Skip to main content

Alcatel Loses $1.5 Bln Microsoft Judgement

Alcatel Loses $1.5 Bln Microsoft Judgement

In what may be the final note on a series of lawsuits that have been dragging its way through the courts since 2003, a U.S. Appeals court has ruled (PDF) that Microsoft doesn’t have to pay a $1.5 billion judgement levied against it because it didn’t actually violate MP3 patents in its Windows Media Player software.

“We affirm the district court’s dismissal of the infringement claims,” the court wrote in its ruling, finding the Microsoft did not infringe on a patent now owned by Alcatel, and that the Redmond company had adequately covered its based by paying $16 million to Germany’s Fraunhofer Gesellshaft to MP3 technology.

Recommended Videos

The original suit, originally filed by Lucent, landed in 2003 and included computer makers Gateway and Dell in a broad legal salvo that alleged the companies were using Lucent technology to MP3-enable their software and systems without licensing the technology. In 2007, a jury awarded a record-setting $1.5 billion to Alcatel over the charges, but the verdict was later overturned on appeal.

Alcatel has managed to go after Microsoft successfully on patent infringement claims; earlier this year, a judge upheld a $368 million penalty against Microsoft over handwriting recognition and date entry technologies…with interest, the penalties topped $512 million. Microsoft also successfully dodged a patent infringement suit from Alcatel over video encoding technology.

Geoff Duncan
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Geoff Duncan writes, programs, edits, plays music, and delights in making software misbehave. He's probably the only member…
5 features I’m itching to try in Microsoft’s ChatGPT-powered Edge Browser
Microsoft's redesigned Bing and Edge search engines.

Microsoft has just announced that its new AI, powered by ChatGPT, is coming to the Edge browser and Bing search engine. The addition of advanced AI will redefine the way these two Microsoft products work, and there are some major changes on the horizon.

The Microsoft-backed ChatGPT is a conversational AI that you can ask questions and get all sorts of answers from -- even things like your astrological makeup. Microsoft is eager to to take that experience out of a website and into the browser, and there are a ton of features I'm itching to try out.
A reimagined search engine

Read more
Hackers stole $1.5 million using credit card data bought on the dark web
A credit card is passed from one person to another.

In what sounds like a movie script, over $1 million was stolen by a group that made use of thousands of credit cards posted for sale on the dark web. Some of the details of this complex cybercrime operation have come to light following an indictment by the U.S. Department of Justice.

In the United States v. Trevor Osagie, the defendant has pled guilty to conspiracy to commit credit card fraud from 2015 to 2018. Osagie worked with a network of thieves and managed to rack up over $1.5 million in damages.

Read more
Dell XPS 13 2-in-1 vs. Lenovo IdeaPad Duet 5i: a close competition
Dell XPS 13 2-in-1 front view showing display and folio keyboard.

Two new detachable tablet 2-in-1s hit the market recently, entering a space that's been dominated by Microsoft's Surface Pro for years. Lenovo has its new IdeaPad Duet 5i and Dell offers the XPS 13 2-in-1, the latter of which has morphed from a 360-degree convertible.

The Lenovo competes primarily on price while looking a lot like Microsoft's tablet, while Dell's model takes a different design path and costs a bit more. Which is the better tablet for you?
Specs and configurations

Read more