Dish Network Corp. and EchoStar Corp. asked an appeals court to throw out a lower court’s order that the companies stop using a digital-video recording service that the court had said infringes a TiVo Inc. patent.
Barring Dish and EchoStar’s service “is not a meaningful remedy,” Seth Waxman, an attorney for the companies, told a three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit in Washington.
Dish, the second-biggest U.S. satellite-television provider, was ordered to shut down its DVR service by U.S. District Judge David Folsom in Marshall, Texas, who ruled June 2 that it continues to infringe a patent owned by TiVo, a pioneer of digital-video recording services.
The appeals court later said it would allow Dish’s customers with their digital-video recorders to continue using the service while company appealed Folsom’s ruling.
Read the rest at Dish Asks Appeal Court to Allow Recording-Service Use (Update1) - Bloomberg.com
Barring Dish and EchoStar’s service “is not a meaningful remedy,” Seth Waxman, an attorney for the companies, told a three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit in Washington.
Dish, the second-biggest U.S. satellite-television provider, was ordered to shut down its DVR service by U.S. District Judge David Folsom in Marshall, Texas, who ruled June 2 that it continues to infringe a patent owned by TiVo, a pioneer of digital-video recording services.
The appeals court later said it would allow Dish’s customers with their digital-video recorders to continue using the service while company appealed Folsom’s ruling.
Read the rest at Dish Asks Appeal Court to Allow Recording-Service Use (Update1) - Bloomberg.com