Apple wins appeal to keep US$308 million US patent verdict at bay

Apple wins appeal to keep US$308 million US patent verdict at bay
The Apple Inc logo is seen at the entrance to the Apple store in Brussels, Belgium July 2, 2021. REUTERS/Yves Herman

A US appeals court on Friday affirmed a decision to throw out a US$308.5 million jury verdict against Apple for allegedly infringing a patent related to digital rights management.

The US Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit in Washington, DC, upheld an East Texas federal judge’s ruling that Personalized Media Communications LLC’s patent was invalid because the company engaged in misconduct before the US Patent and Trademark Office.

PMC declined to comment on the decision. Representatives for Apple did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

PMC, a patent licensing company, first sued Apple for infringing several patents in 2015. An East Texas jury said in August 2021 that the FairPlay software used in Apple’s iTunes and App Store to decrypt movies, music and apps infringed one of the patents and awarded the company US$308.5 million in damages.

District Judge Rodney Gilstrap overturned the verdict four months later. He said PMC’s patent was unenforceable because the company had used a “deliberate strategy of delay” in applying for the patent, representing a “conscious and egregious misuse of the statutory patent system.”

Gilstrap said PMC had used an improper “submarine” strategy that some applicants employed before 1995 to delay patents from becoming public until a market developed for their invention.

The Federal Circuit affirmed Gilstrap in a 2-1 ruling, finding that PMC’s “inequitable scheme to extend its patent rights” had prejudiced Apple.

Source: Reuters