October 19th, 2008 by
Filed under: Desktops
As much as we were hoping to see Steve Jobs and… well, anyone from Psystar settle things in the squared circle, we suppose we’ll have to live with a much more peaceful end to this madness. Rather than spending wads of cash on lawyers for no good reason, the two outfits have agreed to use alternative dispute resolution in order to wrap this scuffle up and move forward. As you may know, ADR is a private process where both parties meet outside of a trial in order to reach some sort of agreement, though we imagine the outcome will be pretty public depending on Psystar’s ability / inability to continue fulfilling orders. We’re told that the process will get going before February of 2009, and the full fling (PDF) with the US district court in the Northern District of California is linked below if you’ve suddenly found yourself with entirely too much free time.
[Via The Mac Observer]
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Posted in Apple, lawsuit, legal, sue, suit, agreement, psystar, open computer, OpenComputer, adr, Alternative Dispute Resolution, AlternativeDisputeResolution | No Comments »
October 7th, 2008 by
Filed under: Robots, Wearables
If you’ll recall, Tsukuba University professor Yoshiyuki Sankai designed a robotic suit called HAL-5 a few years ago. Production of this handicap-overcomer began back in 2006, and as promised, manufacturer Cyberdyne (not to be confused with Cyberdyne Systems, best known for its genocidal Skynet AI and army of Terminator robots) is finally ready to crank it out in large numbers. Starting this Friday, HAL will be available for rent in Japan at the modest rate of $2,200 per month. Sankai hopes it will prove useful to the elderly and folks with disabilities by providing super-strength mechanical assistance when they send brain signals to move their limbs. HAL may be used for good but it won’t be used for awesome; Sankai has turned down military-types who’ve expressed interest.
[Thanks, Evan]
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Posted in suit, hal, cyberdyne, hal 5, mass production, robot suit | No Comments »
September 28th, 2008 by
Filed under: Gaming, Peripherals
Way back in December of 2006, NVIDIA and AMD were both pegged for potential price fixing, and nearly two years later it seems it’ll finally be paying the piper. A settlement agreement is detailed in a recently filed 8-K form, which asserts that NVIDIA would pay $850,000 into a total fund of up to $1.7 million, with AMD / ATI probably left to make up the rest. Of note, the 8-K filing does mention that all of this is still “subject to court approval,” but it’s likely that the green light will eventually be given. Outside of that, we’re also informed that NVIDIA will be handing over $112,500 to the individual plaintiffs who brought the case to court. Well, we’re glad that’s settled.
[Via CustomPC]
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Posted in nvidia, court, lawsuit, legal, settlement, sue, suit, graphics, class action, ClassAction, GPU, Graphics card, GraphicsCard, price fixing, PriceFixing, price-fixing | No Comments »
September 24th, 2008 by
Filed under: Cellphones
We could start off by telling you just how much this decision will hurt Qualcomm and just how celebratory the mood must be at Broadcom, but instead, we’ll key you in on this quote: “The appeals court also rejected Qualcomm’s request for a new trial.” At long last, we may have actually heard the end of what has seemed like a never-ending battle between the aforementioned parties. Today, a US Appeals court upheld an earlier ruling that Qualcomm had indeed infringed upon two Broadcom patents while ruling that a third patent in question was invalid. The ruling is obviously a huge win for Broadcom, who will soon be bathing in Benjamins as Qualcomm is forced to pay mandatory royalties for the chips it sells during the “sunset period” ending January 31, 2009.
