for using BITS graduates' technology
Washington: Tech giant Apple has been told on
Friday, 16th October 2015, to pay $234 million (1515 Crore Rupees) to the intellectual
property arm of Wisconsin University, Madison, for using without permission
patented technology developed by its team, including two Indian-American
engineers.
The award
amount a federal jury in Madison asked to Apple to pay Friday was about $165
million less than what Wisconsin University Alumni Research Foundation (WARF)
had sought, according to Wisconsin State Journal. The case centres on
technology that became a component of processors that run widely popular Apple
devices such as the iPhone and iPad.
Gurindar
Sohi and Terani Vijaykumar, both electrical and electronics engineering
graduates of Birla Institute of Technology and Science (BITS), Pilani, were
part of the four-member WARF team which developed the technology.
US
District Judge William Conley, who presided over the trial, complimented the
lawyers on their professionalism and spoke to Wisconsin University-Madison
computer sciences' Professor Sohi, who led the WARF technology team, seated in
the courtroom.
"For
Dr. Sohi, I hope you felt that your invention was vindicated," Conley was
quoted as saying.
"This
is a case where the hard work of our university researchers and the integrity
of patenting and licensing discoveries has prevailed," said Carl
Gulbrandsen, managing director of WARF.
"The
jury recognized the seminal computer processing work that took place on our
campus. This decision is great news for the inventors, the University of
Wisconsin-Madison and for WARF."
Apple
attorneys declined to comment, referring questions to the California company's
public relations office, the Journal said.
Spokesperson
Rachel Tulley said only that Apple plans to appeal.
The jury
also ruled that a subset of processing chips produced in Texas by Samsung under
contract for Apple, then exported to Korea, still infringed on WARF's patent.
The jury
also ruled that although those chips were produced by Samsung, Apple controlled
their production.
WARF sued
Apple in January 2014, claiming that Apple infringed on one of WARF's patents
in creating a processor for its popular mobile devices, starting with the
iPhone 5S in 2012.
On
Tuesday, the jury agreed that Apple's use of the technology was an infringement
of WARF's patent.
The
technology, first incorporated into Apple's A7 processor and used now in the A8
and A8X processors, makes the processors work faster and more efficiently, and
extend battery life by as much as two hours.
According
to WARF complaints, the patent titled "Table-Based Data Speculation
Circuit for Parallel Processing Computer" was issued to Andreas Moshovos,
Scott Breach, Terani Vijaykumar, and Gurindar Sohi in 1998 as a result of their
"labour and ingenuity".
"The
invention disclosed and claimed in the patent has been recognized by those in
the art as a major milestone in the field of computer microprocessing,"
the complaints stated.
"This
work has been recognized as a major milestone in the field of computer
microprocessor architecture/design," lawyers for WARF wrote in the
compalint.
"Indeed,
Dr. (Gurindar) Sohi, the leader of the lab that developed the '752 patent, has
been elected to the National Academy of Engineering based on his work in the
field of computer architecture," they added.
WARF had
also asserted that Apple wilfully infringed on its patent, a claim that
withstood a summary judgment motion in August.
But on
Thursday night, after hearing testimony from Apple's witnesses during the
trial's damages phase, Conley reconsidered and dismissed the wilfulness claim.
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