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BlackBerry bounces back as patent office rules against NTP

BlackBerry bounces back as patent office rules against NTP

By:  Nancy Gohring  On: 01 Feb 2006 For: IDG News Service (Dublin Bureau) Creator

The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office rejected a patent that it previously awarded and that is central to the ongoing litigation against BlackBerry-maker Research In Motion Ltd. (RIM), RIM said.

The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office rejected a patent that it previously awarded and that is central to the ongoing litigation against BlackBerry-maker Research In Motion Ltd. (RIM), RIM said on Wednesday.

The USPTO rejected all claims in the patent, including five of the seven claims that last year a court ruled RIM infringed, RIM said. The move follows an initial rejection ruling on the patent made in September by the USPTO.

NTP Inc., the company suing RIM for patent infringement, will have a chance to appeal the new ruling but won't be able to submit additional information for consideration by the USPTO, RIM said.

The USPTO's ruling marks an unusual twist in the long-running lawsuit. The Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit has already decided that RIM has infringed on the patents, which now the patent office says it awarded mistakenly.

But because the patent review process and the legal proceedings happen independently of each other, it's not known yet how the patent rejection could affect RIM's future.

In late February, a judge will consider a request by NTP to order RIM to shut down its service in the U.S., based on the previous patent infringement ruling against RIM.

RIM said it believes that the USPTO will quickly continue to reexamine the rest of NTP's patents, all of which have been rejected by the USPTO in at least initial rulings.

RIM's BlackBerry devices are used by workers around the globe to wirelessly send and receive corporate e-mail.


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Nancy Gohring Nancy Gohring Nancy Gohring is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in mo... more

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