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Jury Finds Nintendo Wii Infringes Dallas Inventor's Patent, Awards $10 Million (arstechnica.com)

A jury has ruled that Nintendo must pay $10.1 million because its Wii and Wii U systems infringe a patent belonging to a Dallas medical motion-detection company. Ars Technica reports: iLife sued Nintendo (PDF) in 2013 after filing lawsuits against four other companies in 2012. The case went to a jury trial in Dallas, and yesterday the jury returned its verdict (PDF). They found that Nintendo infringed U.S. Patent No. 6,864,796, first filed in 1999, which describes "systems and methods for evaluating movement of a body relative to an environment." The patent drawings show a body-mounted motion detector that could detect falls in the elderly, which is the market that iLife was targeting, according to its now defunct website. The $10.1 million was less than 10 percent of what iLife's attorneys had been asking for. When the trial began in Dallas on August 21, Law360 reported that iLife lawyers asked the jury for a $144 million payout. That damage demand was based on a royalty of $4 per Wii unit, multiplied by 36 million systems sold in the six years before the lawsuit was filed.

5 of 113 comments (clear)

  1. Re: Is anyone surprised? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Informative

    Not OP, what racist posts are you referring to? His history looks pretty clean with very few posts in the past few years.

  2. Re:Is anyone surprised? by truedfx · · Score: 2, Informative

    "Patent troll" usually means to a company which buys up patents and doesn't create anything but lawsuits. In this case, the lawsuit was brought by a company which actually attempted to sell a product which made use of the patent. So, regardless of whether the patent is valid, not a patent troll, unless you have an unconventional definition of the term.

  3. My opinion by ewanm89 · · Score: 5, Informative

    Is iLife a patent troll: no they actually made a product and released it using the patent.

    Is the patent valid? Well according to this judge and jury yes, according to most of us probably not. The patent covers using a 3-axis accelerometer and some sort of data processing to detect motion of a body. Well in physics a body is any cohesive group of matter that moves, for example the earth is a planetary body. The V2 missile in WW2 used 2 gyros and an accelerometer in its inertial navigation system, I wonder how many missiles since? More recently the year before filing date on the patent the Amida Simputer was commercialy released in India, a handheld Linux based computer with an accelerometer based gesture interface. Even if these were not using a 3-axis accelerometer is using a 3-axis accelerometer instead of a 1 axis of 2 axis or multiple accelerometers a novel application?

  4. Re:Is anyone surprised? by queazocotal · · Score: 5, Informative

    Having skimmed the patent, it's basically bullshit.

    It is simply describing a possibly wireless device with an accelerometer, running some program.
    This is, in 1999, exactly as any engineer would design a fall detection thing. It adds nothing to the knowledge of mankind, and in no way deserves protection.
    It should not have passed the novelty test.

  5. Re: Is anyone surprised? by Cito · · Score: 4, Informative

    the man invented the motion devices first for medical equipment. not a patent troll, he owns the patent on his own invention. it didn't sell not his fault but he still invented it and owns the invention. Nintendo using the exact same motion controller copied the man's invention, and Nintendo wii have been used in medical symposiums as a proof of concept use in the medical field, therefore not only did they steal the patent they also showed at it medical symposiums too.

    Nintendo should have been fined higher for blatant theft. They whine about pirates but they pirated their own console