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Apple To Close Retail Stores In the Patent Troll-Favored Eastern District of Texas (techcrunch.com)

An anonymous reader quotes a report from TechCrunch: Apple has confirmed its plans to close retail stores in the Eastern District of Texas -- a move that will allow the company to better protect itself from patent infringement lawsuits, according to Apple news sites 9to5Mac and MacRumors which broke the news of the stores' closures. Apple says that the impacted retail employees will be offered new jobs with the company as a result of these changes. The company will shut down its Apple Willow Bend store in Plano, Texas as well as its Apple Stonebriar store in Frisco, Texas, MacRumors reported, and Apple confirmed. These stores will permanently close up shop on Friday, April 12. Customers in the region will instead be served by a new Apple store located at the Galleria Dallas Shopping Mall, which is expected to open April 13. "The Eastern District of Texas had become a popular place for patent trolls to file their lawsuits, though a more recent Supreme Court ruling has attempted to crack down on the practice," the report adds. "The court ruled that patent holders could no longer choose where to file." One of the most infamous patent holding firms is VirnetX, which has won several big patent cases against Apple in recent years.

A spokesperson for Apple confirmed the stores' closures, but wouldn't comment on the company's reasoning: "We're making a major investment in our stores in Texas, including significant upgrades to NorthPark Center, Southlake and Knox Street. With a new Dallas store coming to the Dallas Galleria this April, we've made the decision to consolidate stores and close Apple Stonebriar and Apple Willow Bend. All employees from those stores will be offered positions at the new Dallas store or other Apple locations."

54 comments

  1. Ob by Hognoxious · · Score: 2, Funny

    A corprashun doing what it wants despite what the good ol' boys say! That's cormanissum!

    Oh wait.

    --
    Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
  2. There is no justice in a Texas Repub Courtroom by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Informative

    It shouldn't surprise anyone that the party of obvious lies and blatant corruption does not adjudicate cases fairly.

    At least Houston voted out all their racist republican judges and some fairness can start to emerge in Texas court rooms.

    Donald Trump belongs in prison with his campaign manager, personal lawyer, and other co-conspirators with Russia's attack on America.

  3. The Eastern District of Texas by oldgraybeard · · Score: 5, Informative

    where the judges and local lawyers (extended family based corruption) are running a buy your court ruling scam for patent trolls.

    Anything coming out of the Eastern District of Texas related to patents should be viewed with suspicion.

    Just my 2 cents ;)

    1. Re:The Eastern District of Texas by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who has more money: Apple or some patent troll?
      If the patent troll was wealthy and successful in their own right they wouldn't be a patent troll in the first place.
      So is it that East Texas is a hive of corruption where Apple (one of the wealthiest and most successful companies on the planet) is being outbid by literally-who patent trolls?
      Or is it that East Texas simply has judges who favor the actual holders of patents (just as the law is written)?

      Perhaps it's that California is the actual hive of corruption where super wealthy companies like Apple, Facebook, and Google expect to the be winners 99% of the time-- perhaps the state makes sure that the geese that lay the golden state's eggs never have reason to take flight?

      Furthermore: do you live in East Texas? Have you personally seen corruption there? If so then why didn't you report it?
      Do you have links or citations on what you're accusing Texans of or are you just an elitist prick that likes to slander others?

    2. Re:The Eastern District of Texas by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      http://nymag.com/intelligencer/2019/02/election-fraud-is-real-and-it-involves-a-republican.html

    3. Re:The Eastern District of Texas by PPH · · Score: 0

      B...b...but they have Jesus in their hearts.

      --
      Have gnu, will travel.
    4. Re:The Eastern District of Texas by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except it is not a scam when it delivers.

    5. Re:The Eastern District of Texas by gravewax · · Score: 1

      If the patent troll was wealthy and successful in their own right they wouldn't be a patent troll in the first place.

      patent trolls are INTENTIONALLY not wealthy, the people that own the patent troll companies are exceedingly wealthy or opportunistic large law firms. By doing it through a separate entity they are protecting themselves from any financial backlash should their trolling fail.

      So is it that East Texas is a hive of corruption where Apple (one of the wealthiest and most successful companies on the planet) is being outbid by literally-who patent trolls?

