Paul Allen Sues Apple, Google, Others Over Patents – WSJ.com

Billionaire Paul Allen has made major forays into cable television and sports teams since leaving Microsoft Corp. more than two decades ago. Now he’s adding another pursuit: patent litigation.

Mr. Allen, who co-founded Microsoft with Bill Gates, on Friday sued Apple Inc., Google Inc. and nine other companies asserting they are using technology developed about a decade ago at his now-defunct Silicon Valley laboratory. Mr. Allen, a pioneer of computer software, didn’t develop any of the technology himself but owns the patents.

via Paul Allen Sues Apple, Google, Others Over Patents – WSJ.com.

LinkedInPinterestEvernoteWordPressBlogger PostEmailShare

AFP: US indicts ex S.Korean airline execs for price fixing

Two former Asiana Airlines executives were indicted in New York on Thursday for a price-fixing scheme involving economy class airfares for travel between the United States and South Korea.

A grand jury in Brooklyn, New York issued the one-count indictment against Joo Ahn Kang and Chung Sik Kwak, both former Asiana vice presidents and South Korean nationals. Kang also served as airline president from 2005 to 2008.

The pair were charged with “conspiring with others to suppress and eliminate competition by fixing passenger fares” from about January 2000 to February 2006, the Justice Department said in a statement.

“As a part of the conspiracy, Kang, Kwak and co-conspirators monitored and enforced adherence to the agreed-upon, noncompetitive rates charged to passengers traveling between the United States and Korea,” it added.

via AFP: US indicts ex S.Korean airline execs for price fixing.

LinkedInPinterestEvernoteWordPressBlogger PostEmailShare

Facebook Sues Teachbook Over Use of ‘Book’ | News & Opinion | PCMag.com

Facebook is going after a social-networking site for teachers, dubbed Teachbook, for attaching the word “book” to its name.

The “book” part of Facebook is highly distinctive and most people associate it with social networking, Facebook said in a lawsuit it filed against Teachbook earlier this month. The only reason Teachbook is using “book” in its name is to unfairly benefit from Facebook’s popularity, according to court documents.

“If others could freely use ‘generic plus book’ marks for online networking services targeted to that particular generic category of individuals, the suffix book could become a generic term for ‘online community/networking services’ or ‘social networking services,’” according to Facebook. “That would dilute the distinctiveness of the Facebook marks, impairing their ability to function as unique and distinctive identifiers of Facebook’s goods and services.”

Selecting “book” was a completely arbitrary choice and “pilfers a distinctive part of the Facebook,” Facebook said. Teachbook’s services “are the same as and/or related to some of the services provided by Facebook, [and] while Facebook does not object to [Teachbook's] provision of online social networking services, it does object to [Teachbook's] use of the infringing and dilutive Teachbook mark while doing so.

via Facebook Sues Teachbook Over Use of ‘Book’ | News & Opinion | PCMag.com.

LinkedInPinterestEvernoteWordPressBlogger PostEmailShare

Mozilla Releases Fennec, Firefox Mobile Alpha for Android | News & Opinion | PCMag.com

The Mozilla Foundation on Friday said it was releasing an alpha-test version of Fennec, its mobile version of Firefox, for the Nokia N900 and smartphones running Android 2.0 or above.

Fennec’s main strengths are support for add-ons (much like desktop Firefox) and integration with Firefox on the desktop. The new browser provides “Firefox Sync built-in into the browser, which provides seamless access to Awesome Bar browsing history, bookmarks, passwords, form-fill data and open tabs,” according to a Mozilla blog post.

Other new technologies include Electrolysis, which separates the UI and rendering processes for faster response, and Layers, which improves scrolling, animation and video performance.

via Mozilla Releases Fennec, Firefox Mobile Alpha for Android | News & Opinion | PCMag.com.

LinkedInPinterestEvernoteWordPressBlogger PostEmailShare

Google Realtime Search Challenges Bing, Twitter – Search Engines from eWeek

Google rolled out its Google Realtime Search page, which returns Twitter conversations and other real-time results in response to search queries. Google and Microsoft’s Bing have spent months exploring real-time search features.

Google’s latest move in real-time search, the launch of a dedicated page that aggregates of-the-moment information from Twitter and other sources, represents yet another escalation in the search-engine giant’s competition against Microsoft’s Bing.

With Google Realtime Search, typing in a term like “Halo: Reach” will result in a scroll of real-time Tweets about the game, alongside related “Top links” from YouTube and other Websites. A timeline at the top of the page allows you to follow those real-time updates into the past, in minute-by-minute increments. Tweets are organized from oldest to newest, helping users trace a Twitter conversation to its source.

Other real-time tools include the ability to narrow a search term by geography. “You can use geographic refinements to find updates and news near you, or in a region you specify,” Dylan Casey, a product manager for Google, wrote in an Aug. 26 posting on the Official Google Blog. “So if you’re traveling to Los Angeles this summer, you can check out tweets from Angelenos to get ideas for activities happening right where you are.”

via Google Realtime Search Challenges Bing, Twitter – Search Engines from eWeek.

LinkedInPinterestEvernoteWordPressBlogger PostEmailShare

Hitachi Data Systems General Counsel Chris Leslie Tackles FCPA Compliance | Corporate Counsel

When Chris Leslie took the general counsel job at Hitachi Data Systems in 2004, he was coming off of an 11-year stint in various senior legal positions with Sun Microsystems. The global compliance program at that company had been top-notch, Leslie said, “particularly around anti-bribery.”

