WARF and Intel Settle Patent Suit Over Core 2 Duo
reebmmm writes "The Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation (WARF) and Intel have settled their patent suit over technology developed by Gurindar Sohi, a computer science professor at the University of Wisconsin — Madison. Professor Sohi developed technology that was ultimately patented by WARF using money he received from Intel. Last month, Judge Barbara Crabb found that the funding agreement was ambiguous, but that e-mails revealed that the money was an unrestricted gift and carried with it no obligation to license or assign any inventions to Intel. Trial was scheduled to begin today. The terms of the settlement were not disclosed."
What a great guy...
Intel: "Here's money to do your research." ... after research ...
Sohi: "Thanks!"
Sohi: "Woah! You never paid me for my research!"
Intel: "What...?"
So does this mean that paying kickbacks and giving "gift" bribes doesn't entitle you to any legal rights?
"Common sense will be the death of us all"
Hide the beer and cheese to stomach injector we developed with WARF funds! I need this patent, it's going to revolutionize how sconnies get fat!
I bet WARF is suing because of its inability to living within its means, and is looking for additional revenue streams to pay the inflated salaries of its administrators and lawyers (who are nothing more than blood sucking parasites.)
Was this a huge tax dodge?
"Intel had supported Sohi's research with about $90,000 in gifts in the 1990s and argued it was entitled to the intellectual property that resulted from the funding."
So he got at least $90k in unreported income in form of gifts to keep his research going which in turn benefitted Intel?
This appears like a gift/graft which by-passed the administration. Then it's basically a way of scamming income without having to pay taxes as I think you don't have to pay taxes on a gift if its below a certain threshold?
Why isn't anyone picking up on the fact Sohi was possibly working for them illegally? Did the H1B's run out? Why all the subterfuge to hid the payments for work rendered to Intel?
Frankly this is bad academic practice. Intel may try pressuring the next guy to do the same or may be held up in IP court by the next guy due to poor business/academic relations & accounting practices.
"He wrote in a 2000 e-mail uncovered during the litigation that he had a "gentleman's agreement" with Intel in which he would not aggressively seek patents but would keep the company informed if he did." -- Im sure the University's Counsel liked to hear that.
He may be a good scientist but his business ethics - yes the do exist - seem shaky.
Wouldn't we all like to get 90k under the table on a gentlemen's agreement from Intel
Gets to be in the next Intel "Rock Star" TV commercial instead of that "co-inventor of the USB" poser, Ajay Bhatt. :-)
It must have been something you assimilated. . . .
Assimilate this!
How many more years will slashdot have an off-by-one error on your Score in your profile?
You have two cores. One for you, and one for me. Explains the whole thing, including the settlement. Let this be the last comment on this story.
I didn't know Klingons had processor patents?!
You seem to think that Intel was the only party who paid for the research. Who do you think paid to build the building? Who pays for the electricity costs? Who pays most fo the guy's salary?
Intel gave this guy some research money. They could (and should) have insisted to at least partial rights to the fruits of the research. But if they didn't then the loss is theirs.
It is usually the other way around. The little guy gets screwed by the "handshake" agreement.
A company as big as Intel should have known better. Sack the contracts department.
There are black klingons?
Mod me down, my New Earth Global Warmingist friends!
Don't be retarded. Worf wasn't a man at all, he was a Klingon.
You also missed the episode where Geordi got hit with a zap from some guy who was about to transition to an energy being, and this imbued him with more self-confidence, and he ended up scoring with some hot chick.
And everyone on the ship was acting like they were suffering from malt liquor intoxication in The Naked Now.
I don't know anything about this Intel case. But I met Dr. Sohi at ISCA 2009, and he's definitely a cool guy and interesting to talk to. The guy really knows his stuff and is highly respected by everyone else in the field.
It is funny how things settled out quickly once WARF threatened to whip out the bat'leth and get all mupwI' yI'uchtaH on their ass!
Learning HOW to think is more important than learning WHAT to think.
You also missed the episode where Geordi got hit with a zap from some guy who was about to transition to an energy being, and this imbued him with more self-confidence, and he ended up scoring with some hot chick.
That was Broccoli that got zapped. The Nth Degree.
i'd pee my pants if i had to go up against the son of Moag and the House of Martok!
Oh wait, I know which one you mean. The man that was being hunted by his people because they were afraid of what he was changing into.
My bad.
If anyone cares, the patent deals with memory disambiguation. The basic jist is that it is hard to execute *memory* instructions out-of-order when previous the address computation of previous instructions has not completed (otherwise what would happen if the processor completes a load instruction, out-of-order, for a prior store instruction that did not yet complete due to a dependence on address computation?). Sohi's patent figured out a way to predict this and to allow the Core2 to get much better out-of-order execution.
Sohi is *highly* respected in the field of computer architecture. In fact Wisconsin is considered one of the best computer architecture schools in the world.
And Worf seemed like such an honest guy on TV. Whadda shame.
Table-ized A.I.
I was a graduate student at the University of Wisconsin for 6 years, during which I was able to work with Guri Sohi as his teaching assistant, in addition to having many stimulating technical discussions.
WARF (Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation, warf.org) helps faculty and students patent their ideas and protect the patents. Remember, a patent is only as good as the lawyers who are willing to go to court to defend it--as this WARF v. Intel situation has shown.
WARF was established in 1925, and helped the University of Wisconsin become one of the first academic institutions to take advantage of the patent system. The patent for including vitamin D in milk was the first big money winner for WARF and the university.
The system is driven by the inventor. If a faculty member or student has an idea they want to patent, WARF covers the expenses, provides help with prior-art, etc. efforts, and pledges to defend the patent. For this, WARF gets 80% of the patent revenues, which it puts back into research funding for the university. The inventor(s) receive 20% of the revenues. From what I have heard, this is a larger percentage than that given to the inventor at many other institutions.
-Todd
Omne ignotum pro magnifico.
...the love child of Worf* and Barf arguing with Gordon Moore in a court room?
___
* Warning: Strong heart required. Not advised for people without eye bleach at hand.
Any sufficiently advanced intelligence is indistinguishable from stupidity.
Doesn't his head look like a fanny?
Yeah, that's the one. I don't remember the episode title, but it was in the 3rd season I believe.