Business

US jury orders Meta to pay US$174.5 mil for violating patents

Texas court says Facebook Live, Instagram Live infringed copyright by using Voxer tech

Updated 3 years ago · Published on 22 Sep 2022 9:42AM

US jury orders Meta to pay US$174.5 mil for violating patents
A Meta spokesman says the company believes that evidence at trial demonstrates that it had not infringed Voxer’s patents in using the latter’s live-streaming technology for its own Facebook Live and Instagram Live features. – AFP pic, September 22, 2022

SAN FRANCISCO – A US jury today ordered Meta to pay US$174.5 million (RM797 million) for violating live-streaming patents developed by a US Army veteran seeking to fix shortcomings in battlefield communications.

A trial in Texas federal court ended with jurors deciding that “live” features at Facebook and Instagram used technology patented by Voxer, a company co-founded by Tom Katis, legal documents showed.

“We believe the evidence at trial demonstrated that Meta did not infringe Voxer’s patents,” a company spokesman said in response to an inquiry from reporters.

“We intend to seek further relief, including filing an appeal.”

Katis had reenlisted in the army after the September 11, 2001 attacks in the United States and served as a Special Forces communications sergeant in Afghanistan, court filings said.

When his combat unit was ambushed in Kunar province, he felt that the systems for coordinating reinforcements, medical evacuations and more “were ill-suited for time-sensitive communications with multiple groups in a highly disruptive environment,” the complaint said.

“Mr Katis and his team began developing communications solutions in 2006 to remedy these shortcomings,” his lawyers said.

“The new technologies enabled transmission of voice and video communications with the immediacy of live communication and the reliability and convenience of messaging.”

Facebook approached San Francisco-based Voxer about potential collaboration after it launched a walkie-talkie app in 2011, but no agreement was reached, according to legal documents.

Instead, the lawsuit argued, Facebook went on to launch Facebook Live and Instagram Live, incorporating Voxer technology into the features. – AFP, September 22, 2022

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