      Again as patent trolls are wealthy and have nothing to lose you can't outbid them, doing so would just be a white flag for all the vultures to circle to get their cut.

      Or is it that East Texas simply has judges who favor the actual holders of patents (just as the law is written)?

      No.

    6. Re:The Eastern District of Texas by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If it was a buy-your-ruling scam, wouldn't Apple always win?

    7. Re:The Eastern District of Texas by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If it was a buy-your-ruling scam, wouldn't Apple always win?

      BINGO!

      Take that, Apple Haters!

    8. Re:The Eastern District of Texas by gravewax · · Score: 1

      It is a buy-your-ruling in the sense if you bring the cases to texas you will get favourable treatment, hence the courts get more money. Apple can't buy that as what the courts are after is the revenue from the cases not cash bribes or freebies.

  4. What's the deal with the Eastern District of Texas by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Serious question, WHY is this region in particular so in favor of patent trolls?

  5. How are we going to turn this into by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    a pity party for GOP Incels to whine about women?

    1. Re: How are we going to turn this into by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      See in previous generations, dumb bitches like you would be put in your place. Youâ(TM)re a fucking moron. You only think youâ(TM)re not because everyone wants to fuck you. Youâ(TM)re nothing more than a run of the mill, useless whore. And you donâ(TM)t even get paid.

  6. Not a surprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Texas is currently a red shithole to use Trump's vernacular. But the scales are tipping inexorably to the left over time. Won't be long before it's blue and bullshit like this gets cleaned up.

    1. Re:Not a surprise by keltor · · Score: 2

      This is a Federal Court district for the State, but like all Federal Court Judges, they are nominated by the President and the majority of the judges in the Court have been nominated by either Bill Clinton or Barack Obama. These are all jury trials and the jury pool (near Tyler, Marshall, and Texarkana) is what's conservative. That isn't changing.

    2. Re:Not a surprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except the patent holders are going to the area so that they can be heard by democrat appointed judges.

  7. Virnet X -- you mean SAIC/NSA? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why not just come out and say "The NSA?" One guy on almost all of VirnetX's patents, Dr. Rorbert Dunham Short III, was a VP at SAIC (now Leidos), and the patents originated at SAIC: VirnetX is basically just a holding company leasing those SAIC patents. SAIC/Leidos is one of the private, less-accountable (hey, it's not technically the government) members of the US intelligence community. SAIC patented more secure and pretty obvious ways of doing video chat (like direct connections rather than passing packets through a central tappable server) that would be harder for the government to intercept, and then they set up a patent troll (VirnetX) to sue anybody who wanted to do things the more secure way, forcing things like Facetime to be less secure. When the government couldn't outlaw security, it had a private arm (SAIC) patent security and then set up a patent troll (VirnetX) to sue people who did security right.

  8. Rounded corners by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

    Just a reminder that Apple literally patented rounded corners.

    They really need to shut up about patents and pay what they owe to people who invent actual technology (and not things like rounded corners or buttons that are indistinguishable from text).

    1. Re:Rounded corners by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Firstly that was a design patent, not a technology patent.

      Secondly, the original design patent wasn't just a round cornered rectangle, that came later https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2012/11/apple-awarded-design-patent-for-actual-rounded-rectangle/

    2. Re: Rounded corners by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Seriously dude, that was a meme. You are a literal idiot for believing outdated memes and anything the internet says.

      Round corners alone are not patentable. It has to be very specific. It was a very specific design patent with lots of other features including round corners.

      Having round corners alone but not replicating other design features does not infringe on Apple's design patent.

  9. Funny same thing said about 9th circuit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We say the same thing about the 9th circuit court in California and its proclivity towards favoring ultra liberal causes.

  10. *cough* TC Heartland SCOTUS Case *cough* by AnalogDiehard · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The SCOTUS case TC Heartland vs Kraft of 2017 ruled that patent litigants can no longer "forum shop" for jurisdictions that are friendly to their case, they can only file patent infringement cases in jurisdictions where the defendant has a physical presence. This ruling was aimed squarely at non-practicing entities (the polite term for "patent trolls") who almost unilaterally selected East Texas district or Delaware to file their infringement cases.

