RIM Guilty of Patent InfringementRIM Guilty of Patent Infringement

Mformation Technologies wins out in legal battle over patent relating to mobile device management

July 16, 2012

1 Min Read

SAN FRANCISCO -- The US Federal District Court of Northern California found Canadian company Research in Motion (RIM) guilty on Friday, by unanimous jury verdict, of infringing Mformation Technologies, Inc.'s patent related to wireless mobile device management. The software found to infringe Mformation's patent is RIM's BlackBerry Enterprise Server (BES), used by corporate enterprise customers to manage and secure their BlackBerry devices. The court awarded Mformation $147.2 million dollars in damages based on past sales of BES-connected BlackBerry smartphones in the US from late 2008, when the lawsuit was filed, through the trial date. This award does not include future royalties, past and future US government sales, or past and future non-US sales.

“Mformation created the mobile device management category in the late 1990s and was innovating in this area well before most of the market understood the fundamental importance of wireless mobility management.

Our patents are a core part of our innovative products, and are fundamental to the methods used for device management in the market today,” said patent inventor and Mformation founder/CTO Rakesh Kushwaha. “We ensured that our early innovations in device management were put through rigorous legal assessment by applying for patents on these innovations in the United States and abroad. Now these patented technologies are central to many critical mobile device management tasks being used by operators, service providers and enterprises around the world, including remote device configuration, lock/wipe and application management. With a total of 27 patents granted or pending, our IP portfolio will allow us to continue to shape the future of the Mobile Device Management market.”

Mformation Technologies Inc.

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