Friday, 2 November 2012

Tech: Microsoft vs Google trial raises issues over secrecy

Tech: Microsoft vs Google trial raises issues over secrecy

Google and Microsoft, like rivals embroiled in smartphone patent wars, are eager to keep sensitive business information under wraps - in this case, the royalty deals they cut with other companies on patented technology. Microsoft asked for similar protections in a court filing late on Thursday.

Such royalty rates, though, are the central issue in this trial, which begins November 13 in Seattle.

U.S. District Judge James Robart has granted requests to block many pre-trial legal briefs from public view. Though he warned he may get tougher on the issue, the nature of the case raises the possibility that even his final decision might include redacted, or blacked-out, sections.

Legal experts are increasingly troubled by the level of secrecy that has become commonplace in intellectual property cases where overburdened judges often pay scant attention to the issue.

Widespread sealing of documents infringes on the basic American legal principle that court should be public, says law professor, Dennis Crouch, and encourages companies to use a costly, tax-payer funded resource to resolve their disputes.

"There are plenty of cases that have settled because one party didn't want their information public," said Crouch, an intellectual property professor at University of Missouri School of Law.

Tech companies counter that they should not be forced to reveal private business information as the price for having their day in court.

The law does permit confidential information to be kept from public view in some circumstances, though companies must show the disclosure would be harmful.

Google argues that revelations about licensing negotiations would give competitors "additional leverage and bargaining power and would lead to an unfair advantage."

Robart has not yet ruled on Google and Microsoft's requests, which, in the case of Google includes not only keeping documents under seal, but also clearing the courtroom during crucial testimony.

It is also unclear whether Robart will redact any discussion of royalty rates in his final opinion. The judge, who will decide this part of the case without a jury, did not respond to requests for comment.

NOT PAYING ATTENTION


Apple Inc and Microsoft Corp have been litigating in courts around the world against Google Inc and partners like Samsung Electronics Co Ltd, which use the Android operating system on their mobile devices.

Apple contends that Android is basically a copy of its iOS smartphone software, and Microsoft holds patents that it contends cover a number of Android features.

Google bought Motorola for $12.5 billion, partly to use its large portfolio of communications patents as a bargaining chip against its competitors.

Robart will decide how big a royalty Motorola deserves from Microsoft for a license on some Motorola wireless and video patents.

Apple, for its part, is set to square off against Motorola on Monday in Madison, Wisconsin, in a case that involves many of the same issues.

In Wisconsin, Apple and Motorola have filed most court documents entirely under seal. U.S. District Judge Barbara Crabb did not require them to seek advance permission to file them secretly, nor did she mandate that the companies make redacted copies available for the public.

Judges have broad discretion in granting requests to seal documents. The legal standard for such requests can be high, but in cases where both sides want the proceedings to be secret, judges have little incentive to thoroughly review secrecy requests.

In Apple's Northern California litigation against Samsung, both parties also sought to keep many documents under seal. After Reuters challenged those secrecy requests, on grounds it wanted to report financial details, U.S. District Judge Lucy Koh ordered both companies to disclose a range of information they considered secret - including profit margins on individual products - but not licensing deals. Apple and Samsung are appealing the disclosure order.

In response to questions from Reuters last week, Judge Crabb in Wisconsin, who will also decide the case without a jury, acknowledged she had not been paying attention to how many documents were being filed under seal. Federal judges in Madison will now require that parties file redacted briefs, she said, though as of Wednesday, Apple and Motorola were still filing key briefs entirely under seal.

"Just because there is a seed or kernel of confidential information doesn't mean an entire 25-page brief should be sealed," said Bernard Chao, an intellectual property professor at University of Denver Sturm College of Law.

Crabb promised that the upcoming trial would be open.

"Whatever opinion I make is not going to be redacted," she told Reuters in an interview.

