Microsoft to pay £178m for patent infringement

clock

Small Canadian company wins court battle against the tech giant

Microsoft has been ordered by the US Supreme Court to pay a small Canadian company, i4i, $290m (£178m) for infringing a patent. The legal battle began in 2007 when i4i first sued Microsoft for u...

To continue reading this article...

Join Computing

  • Unlimited access to real-time news, analysis and opinion from the technology industry
  • Receive important and breaking news in our daily newsletter
  • Be the first to hear about our events and awards programmes
  • Join live member only interviews with IT leaders at the ‘IT Lounge’; your chance to ask your burning tech questions and have them answered
  • Access to the Computing Delta hub providing market intelligence and research
  • Receive our members-only newsletter with exclusive opinion pieces from senior IT Leaders

Join now

 

Already a Computing member?

Login

You may also like
Redis shifts to dual source-available licensing model

Open Source

CSPs hosting Redis solutions will now be required to enter into commercial agreements

clock 22 March 2024 • 3 min read
Microsoft hires Mustafa Suleyman to lead newly formed consumer AI division

Corporate

University drop-out and DeepMind co-founder Suleyman scooped up by Microsoft to be CEO of Microsoft AI

clock 20 March 2024 • 2 min read
University CIO: 'We were owned in 4 hours'

Threats and Risks

And that certainly focused minds, says Salford University’s Mark Wantling

clock 20 March 2024 • 5 min read

More on Legislation and Regulation

Big tech voices opposition to digital competition law in India

Big tech voices opposition to digital competition law in India

Tech giants fear introduction of EU DMA-style law

clock 18 March 2024 • 3 min read
 Apple submits to EU pressure on app downloads

Apple submits to EU pressure on app downloads

iPhone users will no longer be forced through app store

Penny Horwood
clock 13 March 2024 • 2 min read
Google announces changes to comply with EU DMA

Google announces changes to comply with EU DMA

More user choice and consent, less service linking

John Leonard
clock 06 March 2024 • 3 min read