Newstral
Article
Ars Technica on 2015-02-18 01:52
Patent troll claims to own Bluetooth, scores $15.7M verdict against Samsung
Related news
- Company with no product wins $533M verdict vs. Apple, says it’s no “patent troll”Ars Technica
- Newegg sues patent troll that dropped its caseArs Technica
- “Shopping cart” patent troll shamelessly keeps litigating, and losingArs Technica
- “Teledildonics” patent troll backs down from lawsuit against KickstarterArs Technica
- Patent troll claims HTTPS websites infringe crypto patent, sues everybodyArs Technica
- In a first, East Texas judge hits patent troll with attorneys’ feesArs Technica
- Wait… we sued who?! Patent troll drops case one day after Newegg’s lawyer callsArs Technica
- New patent lawsuits down, driven by drop in East Texas “troll” casesArs Technica
- “Corporate troll” wins $3M verdict against Apple for ring-silencing patentArs Technica
- Patent troll that pounded Google for $85 million beaten in round twoArs Technica
- Scan-to-e-mail patent troll loses appeal, can’t avoid Vermont court caseArs Technica
- Major US patent troll sues Google and Samsung in a surprising venue: LondonArs Technica
- Judge tosses jury’s $533M patent verdict against Apple, orders new trialArs Technica
- Patent troll lawsuits head toward all-time highArs Technica
- Patent troll Intellectual Ventures faces off against MotoArs Technica
- AT&T lawyers don’t read court docket, can’t appeal $40M patent verdictArs Technica
- Cisco gets a big patent win despite Supreme Court loss, overturns $64M verdictArs Technica
- Samsung patent counterstrike against Nvidia falls flatArs Technica
- Podcast 'patent troll' faces setbackBBC
- U.S. appeals court tosses patent verdict against Applemetro.us