Judge grants RIM a stay in Visto patent trial
By
Stephen Lawson
,
IDG News Service
, 07/03/2008
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A federal judge has agreed to put off a trial involving Visto's patent-infringement claims against Research In Motion, but
limited RIM's ability to cause further delays.
The trial over mobile e-mail provider Visto's lawsuit against RIM had been set to begin next week. Visto sued RIM in 2006
in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Texas, claiming its popular BlackBerry system infringed four Visto
patents and asking for a shutdown of RIM's service as well as damages. But on Wednesday, Magistrate Judge Charles Everingham
granted a stay of the trial, requested by RIM, because several of the patent claims involved are being re-examined by the
U.S. Patent and Trademark Office.
RIM had requested the re-examinations, in which the patent office is studying the validity of certain parts of Visto's patents.
But as a condition of the stay, the company can't ask for any more re-examinations, either directly or indirectly, the judge
wrote. RIM also won't be allowed to challenge the validity of any of the patents during the trial by bringing up evidence
that has already been considered in the re-examinations.
Earlier this week, the patent office validated 21 out of 22 claims in one of those patents, number 7,039,679, which involves technology for synchronizing e-mail between a mobile device and a LAN server.
Mobile e-mail, based on complex sets of technologies and rapidly growing in popularity, has been fertile ground for patent
disputes. RIM came to the brink of a service shutdown in 2006 before settling a suit brought by NTP for US$612.5 million.
Visto has also aggressively defended its intellectual property, suing competitors including Good Technology, Seven and Microsoft.
The IDG News Service is a Network World affiliate.
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