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Thread: Tivo hearing today?
- 10-17-2008 03:00 PM #221
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The law says an infringer can modify the adjudicated devices in order to design around the patent. The 4 million DVRs most certainly fall into the adjudicated devices category.
The law says in a contempt proceeding, when there is design around, the patentee must prove with clear and convincing evidence the design around still infringes.
The law also says if the infringer can establish the doubt that the accused devices (in this case, the 4 million DVRs with the new software) may no longer infringe, then a contempt will not be appropraite, the patentee must seek a new action, or a new lawsuit.
In any summary proceedings, which the contempt proceeding is one of them, the mover (TiVo) must prove with clear and convincing evidence, not the non-mover (DISH). The non-mover only needs to establish the doubt to avoid a contempt.
All of the above what I said are based on the law, I have quotes for all of the above, you know it.
Your notion that E* must prove non-infringement in a summary proceeding has no basis, you never quoted the law anywhere that the non-mover has the burden of proof in a summary proceeding. It is the opposite, the mover must prove with clear and concincing evidence in order to get the contempt charge they want on the defendant.
The only times you have ever found cases where the non-movers had failed were when the non-movers never tried to design around the patent, or the design around was only colorable, meaning in bad faith.
A good faith design around has always helped an infringer to avoid a contempt charge, no exception, regardless if the products were adjudicated already or not, or if the adjudicated products were already in the field or not, and it does not even matter what the context of the injunction was. When there was doubt whether infringement still existed, there was no contempt, period.Last edited by jacmyoung; 10-17-2008 at 03:11 PM.
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- 10-17-2008 03:11 PM #222
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You'd be fine until right here.
Originally Posted by jacmyoung
The action currently before the court is not an accusation of infringement. TiVo is not accusing contempt because of infringement. TiVo's accusation is that the disable order has not been followed. It is your (and also DISH/SATS', as well as CEO Charles Ergen's) contention that the design-around takes precedence over the disable order.
That is far from "when there is a design-around". Not one quote has been found where a design-around takes precedence over a disable order or recall of an adjudicated device.
- 10-17-2008 04:31 PM #223
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I have in fact posted plenty of quotes to demonstrate the above, most of them quotes from the appeals court, you know the court that tells the lower courts what they should or should not do. Some from the lower courts too. You simply dismissed each one of them.
We shall not go in circle again, let the judge’s ruling be our verdict. It should be out soon I hope.
- 10-17-2008 08:27 PM #224
All the difference in the world...
...and thats why...
True...its seldom black and white at any level. Its the shade of the grey areas that make the difference...
HA!!! GOOD LUCK finding a judge like THAT!


As long as judges are elected officials with a political party to support, as well as a moral agenda of their own, they will NEVER be unbiased! Please! Don't even...
Thats fine...but just to make myself clear. My only point here is that regardless of what side anyone takes in this whole Tivo vs. E* discusion, many people try to support their opinions as being correct soley on the basis of the opinion of a judge, and, as you've accurately pointed out, judges notoriously make mistakes. And as I've pointed out, judges are inherantly as biased as anyone else based on their own convictions. So whats left by which to support a personal opinion.
Nothing.
Any attempt to prove a point using the opinion of a judge is nothing more than a classic appeal to false authority.
- 10-17-2008 08:36 PM #225
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- 10-17-2008 10:22 PM #226
- 10-17-2008 11:47 PM #227
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I'll agree that the judge's ruling be our verdict, and hope it is out by year's end.
Originally Posted by jacmyoung
However, I still stand behind my assertion that of all the citations given, not one of them apply to the devices which were adjudicated as infringements. The main citation, KSM v. Jones, deals with an order of contempt granted on a product that had never been before the court. Contempt was granted without the District Court finding infringement on these newly manufactured work-arounds.
In TiVo v. EchoStar, the pending contempt motion addressed the devices already found infringing. The suggestion by you that a device found infringing must be relitigated to find infringement is counter to the mandate of law and law of this case. Infringement does not need to be found on devices that have already infringed. That sheer fact alone should be reason for DISH/SATS to prove to the court they no longer infringe.
Instead, what has been produced are opinions of outside counsel and testimonies from the infringer. The problem is that exact combination was "tried" by the court two and a half years ago, and DISH/SATS lost. So it isn't like DISH/SATS can simply say the evidence they've given supports a finding of non-infringement, especially when this contempt hearing is not about infringement at all.
