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Crazy Patent Troll Suing Devs For Posting Apps To Google Play (technobuffalo.com)

Developer Austin Meyer is fighting back patent trolls after he was sued for putting his flight simulator app called X-Plane on Google Play. TechnoBuffalo reports: A few years ago, he uploaded the app to the Google Play Store and was very unexpectedly hit with a lawsuit from Uniloc in 2012. The firm claims it patented the idea behind the app market. That's right, Uniloc isn't going after Meyer for making a flight simulator; it's going after any company that uses Google Play. It's already targeted a bunch of other popular apps, including Minecraft. So Meyer did a bit of digging and discovered a few pretty shocking details. It turns out the judge in that district may have a direct relationship with the prosecuting lawyer in many of these cases. The judge, Leonard Davis, is apparently known for almost never throwing out patent lawsuits. Meyer claims that his son, Bo Davis, is the lawyer representing many of these patent trolls.

2 of 108 comments (clear)

  1. Judge Davis retired last year by dgatwood · · Score: 5, Informative

    According to Wikipedia, Judge Davis retired from the eastern district of Texas a year ago. Why is he still hearing cases?

    Yes, if true, there's a potential conflict of interest there, and it could explain a lot about why the eastern district of Texas is so amazingly pro-patent-troll, but at this point, it is water under the bridge. It would have been nice to have known that five or ten years ago; there are a number of ways that the problem could have been resolved, up to and including removing the judge in question if he didn't recuse himself from cases tried by his son going forward. But now that he's retired, there's nothing that can be done, and either the problem has been resolved (in which case he was the problem) or it hasn't (in which case he wasn't).

    --

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  2. Re:Lawsuit filed in 2012, last update early 2015 by mamono · · Score: 5, Informative

    I work for one of the District Courts. We have several judges who are "retired" but still working. Sometimes the just go in to senior status, sometimes they are recalled. It depends on the caseload of the court in question.