Uniloc USA, Inc. et al v. Electronic Arts, Inc.

  1. October 14, 2015

    EA Digs In Heels Countering Uniloc Sanctions Bid

    Electronic Arts Inc. and its attorneys doubled down Tuesday on their efforts to topple a $5 million patent verdict awarded to Uniloc USA Inc., accusing Uniloc of resorting to a "procedural high wire act" by requesting sanctions in response to EA's motion to delay or vacate the judgment.

  2. October 01, 2015

    Uniloc Calls EA's Arguments Against Sanctions 'Frivolous'

    Uniloc USA Inc. on Thursday ripped Electronic Arts Inc.'s bid to avoid sanctions for allegedly filing frivolous motions in order to escape a $4.9 million patent verdict, saying EA's response to the call for sanctions is flawed and introduced a different argument than the one it posed for post-judgment relief.

  3. September 22, 2015

    EA Slams 'Baseless' Sanctions Bid In Fight Over $5M IP Verdict

    Electronic Arts Inc. and its attorneys shot back on Monday at Uniloc USA Inc.'s motion for sanctions against them in a security software patent suit, saying the "baseless" motion improperly attempts to chill legitimate litigation and is premised on demonstrably false allegations.

  4. September 09, 2015

    Uniloc Wants EA, Attys Sanctioned After $5M Patent Verdict

    Uniloc USA Inc. has asked a Texas federal court to sanction Electronic Arts Inc. and its Keker & Van Nest LLP and Potter Minton PC attorneys for filing "legally and factually frivolous" motions to escape Uniloc's $4.9 million patent verdict, saying EA's only goal is to delay the case.

  5. July 01, 2015

    EA Says Conflicting Testimony Undermines $4.9M IP Verdict

    Electronic Arts Inc. made another bid in Texas federal court Tuesday to escape a jury's $4.9 million verdict in a patent infringement case, arguing a key expert offered conflicting testimony and that Uniloc Luxembourg SA secured the verdict through "fraud, misrepresentation or misconduct."

  6. April 23, 2015

    Game Over For EA's Challenge To $4.9M IP Verdict

    A Texas federal judge on Thursday rejected Electronic Arts Inc.'s bid to quash a jury's $4.9 million verdict for infringing an anti-piracy software patent held by Uniloc Luxembourg SA, ruling that while Uniloc may have tweaked its strategy, it remained consistent throughout trial.

  7. December 05, 2014

    EA Hit With $5M Verdict In Security Software IP Battle

    Electronic Arts Inc. must pay $4.9 million for infringing an anti-piracy software registration patent registered by Uniloc Luxembourg SA, in one of a slew of lawsuits filed by the computer security company.