Intel is taking legal action against a spider's web of patent holders from SoftBank-owned Fortress Investment Group and its network of subsidiaries.
The Japanese megacorp bought the group for $3.3bn in late 2017, and Chipzilla claims Fortress has become more aggressive in an effort to justify its sales price to its new owners.
Intel is suing the company under the Sherman and Clayton antitrust acts to "prevent and restrain Defendants' anticompetitive conduct".
Intel argues in court documents (PDF) that Fortress is asserting patent rights that would not have been considered enforceable by their original owners.
The documents also claim that Fortress has no interest in licensing these patents in the normal way, but prefers to boost the value of its patent portfolio by linking worthless patents with valuable ones.
This war chest of aggregated patents, Intel alleges, allows Fortress to bring case after case against a company until it folds or pays well over the market value for the intellectual property held to stop the litigation.
This strategy, Intel claims, makes it more likely that weak or unenforceable patents are found to be valid in the courts because they are aggregated with patents that may have some merit. It also gives Fortress the opportunity to gain sets of patents that could provide alternatives to each other, which damages competition in the same way that a merger of competing companies can.
(Score: 3, Interesting) by Nuke on Tuesday October 29 2019, @07:57PM (1 child)
When was that? I devised and made an intermittent wiper device for my car in 1970. I had never seen the idea anywhere else, but it seemed an obvious consequence of being fed up with turning the wipers on and off briefly during light rain. I think the whole idea of patents is ridiculous.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday October 29 2019, @10:19PM
Idea 1963, first Ford car 1969, lawsuit 1978-1990. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Kearns#Intermittent_wipers [wikipedia.org]