All Crackberry owners beware! :-)
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http://www.pcworld.com/news/article/0,aid,123761,00.asp

BlackBerry Users Face Shutdown
 
Judge's ruling in patent case could end service pending appeal.

Stephen Lawson, IDG News Service

Thursday, December 01, 2005


A federal judge won't hold up court proceedings in NTP's patent lawsuit
against Research In Motion, opening the door to a possible injunction that
would stop sales of BlackBerry mobile e-mail devices, and shut down
BlackBerry service, in the U.S.

RIM had filed two motions, one to enforce an agreement with NTP to settle
the case and another to stop the court proceedings while the Patent and
Trademark Office re-examines NTP's patents. Judge James Spencer of the
U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia on Wednesday
denied both motions. He ruled that the parties don't have a valid
settlement agreement and said the district court could not hold up the
case during a patent re-examination that could take years.


Years of Litigation

RIM, in Waterloo, Ontario, sells BlackBerry wireless handhelds and
operates a push e-mail service. NTP, a patent holding and licensing
company in McLean, Virginia, sued RIM in 2001 claiming the company's
devices, e-mail system and method of operating the system infringed NTP
patents. NTP won a jury verdict in 2002. In March, the companies announced
they had agreed to settle the dispute by having RIM make a $450 million
payment to NTP in exchange for a perpetual license to NTP's patents.
However, the deal fell through, as RIM thought the press release
constituted a final agreement while NTP insisted the companies had never
reached a definitive agreement.

"We would hope today's significant developments would bring them back to
the table," said James Wallace, an attorney with Wiley Rein & Fielding
LLP, in Washington, D.C., who represents NTP.

The court next will schedule briefings with the parties and set a date for
a hearing on the injunction and damages, according to the orders by Judge
Spencer. An injunction could be imposed by the end of the year, Wallace
said.

Meanwhile, RIM is seeking an appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court and expects
the high court to decide over the next few months whether to hear that
appeal, it said in a statement Wednesday.

RIM believes an injunction would be inappropriate because of the ongoing
patent re-examination, the request for Supreme Court review and other
factors, including public interest concerns over suspending BlackBerry
service, the statement said. RIM is also preparing software work-arounds
it could use if necessary to maintain BlackBerry services in the U.S., it
said.


Negotiations Likely?

Judge Spencer's order on the settlement agreement isn't surprising
considering how hard it is to enforce a settlement, intellectual property
attorney Robert Andris said in an e-mail message Wednesday.

"This ruling will almost certainly force the parties back to the
bargaining table--both have too much to lose," said Andris, a partner at
Ropers, Majeski, Kohn & Bentley, in Redwood City, California. "NTP risks
losing an established source of future revenue in the form of royalties
from RIM, and RIM risks an injunction that could shut the company down all
together."

Blackberry users don't see a possible shutdown as a looming threat right
now, according to In-Stat analyst Allen Nogee.

"I don't see a lot of fear," Nogee said. "Certainly people hope that
they'll get it worked out."

However, a settlement could hit users in its own way, he added. "The costs
have to come from somewhere," he noted. "You might see higher fees. It's
fairly expensive anyway" at $40 to $60 per month for the service, Nogee
said.


Market Challenges, Too

The ongoing legal headaches, combined with mounting competition from
mobile e-mail vendors such as Good Technology, and Intellisync, are bad
news for RIM, Nogee said. Moreover, Microsoft is a growing threat with
Windows Mobile 5.0 coming on a new Palm Treo, and Nokia, a RIM licensee,
has developed its own push e-mail technology.

As if all that isn't enough, RIM is also in a five-day hearing this week
in the U.K. regarding patent lawsuits involving Inpro Licensing.

Still, the company has a loyal following among business users who are used
to the BlackBerry experience and wouldn't readily trade it for another,
Nogee said.


Nancy Gohring of the IDG News Service contributed to this report.



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