[Via Reuters]
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Posted in patent, patents, court, lawsuit, legal, sue, suit, qualcomm, Broadcom, patent infringement, PatentInfringement, 3g, wcdma | No Comments »
August 10th, 2008 by
Filed under: Misc. Gadgets, Transportation, Wireless
Defcon already delivered by exposing California’s FasTrak toll system for the security hole that it is, but that’s not nearly all that’s emerging from the Las Vegas exploitation conference. For starters, a plethora of medical device security researchers have purportedly figured out a way to wirelessly control pacemakers, theoretically allowing those with the proper equipment to “induce the test mode, drain the device battery and turn off therapies.” Of course, it’s not (quite) as simple as just buzzing a remote and putting someone six feet under, but it’s a threat worth paying attention to. In related news, a trio of MIT students who were scheduled to give a speech on how to hack CharlieCards to get free rides on Boston’s T subway were stifled by a temporary restraining order that the university snagged just before the expo. Don’t lie, you’re intrigued — hit up the links below for all the nitty-gritty.
Read - Pacemaker hack
Read - Massachusetts Transit Authority sues MIT hackers
Read - Restraining order on said hackers
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Posted in university, hack, lawsuit, sue, suit, mit, health, medical, pacemaker, mass transit, MassTransit, black hat, Black Hat 2008, BlackHat, BlackHat2008, defcon, defcon 2008, Defcon2008 | No Comments »
August 8th, 2008 by
Filed under: Gaming
A select bunch of Transmeta investors may not completely agree with how the outfit is being managed, but one thing’s for sure: it’s bringing in some serious coin on this deal. During a brief timeout from counting those stacks of Benjamins handed over by Intel, it decided to license its Long Run and LongRun 2 technologies (among “other intellectual property”) to NVIDIA for a cool $25 million. Additionally, the agreement grants NVIDIA a “non-exclusive and fully paid-up license” to all of Transmeta’s patents and patent applications. Unfortunately, it’s still unclear how exactly this will end up affecting NVIDIA fanboys (and girls), but we’ll go out on a limb and suggest that a mobile GTX 280 with a remarkably low power draw is just around the bend.
[Via SlashGear]
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Posted in nvidia, court, lawsuit, legal, settlement, sue, suit, graphics, license, licensing, transmeta, payment, Long Run, LongRun, LongRun2 | No Comments »
July 31st, 2008 by
Filed under: Wearables
We’re not even going to front — some seriously bizarre air conditioning-related gizmos have emerged from the great nation of Japan. The latest concoction to deal with heat wave side effects actually has nothing to do with keeping folks cool; rather, AOKI’s deodorant suits are designed to keep businessmen suffering from Hyperhidrosis adequately fresh. Most of the details are lost in (machine) translation, but all you need to know is that these outfits “suck out the smell of sweat using a silver ion.” Yeah, that’s totally worth the ¥61,950 ($575) asking price.
[Via CrunchGear, image courtesy of ListVerse]
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Posted in japan, japanese, suit, odor, smell, deodorant, ac, air condition, air conditioning, AirCondition, AirConditioning, body odor, BodyOdor, stink | No Comments »
July 7th, 2008 by
Filed under: Robots
Troy Hurtubise has certainly auctioned off a few grizzly fighting suits before (not to mention the Halo-inspired Trojan), but this is likely your one and only shot at procuring the original Project Grizzly Mk VI suit worn by Troy himself in the generally unknown cult classic Project Grizzly. The suit is being offered to the highest bidder as the Grizzly Proof exhibit in Toronto shuts down, and while the starting bid sits at $500, it’ll take upwards of 40 grand before Mr. Hurtubise’s debts associated with the suit are cleared. C’mon, you know that’s all the reason you need to throw your hat into the ring.
[Thanks, Cantraider]
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Posted in suit, auction, ebay, exoskeleton, project grizzly, ProjectGrizzly, Troy Hurtubise, TroyHurtubise | No Comments »
June 6th, 2008 by
Filed under: HDTV, Home Entertainment

Far from being the first time Time Warner Cable has upset its subscriber base, the Los Angeles city attorney’s office is pulling a Dee Snider and refusing to take the carrier’s lackluster service anymore. In a 25-page lawsuit, the city is alleging that the operator “caused major havoc and distress” two years ago when it “failed to live up to its part of the franchise cable agreement requiring that a company answer subscribers’ calls within 30 seconds and begin repairs of service interruptions within 24 hours of notification in 90% of its calls for service.” The suit claims that no more than 60% of customer calls were answered in time, and cable / internet service was said to be “so intermittent and inferior in quality that it was not much better than no service at all.” Not surprisingly, TWC representatives chose not to comment on the whole ordeal, but the outfit could face civil penalties of tens of millions of crisp US dollars in the case. Should’ve picked up the phone, TWC — it would’ve been easier than picking up this tab.
