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- 2005 Ad
- The Federal Circuit's much-awaited en banc pronouncements about claim construction in Phillips (1) overshadowed many of the court's other decisions this year, both in the press and on the conference circuits. But the court has issued a number of decisions in other areas of patent law in 2005 that both...
- Research articles 2006-01-01
- University of California wins browser dispute
- The University of California won a key battle this week in an ongoing $566 million patent dispute with Microsoft Corp. when the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office reaffirmed its patent for browser technology issued in 1998. The patent for technology that allows certain kinds of interactivity on...
- Research articles 2005-09-30
- World Wide Web Consortium presents US Patent Office with evidence invalidating Eolas patent; W3C Director Tim Berners-Lee urges USPTO Director to review prior art, take action.
- M2 PRESSWIRE-29 October 2003-W3C: World Wide Web Consortium presents US Patent Office with evidence invalidating Eolas patent; W3C Director Tim Berners-Lee urges USPTO Director to review prior art, take actionC1994-2003 M2 COMMUNICATIONS LTD RDATE:10292003 The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C), the...
- Research articles 2003-10-29
- The Boston Globe Upgrade Column.
- By Hiawatha Bray, The Boston Globe Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News Sep. 22--Some people are never satisfied. For years, the enemies of Microsoft Corp. have been praying that somebody, anybody, would finally pin the giant software company to the canvas. And now it's...
- Research articles 2003-09-22
- Microsoft Must Pay University of California, Chicago Firm $521 Million.
- Evening Standard, London Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News Aug. 12--Software giant Microsoft has been told to pay $521 million (UKpound 324 million) to the University of California and a Chicago company, which claimed they invented technology used in the Internet Explorer browser. ...
- Research articles 2003-08-12
- Newsbytes Law & Regulation Week In Review.
- WASHINGTON, DC, U.S.A., 2001 JAN 12 NB -- By Robert MacMillan, Newsbytes. AOL/Time Warner Win FCC's Conditional Approval; Tech Lobbyists Prepare To Wade Into Privacy Debate; IT Group Defends Microsoft To Congress; IT Group Defends Microsoft To Congress; Eolas Claims Victory In MS Patent Battle; GovWorks...
- Research articles 2001-01-15
- Eolas sues 22 companies for patent infringement
- Technology research company Eolas Technologies, which won a $520.6 million patent infringement case against Microsoft in 2003, has filed a new patent lawsuit against 22 companies including Adobe Systems, Google, Yahoo, Apple, eBay and Amazon.com.
- News items 2009-10-06
- Eolas Sues Internet [Digital Daily]
- Three years after squeezing a settlement out of Microsoft for alleged infringements of its controversial patent on embedded Web applications, Eolas Technologies hopes to do the same to a bunch of other big tech outfits. This morning, the research and development company filed suit against nearly two dozen companies, accusing...
- News items 2009-10-06
- Eolas sues corporate giants over Web technology
- Eolas Technologies, a company that ground through a years-long patent infringement lawsuit against Microsoft, now has sued a large swath of corporate powers for infringement of that same patent and another related patent concerning interactive programs on Web sites.The list of defendants includes many high-profile companies inside and outside the...
- News items 2009-10-06
- Apple, Amazon, Google, Others on Patent Pain Front
- Stories of small companies suing larger companies right and left -- sometimes with a firm belief that they've been wronged, other times with a firm belief that being just annoying enough but not too so gets you a settlement -- are nothing new. But when you have one that has...
- Blog posts 2009-10-06
- Eolas sues technology and retail giants
- A company claiming a patent on the use of AJAX and other technologies to put interactive applications into web pages is suing Adobe, Amazon, Apple, eBay, Google, Yahoo! and other well-known companies for infringement.
- News items 2009-10-06
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