Certicom Files Suit Against Sony For Patent Infringement
Toronto, Ontario – May 30, 2007 -- Certicom Corp. (TSX: CIC) today announced it has initiated litigation in the Eastern District of Texas, Marshall Division, against Sony Corporation, and related Sony companies, for patent infringement.
In its filing, Certicom alleged infringement concerning two United States patents used in the content protection technologies found in Sony products.
The patents-in-suit are two of Certicom's fundamental patents used in consumer electronics, in particular its world-leading version of Elliptic Curve Cryptography (ECC). In its complaint, Certicom alleges Sony has, and continues to, infringe, contribute to and induce the infringement of Certicom's patents by making, using, importing, offering for sale and selling their products in the U.S. without being licensed by Certicom to do so. These patents are related to content protection technologies, including Advanced Access Control System (AACS) used in Blu-ray and Digital Transmission Content Protection (DTCP) used in wired and wireless distribution of compression audio and video. Products affected include Playstation 3, DVD players, VAIO personal computers and certain high definition TV models and audio equipment.
“We have invested heavily in ECC research and development over many years and feel strongly that our shareholders deserve fair value from companies using our patented technology,” said Bernard Crotty, President and Chief Executive Officer. “We prefer to resolve these issues through commercial discussions and without litigation. However, at this point we are left with no alternative but to file suit.”
Certicom is represented by the Fish & Neave Intellectual Property Group of U.S.-based law firm Ropes & Gray.
About Certicom
Certicom protects the value of your content, applications and devices with government-approved security. Adopted by the National Security Agency (NSA) for classified and sensitive but unclassified government communications, Elliptic Curve Cryptography (ECC) provides the most security per bit of any known public-key scheme. As the undisputed leader in ECC, Certicom security offerings are currently licensed to more than 300 customers including General Dynamics, Motorola, Oracle, Research In Motion and Unisys. Founded in 1985, Certicom’s corporate offices are in Mississauga, ON, Canada with worldwide sales and marketing headquarters in Reston, VA and offices in the US, Canada and Europe. Visit www.certicom.com.
Related Semiconductor IP
- JESD204D Transmitter and Receiver IP
- 100G UDP IP Stack
- Frequency Synthesizer
- Temperature Sensor IP
- LVDS Driver/Buffer
Related News
- Rambus Files Patent Infringement Suit Against Use of Its Inventions by DDR2 and GDDRx Products
- Microchip Technology Files Patent Infringement Suit Against ZiLOG, Inc.
- Qualcomm Files GSM Patent Infringement Suit Against Nokia
- MEMC Conducts Seizure and Files Suit Against Soitec for Patent Infringement
Latest News
- HPC customer engages Sondrel for high end chip design
- PCI-SIG’s Al Yanes on PCIe 7.0, HPC, and the Future of Interconnects
- Ubitium Debuts First Universal RISC-V Processor to Enable AI at No Additional Cost, as It Raises $3.7M
- Cadence Unveils Arm-Based System Chiplet
- Frontgrade Gaisler Unveils GR716B, a New Standard in Space-Grade Microcontrollers