Critical.
Authoritative.
Strategic.
Subscribe to CIO Magazine »

Judge hints at stay of Oracle-Google trial until patent reexamination is over

Oracle must give a clear rationale for keeping the case on track, and a stay could delay the trial for years

The judge overseeing Oracle's intellectual property lawsuit against Google wants Oracle to provide "a clear answer" as to why the trial shouldn't be postponed until a number of patent reexamination processes are fully played out, according to a filing late Thursday in U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California.

Oracle sued Google in August 2010, claiming the Android mobile OS violates a number of patents and copyrights Oracle holds on the open-source Java programming language. Google has denied wrongdoing and said Android uses a "clean room" Java implementation that doesn't violate Oracle's rights.

As part of its pretrial tactics, Google asked the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office to reexamine a number of Oracle's patents at issue in the case, and has received some favorable rulings.

Oracle still has some additional recourse to appeal the USPTO's actions. To that end, Judge William Alsup's order on Thursday questions whether the trial should be held up for now.

"Oracle should state a clear answer to the following question," Alsup wrote. "Given that the examiners have issued final rejections on patents '720, '702, '476, and '205, and Oracle has only withdrawn the '476 patent, but still wishes to go to trial on patents '720, '702, '205, '520, and '104, and Oracle still wishes to have an instruction that those patents must be presumed valid and can only be found invalid by clear and convincing evidence, would it be better to postpone trial until after final decisions by the PTO on administrative appeal?"

"Also please answer: to avoid this problem, will Oracle irrevocably withdraw with prejudice patents '720, '702, and '205?" Alsup added.

The judge wants a response from Oracle, as well as "the views of Google on these questions," by March 9, according to the order.

Depending on what happens, the Oracle-Google trial may be postponed for quite some time, according to one expert.

"If the case is stayed pending final decisions by the PTO Board of Appeals, the stay could extend for two or three years," said attorney Scott Daniels, a partner with the Washington, D.C. law firm of Westerman, Hattori, Daniels and Adrian, as well as author of the Reexamination Alert blog. While appeals typically take 12 to 18 months, "outliers" can extend the process longer, Daniels said.

"It appears that Judge Alsup is willing to proceed with the trial on patent issues, but only if Oracle pares away the patents that have final rejections," Daniels added.

Meanwhile, another important hearing in the case is set for Wednesday, where Oracle's third damages report will be discussed. Oracle's expert first estimated that Google owed Oracle up to US$6.1 billion. However, Alsup has told Oracle to use $100 million as a starting point for determining damages, and has said he won't name a trial date until Oracle provides an acceptable damages report.

Chris Kanaracus covers enterprise software and general technology breaking news for The IDG News Service. Chris's e-mail address is Chris_Kanaracus@idg.com

Join the CIO Australia group on LinkedIn. The group is open to CIOs, IT Directors, COOs, CTOs and senior IT managers.

More about: Google, IDG, Oracle, Patent and Trademark Office, Scott, USPTO
References show all
Comments are now closed.
Related Whitepapers
Latest Stories
Community Comments
Latest Blog Posts
Whitepapers
  • Advanced Persistent Threats and Real-Time Threat Management
    Businesses face a constantly evolving threat landscape. One of the greatest challenges is presented by advanced persistent threats (APTs), which are sophisticated, multi‐faceted attacks targeting a particular organisation. Mitigating the risk of APTs requires advances beyond traditional layered security to include real‐time threat management. This whitepaper describes the nature of APTs, the risks they pose to businesses, and techniques for blocking, detecting, and containing APTs and other emerging threats. Read now.
    Learn more »
  • World Quality Report - The State of Quality 2012
    The most comprehensive assessment of the current state of enterprise application quality and testing practices available from around the world. With our 1550 respondents, Capgemini, HP & Sogeti bring you the full report. Download today.
    Learn more »
  • Customer Success - Slater & Gordon Lawyers
    Lawyers work hard, and they work fast. Any activity that takes their focus away from the task at hand represents lost productivity and lost revenue. Slater & Gordon Lawyers needed to filter spam and email-borne malware and provide high availability for email. Results from the business solution they chose include 250 hours of IT staff time reclaimed annually for other tasks, long delays in email delivery alleviated, reduced email-related storage costs, and email failover to the cloud in minutes, avoiding hours-long outages. Find out how they got these results.
    Learn more »
All whitepapers
rhs_login_lockGet exclusive access to Invitation only events CIO, reports & analysis.
Recent comments