Reichman Jorgensen Wins $525M Patent Infringement Verdict for Kove


credit: Fast Co Exist

Amazon's cloud computing division has been ordered to pay $525 million in damages after a jury found it had infringed on three patents, the AP reports.

The jury in San Jose, Calif., found Amazon Web Services, aka AWS, had infringed on patents related to cloud computing that were owned by Kove IO, a company founded by two University of Chicago PhDs.

The jury also ordered AWS to pay Kove $1 million in damages for each of the patents in question.

"This decision is a testament to the power of innovation and the importance of protecting IP rights for start-up companies against tech giants," Kove CEO John Overton said in a statement from the law firm Reichman Jorgensen Lehman & Feldberg LLP, which filed the suit on behalf of Kove.

The patents in question are "methods and apparatus for generating, using, and selling cloud-based services," according to a release from RJLF.

They cover methods of cloud computing, including "methods for generating, using, and selling cloud-based services," as well as "methods for accurately predicting the performance of cloud-based services."

Amazon didn't respond to a request for comment. Read the Entire Article


Selected Grant News Headlines

A customized collection of grant news from foundations and the federal government from around the Web.

Funding Will Support Further Wine Research at Brock University

A Canadian university is preparing to open what it says will be the country's first "clean plant farm"a greenhouse-free operation where grapevines will be grown to make wine, the BBC...more

Ai Innovation Challenge

The New York Climate Exchange is putting its money where its mouth is. The nonprofit is holding its first-ever AI Innovation Challenge, and it's looking for students to come up with solutions to...more

Climate Solutions: Fg, Unido Award $32,500 To 3 Nigerian Startups

Three young entrepreneurs in Nigeria have won $32,500 for their clean-tech solutions to climate-related problems, the Guardian reports. Schrodinger Tech, Givo Africa, and E-Sam Energy Solutions...more

Caltech Turns Jellyfish into Climate Researchers

Scientists at the California Institute of Technology think they've figured out a way to turn jellyfish into ocean researchers, the Los Angeles Times reports. They're working on a "go-faster cap"...more

Can Climate Change Pakistan'S Economy?

"We are grappling with uncertainty about how to deal with yearly floods," says a 55-year-old resident of Pakistan's Shikarpur. "My home has been destroyed, cattle drowned, and yearly crops...more

Opportunities and Challenges for Financing Women'S, Children'S and Adolescents' Health in ...

Women, children, and adolescents in low-income and middle-income countries are some of the most vulnerable to the effects of climate change, and they're going to bear the worst of it, even if they...more

Future Works Announces Official Launch: Unlocking Leaps in Innovation with Bespoke Ai Solutions

If you're in the business of using artificial intelligence to improve your products and services, you may want to check out a new company called Future Works. It's a merger of two tech companies...more

Engineers Develop Innovative Battery Technology That Could Change the Future of Remote Devices

A team of researchers at the University of Utah is reporting in the journal Energy & Environmental Science that it has developed a new type of battery that could someday power a wide range of...more

Video. How Climate Change Is Threatening One of Portugal'S Best Carbon Sinks

corks aren't just good for the environment, they're good for your wallet, too. Portugal's leading cork company says its trees can capture 73 pounds of carbon dioxide for every kilogram of cork...more

The Impact Investing Case for Telecom Companies

"We are so used to being almost permanently online that we don't really appreciate what we have and do not really know what to do when we're not," Joni Mitchell wrote in her 1970s song "Big Yellow...more





The Neighbourhood Midwives, the brainchild of Annie Francis of Hampshire, offers midwifery services geared for the continuity of care to women and their families.