    Apple won't admit it, but the closure of the stores in the East Texas district was a strategic legal move to exploit the SCOTUS precedent and shield themselves from the patent courts that are all too well known to rule in favor for patent litigants - and for the patent trolls Apple is currently battling.

    --
    Eternity: will that be smoking, or non-smoking? I Corinthians 6:9-10
    1. Re:*cough* TC Heartland SCOTUS Case *cough* by Cmdln+Daco · · Score: 1

      Can we encourage patent trolls in the places we live and use it as a mechanism to drive Apple Stores out of our area? I could get to like not hearing that kabonga-kabonga Applephone ringtone so often.

    2. Re:*cough* TC Heartland SCOTUS Case *cough* by Alci12 · · Score: 1

      That won't work as the courts are not generally as dysfunctional as East Texas.

  11. Re:What's the deal with the Eastern District of Te by Solandri · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Patent trials are relatively rare, and held in normal courts. Consequently the typical judge who gets assigned to a patent case only has to deal with a small percentage of patent cases in his/her career, so isn't well-versed in patent law. The East Texas district court realized that since there was no requirement in patent law that the case be filed in a local court, that there would be a demand for a court where the judges were well-versed in patent law. They set out to make themselves that court, as a way to increase their workload and thus revenue.

    Their rationale (patent trial judges should be specialized in patent law) was fine, even admirable. But their motivation (increase revenue) created a corrupting feedback loop. The more cases their judges decided in favor of patent trolls, the more patent trolls chose to file in their district, and the more revenue the court got.

  12. I live in DFW, TX... and its bad by MikeDataLink · · Score: 1

    The patent trolls here are literally ***buying*** the courts and the politicians are looking the other way.

    --
    Mike @ The Geek Pub. Let's Make Stuff!
    1. Re:I live in DFW, TX... and its bad by FerociousFerret · · Score: 1

      Yes, and now Apple with the closing the 2 stores closest to me (Stonebriar in Frisco and Willow Bend in Plano). Stonebriar is ALWAYS busy. Haven't been to Willow Bend in a while but it was also always busy last time I visited. Thanks much. :-(

    2. Re:I live in DFW, TX... and its bad by radarskiy · · Score: 1

      If they are buying EDTX then they are not getting a very good deal, since the results there are not much more favorable than average

    3. Re:I live in DFW, TX... and its bad by h33t+l4x0r · · Score: 1

      You should demand that your local politicians fix the courts. Then you can have nice things again.

    4. Re:I live in DFW, TX... and its bad by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      The courts have shit to do with this. It's just some deeply unhinged fantasy concocted by someone with an axe to grind. Otherwise, ALL of the Dallas stores would be closing rather than just the ones in the rich northern suburbs.

      These jokers aren't even trying to be subtle with their trolling/journalism anymore.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    5. Re:I live in DFW, TX... and its bad by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      Local politicians, assuming they even wanted things to change, can’t affect federal courts much. Fed judges are appointed for life and are not subject to local control. I suppose the local cops could harass the employees, jury members, and judges, but that’s about it.

    6. Re:I live in DFW, TX... and its bad by h33t+l4x0r · · Score: 1

      Maybe publicly shame them or get in their faces in restaurants. East Texas, you get nice things again when you get off your butts and fix this.

    7. Re:I live in DFW, TX... and its bad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Not all of Dallas is in the eastern court region. Check a map.

  13. Quite patent in beigg troll-favored indeed! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Dear English, your punctuation/spaci g operator precedence order is ridiculous.

    Hyphens bind closer than spaces. And slashes too. Having a context-sensitive precedence level for whitespace is unacceptable. (Try startig at compound words.)

  14. Good Riddance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The less apple stores around the better.
    People will just find better consumer electronics to buy.

  15. Good move by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    F*ck the Eastern District of Texas. If they love patent trolls so much, then let them buy their tech gadgets from the patent trolls. Oh wait, the patent trolls don't actually make and sell anything. So the people from the Eastern District of Texas really don't deserve tech products.

    1. Re:Good move by Cmdln+Daco · · Score: 1

      They deserve better than closed-design Apple products.