[Image courtesy of Web 2 Concepts, thanks Scott]
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Posted in problem, court, lawsuit, legal, suit, service, cable, sued, california, twc, customer service, CustomerService, time warner cable, TimeWarnerCable, Los Angeles, LosAngeles, quality | No Comments »
May 29th, 2008 by
Filed under: Wearables
We’ve certainly seen musical gizmos meshed with wearables before, but the Pacer Suit doesn’t even pretend to be anything other than a cacophonic jumpsuit (with a beastly set of kneepads). Laced with sensors and integrated speakers, the suit sends out tones based on movements from the person within. Heck, there’s even a headphone jack if you’re looking to be courteous while bustin’ a move on the subway. In case you couldn’t guess, the creation is still a concept for now, but we could totally see this becoming a cult classic in the underground scene.
[Via Gadgetremote]
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Posted in Music, suit, art, design, concept, musicthing, pacer suit, PacerSuit | No Comments »
May 28th, 2008 by
Filed under: Desktops, Laptops
According to a state judge in Albany, New York, Dell and its financing arm “engaged in deceptive business practices related to financing promotions for its computers and technical support.” The decision, which was just released yesterday, contained quotes from NY State Supreme Court Justice Joseph C. Teresi stating that the Round Rock mega-corp dabbled in “repeated misleading, deceptive and unlawful business conduct, including false and deceptive advertising of financing promotions and the terms of warranties, fraudulent, misleading and deceptive practices in credit financing and failure to provide warranty service and rebates.” The ruling stemmed from a lawsuit filed by NY Attorney General Andrew Cuomo last year, and while Mr. Cuomo was understandably delighted with the outcome, a Dell spokesman made clear that it didn’t agree with the decision and it would be “defending its position vigorously.” As for potential restitution for NYers, we won’t know any of that until further proceedings are held.
[Thanks, Nate]
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Posted in New York, problem, advertising, dell, court, lawsuit, legal, sue, suit, advertisement, business, industry, NewYork, finance, deception, deceptive, false advertisement, FalseAdvertisement, financing, misleading | No Comments »
March 21st, 2008 by
Filed under: Gaming
Last we checked we actually weren’t in the Twilight Zone, but quite frankly, the bigwigs at Gibson just might be. Seemingly out of nowhere, the famed guitar manufacturer sparked up a lawsuit against Activision claiming that Guitar Hero titles violate one of its patents. Now the company appears to be on the warpath, suing Wal-Mart, Target, GameStop, Amazon, Toys ‘R’ Us and Kmart in an attempt to get the game off of store shelves. Reportedly, Gibson took “this action reluctantly, but is required to protect its intellectual property.” For the retailers that did comment, they chimed in only to say “we aren’t commenting,” and judging by the looks of things, the games are still widely available — for now.
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Posted in amazon, lawsuit, legal, sue, suit, guitar hero, GuitarHero, gibson, target, wal-mart, retail, Gamestop, activsion, k-mart | No Comments »
March 17th, 2008 by
Filed under: Cellphones
It’s fairly commonplace for Chinese manufacturers to crank out clones of other popular wares, but apparently, things aren’t brushed off as easily when the cloning gets done by a mega-corp like Toshiba. Granted, quite a bit is lost in translation here, but the long and short of it is that NTT DoCoMo and Fujitsu are suing Tosh for creating and selling its 821T — which, as you can see above, looks an awful lot like Fujitsu’s RakuRaku handset. Reportedly, the plaintiffs have demanded that Softbank Mobile withdraw the 821T from the market, but it seems there’s quite a bit more back-and-forth left to go down before the dust settles on this one.
