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Jury Hits Marvell With $1 Billion+ Fine Over CMU Patents

Dupple writes with news carried by the BBC of a gigantic tech-patent case that (seemingly for once) doesn't involve Samsung, Apple, Microsoft, or Google: "'U.S. chipmaker Marvell Technology faces having to pay one of the biggest ever patent damage awards. A jury in Pittsburgh found the firm guilty of infringing two hard disk innovations owned by local university Carnegie Mellon.' Though the company claims that the CMU patents weren't valid because the university hadn't invented anything new, saying a Seagate patent of 14 months earlier described everything that the CMU patents do, the jury found that Marvell's chips infringed claim 4 of Patent No. 6,201,839 and claim 2 of Patent No. 6,438,180. "method and apparatus for correlation-sensitive adaptive sequence detection" and "soft and hard sequence detection in ISI memory channels.' 'It said Marvell should pay $1.17bn (£723m) in compensation — however that sum could be multiplied up to three times by the judge because the jury had also said the act had been "wilful." Marvell's shares fell more than 10%.'"

1 of 167 comments (clear)

  1. UC, Berkley should've patented ideas in BSD Unix.. by jkrise · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    then Apple would've been trillions in debt; would be wonderful to watch the squirming execs defending copying valuable ideas and products for free; but patenting trivial stuff and charging billions.

    By now we would've seen patent reform.

    --
    If you keep throwing chairs, one day you'll break windows....