Local technology firm sues Intel
Andrew Edwards
The subsidiary of a Newport Beach company that licenses patents has
sued Intel Corp. and Texas Instruments Inc., alleging that the
technology firms infringed on a patent for a computer processor.
Acacia Research Corp. announced Tuesday that its subsidiary,
Microprocessor Enhancement Corp., had filed suit in federal court.
The filing, dated April 7, stated that Intel and Texas Instruments
have received written notice of the 1995 patent and offers to license
the technology.
Intel spokesman Chuck Mulloy said his company had analyzed the
complaint and found no merit in the lawsuit.
“We plan to launch a vigorous defense,” he said.
Texas Instruments spokeswoman Gail Chandler said it was too early
for her company to elaborate on the filing.
“We will review the complaint and take appropriate action,” she
said.
The plaintiffs allege Intel used patented technology in its line
of Itanium processors and that Texas Instruments used the technology
in a line of products.
Acacia chief operating officer Robert Berman said his company,
which acquires and licenses patents, purchased the processor patent
in January. The patented technology is designed to increase processor
speed.
Acacia routinely files lawsuits to enforce patents, Berman said.
A Securities and Exchange Commission filing from March shows
Acacia filing patent infringement litigation against a number of
companies including Charter Communications Inc., EchoStar
Communications Corp., and Sony Electronics Inc. Acacia spokesman Rob
Stewart said those cases are still open.
“We have several big lawsuits against several big companies,”
Berman said. “That’s what we do. That’s our business.”
The lawsuit seeks damages for alleged patent infringement and an
injunction against future use of the patented technology. Most patent
lawsuits, Berman said, are settled so that license holders allow
other companies to pay royalties to use technology.
“Our business is licensing and enforcement. We get revenue from
the patents we license and enforce,” Berman added.
“It’s not in our best interests to stop Intel from selling them,”
he said. “It’s in our best interests, and our shareholders’ best
interests, to collect revenue.”
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