Intel hit with $949 million U.S. verdict
in VLSI computer chip patent trial
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[November 16, 2022]
By Blake Brittain
(Reuters) -A federal jury in Texas on
Tuesday said Intel Corp must pay VLSI Technology LLC $948.8 million for
infringing a VLSI patent for computer chips. |
Visitors are seen at the Intel booth during
the China Digital Entertainment Expo and Conference, also known as
ChinaJoy, in Shanghai, China July 30, 2021. Picture taken July 30, 2021.
REUTERS/Aly Song/File Photo |
VLSI, a patent-holding company affiliated with the SoftBank
Group Corp-owned private equity firm Fortress Investment Group,
argued during the six-day trial that Intel's Cascade Lake and
Skylake microprocessors violated its patent covering
improvements to data processing.
An Intel spokesperson said the company "strongly disagrees" with
the verdict and plans to appeal, and that the case is "one
example of many that shows the U.S. patent system is in urgent
need of reform."
VLSI's law firm declined to comment on the verdict.
Last March VLSI won a nearly $2.2 billion verdict from Intel in
a separate Texas trial over different chip patents, which Intel
has appealed. VLSI lost another related patent trial against
Intel the following month.
VLSI bought the patent in the latest trial from Dutch chipmaker
NXP Semiconductors NV.
An attorney for VLSI said at trial that Intel's chips cause
"millions and millions of infringements per second." The jury
awarded the company the full amount of damages it requested.
A lawyer for Mountain View, California-based Intel said during
the trial that the company's engineers developed its innovations
independently, and that its modern microprocessors would not
work with VLSI's outdated technology.
Two other patent cases brought by VLSI against Intel are still
pending in Northern California and Delaware. A trial in the
California case is set to begin in 2024.
(Reporting by Blake Brittain in Washington; Editing by David
Bario and Matthew Lewis)
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