S. patents 6,424,333 and 6,275,213 and an interest payment of $8.7 million. The court denied a counter-claim from SCEI for a declaration of non-infringement, said the judgement.

The court also enjoined SCEI from manufacturing, using, selling and/or importing into the U.S. infringing PlayStation consoles, Dualshock controllers and 47 games that were found to infringe one or both of the patents.

However, this injunction was put on hold in response to a counter-motion from SCEI. The court said it stayed the order after consideration of SCEI's chances of winning an appeal against the injunction, damage to SCEI and Immersion that such a stay would cause and also the public interest, said the judgement. Sony was also ordered to pay a license for products already in the marketplace and those subsequently sold.

SCEI was disappointed by the decision but intends to fight the injunction, said Daisuke Nakata, a spokesman for SCEI in Tokyo.

Immersion could not be immediately reached for comment.

The games listed in the judgement are: A Bug's Life; Amplitude; Ape Escape; Atlantis: The Lost Empire; Bloody Roar 2; Cool Boarders 3, 4 and 2001; Crash Bash; Crash Team Racing; Draken: The Ancients' Gate; Emperor's New Groove; Extermination; FantaVision; Final Fantasy X; Formula One 2001; The Getaway; Gran Turismo 1, 2 and 3; Grand Theft Auto: Vice City, and 3; Grind Session; ICO; Jak & Daxter; Kinetica; Kingdom Hearts; Legend of the Dragon; The Mark of Kri; Medal of Honor Frontline; Medieval 2; Metal Gear Solid 2; Monsters Inc.; Sly Cooper and the Thievius Racoonus; SOCOM Navy Seals; Speed Punks; Spyro; Ripto's Rage and Year of the Dragon; Stuart Little 2; Syphon Filter 2 and 3; Tony's Hawk's Pro Skater 3; Twisted Metal: Black, 4 and Small Brawl; Treasure Planet; and War of the Monsters.

Posted March 28, 2005 04:17 PM |




FREE Email Newsletter RSS Feeds
Sign up today for the
daily email newsletter:








    ADDITIONAL RESOURCES:
    • Find reviews of digital cameras and download the latest graphics tools from PCWorld.
    • Astonish your colleagues with the latest technology news and trends from Computerworld.
    • Digital music that matters: chart-toppers and free audio files from Playlistmag.com.
    • Catch a daily glimpse behind the forces shaping the security business from CSOonline.com.
    • In-depth look at networking products, by Network World's team of independent reviewers.
    • Top reviews, analyses & evaluation of IT products by technology experts from InfoWorld.
    • Hot tech news with links to blogs and resources around the Internet on Lockergnome.

    MORE INTERNET NEWS LINKS


Home :: Newsletters :: RSS Feeds :: About TheStandard :: Advertise    
Copyright © 2004, TheStandard.com :: Terms and Conditions :: Privacy Policy