CHECKING THE COMPS


Microsoft sued Motorola two years ago, saying Motorola had promised to license its so-called "standards essential" patents at a fair rate, in exchange for the technology being adopted as a norm industrywide. But by demanding roughly $4 billion a year in revenue, Microsoft says Motorola broke its promise.

Robart will sort out what a reasonable royalty for those standards patents should be, partly by reviewing deals Motorola struck with other companies such as IBM and Research in Motion - much like an appraiser checking comparable properties to figure out whether a home is priced right.

In this case, though, the public may not be able to understand exactly what figures Robart is comparing. Representatives for Microsoft and Google declined to comment.

In its brief, Microsoft said licensing terms could be sealed without the need to clear the courtroom.

"Permitting redaction of this information will minimize the harm to Microsoft and third parties while also giving due consideration to the public policies favoring disclosure," the company argued.

IBM and RIM have also asked Robart to keep licensing information secret.

Chao doesn't think Robart will ultimately redact his own ruling, even though it may include discussion of the specific royalty rates. "I can't imagine that," he said.

Most judges cite lack of resources and overflowing dockets as the reason why they don't scrutinize secrecy requests more closely, especially when both parties support them.

In Wisconsin, Crabb said that even though she will now require litigants to ask permission to file secret documents, it is highly unlikely that she will actually read those arguments - unless someone else flags a problem.

"We're paddling madly to stay afloat," Crabb said.

The Wisconsin case in U.S. District Court, Western District of Wisconsin is Apple Inc. vs. Motorola Mobility Inc., 11-cv-178. The Seattle case in U.S. District Court, Western District of Washington is Microsoft Corp. vs. Motorola Inc., 10-cv-1823.

Tech: HTC One X+ launched in India for Rs forty,190, comes with jelly egg and a quicker processor

Tech: HTC One X+ launched in India for Rs forty,190, comes with jelly egg and a quicker processor

HTC has launched the One X+ in India for Rs 40,190. The One X+ is essentially an upgraded version of the One X which was the company’s flagship smartphone for the first half of the year.


The One X+ features a faster Nvidia Tegra 3 quad-core processor clocked at 1.7GHz, which HTC claims is 27 percent faster than the one on the One X. It retains the same beautiful 4.7-inch S-LCD 2 display, which has a resolution of 1280×720 pixels and has 1GB of RAM. HTC has upgraded the internal memory to 64GB and has added a larger 2,100-mAh battery that improves the battery life by up to 37 percent over the One X. Additionally, users will also get 25 GB of free Dropbox cloud storage.

Photography wise it retains the same 8-megapixel camera with the image sense chip but adds an upgraded 1.6-megapixel front facing camera. Notably, it even has NFC and runs on Android 4.1 Jelly Bean with HTC’s Sense 4 overlay laden on top. It will be available in two colors – Polar White and Stealth Black.

Tech: Micromax Launches mechanical man four.0 Superfone pel A90S For Rs thirteen,000

Tech: Micromax Launches mechanical man four.0 Superfone pel A90S For Rs thirteen,000

ICS French telephone sports a four.3" Super AMOLED screen, eight mp camera, and one gigahertz dual-core electronic equipment.
Micromax has added the Superfone Pixel A90S to its ever-growing Android lineup. The new entrant is a successor of the Pixel A90, and comes with Android 4.0 (Ice cream Sandwich) out of the box. Like its predecessor, it offers dual-SIM (GSM + GSM) functionality. In terms of specs, the A90S comes with a 1 GHz dual-core CPU and a 4.3" Super AMOLED screen that renders 480x800 pixels with 262K colours. 