- 10-18-2008 11:15 AM #228
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As I said you simply ignored cases that proved you wrong. The Foodtprint2.0 case was exactly about a service provided by web servers that were found to have infringed in the field, and after a software update, the judge found no contempt, even though the servers never stopped working at the hands of the end users, despite the fact the judge clearly ordered the servers to stop in her injunction. The only thing you tried to make that case "irrelevant" was because as you said in that case the judge "allowed" such software update. But again, there is no requirement by the law that the court must first allow the modification before the infringer may do so, even Judge Folsom said on 9/4 he did not necessarily disagree with the fact E* did not inform him of the design around until the contempt proceeding started.
The sheer fact simply does not exist. Besides, the defendant has no chance during a contempt proceeding to even prove non-infringement. Because the law does not allow the judge to determine if the design around is infringing or not, during a contempt proceeding, only whether it is more than colorable or not....That sheer fact alone should be reason for DISH/SATS to prove to the court they no longer infringe.
It is however the plaintiff who must prove with clear and convincing evidence that infringement still exists. If they fail to do so, it is not to say the defendant no longer infringe, rather that there is doubt whether the defendant still infringe or not, and when such doubt exists, the judge may not find the defendant in contempt. The defendant might as well still infringe, but without proof of infringement with clear and convincing evidence, the plaintiff in such case must then seek a new action (a new lawsuit) to again try to prove the design around still infringes.
I must admit the concept is somewhat confusing. But the concept demonstrates one thing clearly, that it is very difficult to get a contempt ruling out of the court, because a contempt charge is an extraordinary court measure, not used lightly. The courts place heavy burden of proof on the plaintiffs in contempt proceedings.
In all the cases which the infringers were found in contempt, without exception, the infringers either never attempted to design around the patent, or if did, the effort was in bad faith because the design around was merely colorable.
E*'s design around is certainly substantial, because it removed 8 out of the 9 steps that were once determined to have met the TiVo's patent claim steps. This much is not in dispute, even TiVo did not dispute that, TiVo only tried to insist that the design around still infringed because one step (the PID) in the design around still met one of the 9 steps of its patent claim.
You will just have to decide for yourself if TiVo had proved with clear and convincing evidence that the design around still infringed or not, keep in mind to find infringement, all 9 out of 9 steps must be met.
- 10-18-2008 11:41 AM #229
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And this will be my last post in this particular argument before too many people gets annoyed.
The point is, your two statements are in contradiction to each other.
On one hand, you said products already adjudicated to be infringing products may not be adjudicated again, meaning such products will forever be infringing products,
On the other hand you said because of the above "sheer fact" (which is not true), it will be E* who must now prove the same products no longer infringe. If the products once found infringing will always be infringing, how can you insist E* must prove they no longer infringe? Asking them to do the impossible?
TiVo might as well sit back and see the contempt ruling handed down by the judge, why bother to even try to argue with E*? Just make the point the 4 million DVRs will forever be infringing products no matter how E* tries to modify them, simple as that. Why waste their lawyers' time? You know lawyers' time is not cheap.
- 10-18-2008 02:12 PM #230
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This will be my last post on this subject, as well, until we get any rulings or rumors of rulings:
Originally Posted by Greg Bimson And if the Footprint 2.0 service is no longer active, replaced with something else, then the Footprint 2.0 service has ceased to exist. Yet most of the 4 million receivers adjudicated as infringements are still in customers hands subject to an order to disable DVR functionality in those receviers. Unlike the Footprint 2.0 service, those four million DVR's still exist, although it is now closer to 3 million that are actually active.
Originally Posted by jacmyoung
Originally Posted by Greg Bimson Do you understand what you've just said? We are four and a half years into a suit where almost four million DVR receivers were found to infringe upon a patent, and you've now just said that a contempt proceeding is not the place to prove non-infringement. So you are now saying that receivers adjudicated as infringements should be allowed to ignore a court order because DISH/SATS did something to them. But that isn't what the court order said.
Originally Posted by Greg Bimson
The court order mandated one specific action. In other words, DISH/SATS was supposed to do something, literally one thing, and yet that action would not remove those devices from the court order.I never said that the products found infringing will always be infringing. I simply said that the plaintiff must move the court to consider that the devices found infringing no longer infringe, and then get the judge to take them out of the scope of the injunction. That's what DISH/SATS tried to do with their Advanced Exchange Program. They moved the court to consider that a 721 should be replaced with an unmodified 721 and not be in the scope of the injunction. DISH/SATS then abandoned this line of inquiry to the courts, and started exchanging the infringing 721 for a 622.
Originally Posted by jacmyoung
The issue here is that if you no longer want devices adjudged as infringing to be in the scope of an injunction, you simply move the court to consider changes made to take it out of the injunction. You prove that a device, process or service that has been found as an infringement no longer applies and have the court bless it.
That is what the egg processing case was.

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