Intellectual Property
May 22, 2013
San Jose company cannot sue without offering license first, judge rules
A federal judge ruled Monday that San Jose-based LSI Corp. acted wrongly when it sued a Taiwanese company in the International Trade Commission for patent infringement without first offering an opportunity to take a license.




By Kevin Lee
Daily Journal Staff Writer
A federal judge ruled Monday that San Jose-based LSI Corp. acted wrongly when it sued a Taiwanese company in the International Trade Commission for patent infringement without first offering an opportunity to license the networking patents. U.S. District Judge Ronald M. Whyte's opinion prohibits LSI from acting upon any potential preliminary injunction it receives against Realtek in the ongoing ITC proceeding. The San Jose-based Whyte ...
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