Jury Orders SAP to Pay Oracle $1.3 Billion in Infringement Case – Law Blog – WSJ

Well, we all figured that the jury in the dispute between Oracle and SAP would find that SAP owed Oracle some money. That SAP infringed Oracle’s copyrights was never in dispute.

But on Tuesday afternoon, an Oakland, Calif., federal jury awarded Oracle Corp. $1.3 billion, significantly more than SAP’s lawyers had argued the company should be made to pay. Click here for the early report from the WSJ; here and here for earlier LB posts on the conflict.

The ubiquitous David Boies, representing Oracle, on Monday argued that SAP owed Oracle company between $288 million and $3 billion, while Robert Mittelstaedt, an attorney representing SAP, said the company should pay between $28 million and $41 million.

The verdict came in the fourth week of a trial to determine how much SAP should pay Oracle for copyright infringement by a discontinued business unit called TomorrowNow, the culmination of lawsuit Oracle first brought in March 2007.

via Jury Orders SAP to Pay Oracle $1.3 Billion in Infringement Case – Law Blog – WSJ.

When IT Is Asked to Spy – Computerworld

It’s 9:00 in the morning, or 3:00 in the afternoon, or even 10:00 at night. Do you know what your users are up to? More than ever, IT managers can answer, “Oh, yes.”

As corporate functions, including voice and video, converge onto IP-based networks, more employee infractions are happening online. Employees leak intellectual property or trade secrets, either on purpose or inadvertently; violate laws against sexual harassment or child pornography; and waste time while looking like they’re hard at work.

In response — spurred in part by the need to comply with stricter rules and regulations — organizations are not only filtering and blocking Web sites and scanning e-mail. Many are also watching what employees post on social networks and blogs.

They’re collecting and retaining mobile phone calls and text messages. They can even track employees’ physical locations using the GPS feature on smartphones.

More often that not, IT workers are the ones asked to do the digital dirty work, primarily because they’re the people with the technical know-how to get the job done, says Nancy Flynn, executive director of The ePolicy Institute, a Columbus, Ohio-based consultancy that helps companies establish Internet and computer usage policies.

Statistics are hard to come by, but Flynn and other industry observers agree that monitoring and surveillance are becoming a bigger part of IT’s job.

via When IT Is Asked to Spy – Computerworld.

e-Discovery Insights: 2010 ABA Legal Technology Survey

2010 ABA Legal Technology Survey

Nothing like a Friday afternoon to examine six volumes of law & technology statistics from the ABA.  I was somewhat amused when I accessed their page and discovered that they’d received an endorsement – from yours truly.  Somebody apparently liked something I said about last year’s survey and quoted me.

The ABA provided me with some excerpts, so I reviewed them and picked out a few that I thought would be of interest.

continued e-Discovery Insights: 2010 ABA Legal Technology Survey.