Quote:
Originally Posted by Thomas22 ...2. At the September 4 hearing, the Court will also consider the damages that TiVo incurred2
during the period that the injunction was stayed. |
I don't know how you got that idea, the court order of the day for the 9/4 meeting mentioned no such thing.
I personally would like to see DISH and Tivo both cross license their patents and work together, only because they are two like minded companies both cater to the end users more so than caving into the demands of the networks and the studios, unlike cablecos and DirecTV.
But unfortunately the train has left the station a long time ago, and it is less likely today than ever DISH will talk to Tivo.
The latest court order clearly put the case on the path for a customary contempt proceeding, during which the colorable difference issue will be discussed (because all new DISH DVRs are mentioned in the order), and I have little doubt in my mind the DISH new software is more than colorably different compared to the old, infringing software, meaning DISH will not be in contempt.
Tivo will have a long way to go (another full trial) to try again to find DISH's new software still infringes, and the next trial of course will be much more difficult to prove, even if Tivo can survive the time and cost required to last through this new trial.
Because this time, unlike the last time, DISH did commit large resources for over a year to develope the new software and to ensure it no longer infringed on Tivo's patent. The new software could still infringe, but the likelihood of such will be much less than the last time, especially consider that DISH had patent lawyers seriously looked at the new software to make sure it no longer infringed before it was downloaded on the DVRs.