Down for the count: Dish to pay TiVo $104 million

By Scott M. Fulton, III | Published October 6, 2008, 9:28 PM

The nation's highest court today shut the door on EchoStar's and Dish Network's petitions for a final appeal of their patent infringement case. Now all they can hope is for mercy from TiVo, if they are to continue producing DVRs in the US.

After the US Supreme Court declined this afternoon to hear the appeal of Dish Network and its former parent EchoStar in a long-running patent infringement case, EchoStar decided it had no other option: It's paying TiVo $104 million, in hopes that this will settle the companies' disputes over whether Dish Network software infringed on TiVo patents.

"Because of the Supreme Court's decision, we will pay TiVo approximately $104 million (the amount the jury awarded in 2006 plus interest)," reads EchoStar's statement from earlier today. "The money is in an escrow account and will be released to TiVo in the next few days."

When this case began, EchoStar was Dish Network's parent company; now, it's merely a part-owner and business partner.

In its public statement, EchoStar said it has already implemented a "software workaround" for the "Time Warp" functionality which TiVo said infringed on its patents. Though some are classifying the $104 million payment as a settlement, TiVo's last statement on the matter today -- issued about a half-hour before EchoStar's -- made it clear that TiVo would continue to seek a permanent injunction on the sale of Dish Network DVRs. An injunction was granted in the spring of 2006, but was stayed by the Federal Circuit that August.

There's no legal impediment now for a judge to lift that stay, even if the $104 million goes through as EchoStar promises.

So this could very well be the worst of the no fewer than 28 possible negative scenarios that Dish reported to the SEC last August. In the event that a judge lifted a stay of the injunction, Dish warned, "we would be at a significant disadvantage to our competitors who could offer this functionality and, while we would attempt to provide that functionality using different technology and/or manufacturers other than EchoStar, the adverse affect on our business could be material. We could also have to pay substantial additional damages."

The $104 million amount is about 31% of what Dish Network -- now separate from EchoStar -- earned in operating income in its second fiscal quarter.

Comments

View comments by with a score of at least

total travesty this Tivo right to patents thing...only because before the brand came out, pc enthusiasts at home could build their own units to do the same. So props to getting a patent on the idea, but it really does suck...should have never been allowed to be patented by Tivo, but someone (anyone) in the PC industry.

Score: 0

|

Screw Dish; after being ignored as a customer and then harassed by their telemarketers after I dropped them that company can spiral straight into the pits of Hades for all I care.

Score: 0

|

Betcha paying a mere million to some good coders could have created an open source solution! Best way around idiotic patents? Code your own.

Score: 0

|

Just to let you know, it doesn't matter if you code your own. If someone designs something, and then gets a patent, they own that design. If by chance, you locked yourself in a room, came up with the exact same design, and then used it. It doesn't matter. The other guy patented it first, and thus, can sue you

Score: 0

|

Forget the 104 million, TiVo needs to get Dish Network to support the series 3 TiVo's with CableCARDS. Looks like this might be in Dish's best interest too.

Score: 0

|

big pay out?

no problem.

rate increases for dish customers!

Score: 0

|

Nice - TiVo needed this!

Score: 0

|

A real beta process at work: Mozilla fires up Firefox 3.6 Beta 2

In the clearest sign yet that public input really does help the development process, a flurry of bug detections provoked Mozilla to release Beta 2 of the next Firefox.

Snow Leopard and Windows 7 still can't crack the netbook problem

Apple has killed Atom support in OS X 10.6.2 and Windows 7 Starter Edition is stripped of "basic" functionality.

Microsoft's Top 3 advances in Exchange Server 2010

The latest round of changes launched today will impact how admins deliver services to e-mail recipients, and how much companies will pay along the way.

Firefox turns five: Thanks for giving us a choice

Carmi Levy | Wide Angle Zoom: No longer the phoenix rising from the ashes, Mozilla has carried on more than just Netscape's legacy.

Kindle for PC opens in beta, underwhelms

Amazon has opened the beta of Kindle for PC, a companion to the Kindle, but little else.

European ministers approve watered-down 'neutral net' language

The latest provision in the EU's telecoms regulatory framework would let businesses cancel individuals' Internet access, if they go to court first.

It's the US vs. the EU over Oracle+Sun and the meaning of 'open source'

Now that the EU is a virtual country, the US Justice Dept. is taking a stand in favor of its view -- and against the EC's -- that MySQL will survive under Oracle.

Qualcomm: $1.3 billion Samsung licensing deal unrelated to fair trade violations

Samsung has come to a 15-year licensing deal with Qualcomm over 3G and 4G wireless technology.

Nokia's 'limited number' of recalled chargers exceeds 14 million

Today, the Finnish phone maker has begun a recall of mobile phone chargers that are a shock hazard.

Ubuntu 9.10 upgraders report frustration

For those Wine aficionados out there, beware of the remote possibility that your Linux system could be infected by Windows-seeking malware.

Supreme Court considers patentability of abstract methods today

Can software that executes a formula for a business process qualify for federal patents? An appeals court already said no, and inventors are making their case.