Here's the complete list of features:

 
  •     4.3" Super AMOLED multi-touch screen with 480x800 pixels, 262K colours.
  •     8 mp auto-focus camera with flash.
  •     Camera Features: Panoramic Image Capture, Multi-shot, Night Vision.
  •     0.3 mp front camera.
  •     1 GHz dual-core CPU, 512 MB of RAM.
  •     512 MB of internal storage, MicroSD card slot (up to 32 GB).
  •     Wi-Fi, Bluetooth 4.0, GPS.
  •     Micro-USB port, Orientation sensor.
  •     Android 4.0 (ICS).
  •     Dual-SIM, dual-GSM (900, 1800 MHz); 3G (2100 MHz).
  •     SAR Value: At the head - 1.556 W/Kg, At the body - 0.923 W/Kg.
  •     5" (l) x 2.6 (w) x 0.4" (9.8 mm) (d), 118 grams.
  •     1600 mAh battery; 5 hours of talk time (4 hours on 3G).

From the specs sheet, the only difference between the Pixel A90 and the A90S is the upgraded dual-core CPU in the latter. The A90S is priced at Rs 13,000, and is currently available at ManiacStore.com.

Tech: Microsoft Tests Smartphone With Asia Suppliers

Tech: Microsoft Tests Smartphone With Asia Suppliers

TAIPEI—Microsoft house. is functioning with element suppliers in Asia to check its own smartphone style, folks at home with the case aforesaid, suggesting the computer-software large is more and more adopting a variation of a business model favored by rival Apple INC., that styles computers and phones along side the computer code that powers them.

Officials at some of Microsoft's parts suppliers, who declined to be named, said the Redmond, Wash.-based company is testing a smartphone design but isn't sure if a product will go into mass production.

One person said that the screen of Microsoft's smartphone currently being tested measures between four and five inches. Apple's newest smartphone, the iPhone 5, has a four-inch screen, while Samsung's Galaxy S III phone has a 4.8-inch screen.

Speculation has swirled for months that Microsoft would make its own smartphone, after Microsoft unveiled in June its first homegrown computing device, the Surface tablet. The Surface went on sale last week, and it remains controversial among longtime Microsoft allies, some of whom believe the company is unfairly competing with their personal-computer models running Microsoft's Windows software.

In an interview with The Wall Street Journal on Monday, Microsoft Chief Executive Steve Ballmer declined to comment on whether Microsoft would make its own smartphone.

"We're quite happy this holiday [season] going to market hard with Nokia, Samsung and HTC," said Mr. Ballmer, referring to companies making smartphones powered by Microsoft software. "Whether we had a plan to do something different or we didn't have a plan I wouldn't comment in any dimension."

A Microsoft spokesman declined to comment.

If Microsoft pushes ahead with its mobile phone, it would underscore how far Microsoft has moved away from its long-standing practice of making software and leaving decisions about design, features and marketing of the computing hardware to partners such as Hewlett-Packard Co. or Samsung Electronics Co.

In addition to the Surface, Microsoft produces the Xbox videogame consoles and it increasingly has dictated how Windows-powered PCs and smartphones made by its partners look, perform and are pitched to consumers.

As it does so, Microsoft pulls from a modified playbook of Apple—whose hardware-plus-software approach Microsoft officials long have scorned. Google Inc., whose Android smartphone software is the market-share leader, owns cellphone maker Motorola Mobility Holdings Inc. even as outside companies such as Samsung also power their smartphones with Android.

Smartphones running Microsoft's two-year-old Windows Phone operating software for cellphones haven't sold well, and Microsoft may want to leave itself an option to test whether its own phone would spur sales.

Stephen Elop, the chief executive of Nokia Corp., two weeks ago on a conference call said he would welcome a Microsoft-made phone because he believed it would be a "stimulant" to sales for all companies making Windows Phone devices. In the conference call with analysts, Mr. Elop said he wasn't informed about Microsoft's plans.

The market for smartphones is rapidly expanding with demand particularly strong in China and other emerging markets. Research firm IDC expects global smartphone shipments to grow 38.8% this year to 686 million units.

In 2010, Microsoft launched and then quickly killed a line of youth-oriented smartphones called the Kin. The phones carried Microsoft's brand, but were manufactured by Japanese electronics company Sharp Corp.

News about Microsoft working on its own smartphone was reported earlier by several technology blogs.