  16. People North of Dallas Will Love This by toddz · · Score: 1

    Wow, I have visited the Frisco store plenty of times and it always packed. So much that people can't even hang out inside. I guess the $$$ and risk wasn't worth it and they figure everyone will just drive 30 minutes to go 17 miles and hang out in an even more packed store.

    1. Re: People North of Dallas Will Love This by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      30 minutes and 17 miles are the least of their expenses in Apple world. Once they get into the store, they are liable to spend 80 hours pay in one go.

  17. Re:What's the deal with the Eastern District of Te by mbkennel · · Score: 3

    Why are Federal Courts thinking about "revenue" ? If any institution ought to be free of commercial entanglements, this is it.

  18. Re:What's the deal with the Eastern District of Te by Xenx · · Score: 1

    Because people like getting paid. Or at least, being able to provide for themselves and their families.

  19. Apple Dying? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Apple closing stores in Texas. A couple of days ago, a UK Apple dealer decided to shutter five out of six of its stores. https://www.solutions-inc.co.uk/bournemouth/

    So I am not the only Apple lover who has given up on them. How many other stores are closing? With Steve Jobs gone, they seem to have lost their way.

    1. Re:Apple Dying? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good riddance to bad rubbish

  20. Re:What's the deal with the Eastern District of Te by keltor · · Score: 3

    They aren't. Federal Court Judges are paid strict salaries that are set by law: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

  21. EU nations next? by AHuxley · · Score: 0

    The more EU nations try to tax and regulate? See them the same way as an Eastern District.

    --
    Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"
    1. Re:EU nations next? by Mr.+Dollar+Ton · · Score: 1

      Don't worry. Europe managed to survive the spectre of Communism, it will overcome the spectre of John Galt, too.

  22. Re:What's the deal with the Eastern District of Te by Dutch+Gun · · Score: 1

    But increased workloads likely can be used to increase the number of local employees of the courts, and thus indirectly affect one's power base. This is not just about the judges, but the entire mini-industry the East Texas district has set up for itself. I've heard of corporations that have gone in the opposite direction as Apple just did before the "no shopping" rule was in effect, making lucrative civic donations in an attempt to sweeten dispositions toward themselves among the local citizens. If that doesn't speak to a completely corrupt system, I'm not sure what does.

    --
    Irony: Agile development has too much intertia to be abandoned now.
  23. Re: What's the deal with the Eastern District of T by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Juries in that region draw from a not highly educated populace with a large fraction of religious conservatives who are more susceptible to the moral dimension of an argument than to detailed distinctions in technology that are crucial to patents. Anyone accused of doing something bad, must have done something bad. There is a history of favoring plaintiffs and of granting large awards for damages. Texas employers are embraced, and regionally centered wealth carries a positive moral bias. A California or New York or foreign defendant carries a negative moral bias.

  24. Re: What's the deal with the Eastern District of T by LostMyAccount · · Score: 1

    I can definitely see that districts juries filled with people engaging in some populist fantasy about sticking it to an East/West coast greedy corporation trying to steal ideas from the little man.

  25. Re:What's the deal with the Eastern District of Te by LostMyAccount · · Score: 1

    Empire building.

    I'm sure with the specialist workload they get added budget dollars and probably added fees from cases filed in their district. I'm sure there are a lot of people living well because they are a paid consultant on something to this court.

    I also don't doubt there is a lively social economy in orbit around the judges and influential staff people in this court and I'm sure if there was ever a strict audit, especially of spouses, children and extended family members there would be a lot of unusually large gifts and special favors. It's probably a hell of a place to own a Mercedes dealership.

  26. Re:What's the deal with the Eastern District of Te by orient · · Score: 1

    There might have been another incentive: judges ruling over cases where their own sons represented patent trolls: https://www.youtube.com/watch?...

    --
    Laudele lor desigur m-ar mahni peste masura.
  27. Re:What's the deal with the Eastern District of Te by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Because people like getting paid. Or at least, being able to provide for themselves and their families.

    Oh, that's rich!

    Someone who thinks that Government should be a for-profit industry...

    Retard. Government doesn't work like regular business. Or rather, it isn't SUPPOSED to.