He quickly found, though, that his new company’s training in that realm was “spotty” at best. On a trip to the IT services and data-storage company’s Asia Pacific branch, he received his most jarring wake-up call when his questions about the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) were mostly met with “blank stares.”

“There was no recognition on the part of most people of what the FCPA stood for or what it was,” he said. This was particularly troubling considering that enforcement of the FCPA and other anti-corruption laws was beginning to heighten in the U.S. and around the world. (In fact, high-profile cases involving Siemens AG and BAE Systems Plc have shed a spotlight on the matter over the past five years.)

via Hitachi Data Systems General Counsel Chris Leslie Tackles FCPA Compliance.

LinkedInPinterestEvernoteWordPressBlogger PostEmailShare

U.S., Russian Patent Offices Strike Fast-Track Deal | National Law Journal

The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office and its equivalent in Russia are launching a one-year pilot program on Sept. 1 to fast-track each other’s approved patent applications.

Such “patent prosecution highway programs” allow patent offices to use each other’s work to help process applications more quickly.

The PTO’s pilot program with Russia’s Federal Service for Intellectual Property, Patents and Trademarks of the Russian Federation, or Rospatent, means that an applicant receiving a favorable ruling from one nation’s patent office on at least one claim in an application may request that the corresponding application filed with the other nation be fast-tracked for examination.

via U.S., Russian Patent Offices Strike Fast-Track Deal.

LinkedInPinterestEvernoteWordPressBlogger PostEmailShare

Despite Negligent Preservation, Failure to Establish Relevance of Lost Emails Results in Denial of Motion for Sanctions : Electronic Discovery Law

Siani v. State Univ. of New York at Farmingdale, 2010 WL 3170664 (E.D.N.Y. Aug. 10, 2010)

In this employment discrimination case, the court denied the pro se plaintiff’s motion for spoliation sanctions, despite finding defendants were at least negligent in their preservation efforts, where plaintiff failed to present extrinsic evidence “tending to show that the destroyed emails would have been favorable to his case.”

Plaintiff alleged that defendants failed to preserve electronic evidence and requested an adverse inference.  Specifically, plaintiff alleged that emails were deleted by both named defendants and non-party employees of the university in violation of their duty to preserve.

Defendants presented evidence that following receipt of notice of plaintiff’s claim, multiple litigation hold notices were disseminated and individuals subject to the hold were repeatedly reminded of their preservation obligations.  The employee in charge of the university’s IT department also backed up the email accounts of the named defendants (employees of the university), but admitted he did not back up his own email account or accounts belonging to any relevant non-parties.  Nor did he suspend the automatic deletion cycle.  Despite the hold, certain named defendants and non-parties admitted that emails were deleted either unintentionally or in the course of routine cleaning.  Still, some of the deleted emails were available from alternative sources.

via Despite Negligent Preservation, Failure to Establish Relevance of Lost Emails Results in Denial of Motion for Sanctions : Electronic Discovery Law.

LinkedInPinterestEvernoteWordPressBlogger PostEmailShare

Gibson Dunn – 2010 Mid-Year Electronic Discovery and Information Law Update

This 2010 Mid-Year Update provides an overview of recent e-discovery developments and trends, based on Gibson Dunn’s review of 103 e-discovery decisions issued between January 1 and June 17, 2010.

The following are highlights:

  • Like last year, sanctions and cooperation were dominant themes in the first half of 2010.
  • Motions to compel and privilege disputes also continued at a steady pace.
  • We noted fewer decisions regarding preservation, form of production, and accessibility of data.
  • Courts have concentrated on more nuanced factual scenarios and discovery disputes arising farther along in the discovery process, such as iterative search terms, protective orders and the application of Federal Rule of Evidence 502.
  • We also noted a substantial increase in decisions analyzing the interplay between the Fourth Amendment and electronic discovery, as well as cases analyzing individuals’ reasonable expectations of privacy in various electronic data.
  • Courts have begun to engage in the burgeoning arena of e-discovery in the social media context, as the number of cases recognizing evidence from social networking has exploded.

via Gibson Dunn – 2010 Mid-Year Electronic Discovery and Information Law Update.

LinkedInPinterestEvernoteWordPressBlogger PostEmailShare

Federal Judge Sanctions Tech Company Over Handling of E-Discovery | New York Law Journal

A federal judge has sanctioned a leading developer of “flash drive” technology for its mishandling of electronic discovery in what the judge called a “David and Goliath-like” struggle.

Southern District Judge William H. Pauley ruled that he would instruct the jury to draw a negative inference from the fact that SanDisk Corp., a company with a market capitalization of $8.7 billion, had lost the hard drives from laptop computers it issued to two former employees who are the plaintiffs in Harkabi v. Sandisk Corp., 08 Civ. 8230.

SanDisk must be “mortif[ied]” by the ex-employees’ argument that the company, as a leading purveyor of electronic data storage devices, cannot claim that it made an “innocent” mistake in losing the hard-drive data, Pauley wrote.

That argument is on target, the judge concluded, noting that SanDisk’s “size and cutting edge technology raises an expectation of competence in maintaining its own electronic records.”

via Law.com – Federal Judge Sanctions Tech Company Over Handling of E-Discovery.

LinkedInPinterestEvernoteWordPressBlogger PostEmailShare