[Via GearFuse]
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Posted in lawsuit, legal, sue, suit, knockoff, clone, ntt DoCoMo, NttDocomo, RipOff, softbank, 821T, RAKURAKU | No Comments »
February 9th, 2008 by
Filed under: HDTV, Home Entertainment

We’ll be straight with you — we aren’t surprised one iota by this one. For those keeping tabs, Samsung’s slate of Blu-ray players have been plagued with issues essentially from day one, and while it has released a flurry of firmware updates over the years in an attempt to mend a variety of incompatibility issues, even its recent BD-UP5000 hybrid player is being axed early on after giving owners all sorts of fits. Apparently, one particular buyer isn’t taking things lying down, and has decided to file suit against the mega-corp alleging that it has sold “defective Blu-ray players” to consumers. According to the suit, Sammy was “fully aware of the defective nature of the player [BD-P1200, in particular] at the time of manufacture and sale,” and it also claims that the firm has “failed to provide a remedy consistent with the products’ intended and represented uses.” More specifically, the verbiage picks on the units’ inability to play back select BD titles, and while some fixes have indeed been doled out, we still get the feeling many consumers have been left dissatisfied. Needless to say, this outcome should be interesting.
[Thank, Nfinity and Prey521]
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Posted in samsung, Blu-ray, court, lawsuit, legal, sue, suit, BD-P1200, defective, incompatibility, incompatible | No Comments »
January 25th, 2008 by
Filed under: Cellphones

What would you do if the US patent office gave you the go-ahead on a far-reaching, non-specific application filed for a “mobile entertainment and communication device”? If your answer was that you would immediately draw up lawsuits against almost every major electronics manufacturer that even looked at a smartphone funny, you get a cookie. Yes folks, as impossible as it is to believe, the holders of the aforementioned patent have just sued Apple, Nokia, RIM, Sprint, AT&T, HP, Motorola, Helio, HTC, Sony Ericsson, UTStarcomm, and Samsung… amongst others. So eager was this company to sue, in fact, that legal papers were filed a day before the patent was granted, and subsequently had to re-submitted. The real sucker-punch here is that the patent simply combines a list of prior technologies jumbled into one product, a practice which has recently been ruled against by the Supreme Court. Still, we doubt it will stop the holders from trying to nab a few dollars in settlements, staying the work of real innovators, and generally making a mockery of our patent system. Bravo!
[Via Slashdot]
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Posted in Apple, htc, patent, samsung, nokia, motorola, lawsuit, sprint, suit, hp, smartphone, rim, att, sony ericsson, SonyEricsson, helio, smartphones, application, granted, suing, us patent office, UsPatentOffice, utstarcomm | No Comments »
January 5th, 2008 by
Filed under: Gaming
We can’t say that we’re shocked to hear this — you know, considering just how long those Xbox Live holiday blues went on — but Microsoft is indeed being slapped with a class action lawsuit over the aforementioned outages. Reportedly, a trio of angered Texans are alleging that Microsoft didn’t abide by its own contract when network issues disallowed a good chunk of Live users from getting their fix over the past few weeks. According to the complaint, MSFT understood that the time of year would lead to increased activity, yet “failed to provide adequate access and service to Xbox Live and its subscribers.” Of course, we’re betting the Redmond-based lawyers point out that clause about not guaranteeing any minimum level of service, but who knows, maybe we’ll all end up with two shiny new Arcade titles.
[Thanks, Andre and Ben]
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Posted in Microsoft, xbox 360, Xbox360, lawsuit, legal, sue, suit, outage, xbox live, XboxLive | No Comments »
December 29th, 2007 by
Filed under: Portable Audio
Sure, we’ve heard RIAA-admiring lawyers affirm that ripping your own CDs is in fact “stealing,” but it seems the aforementioned entity is putting its money where its mouth is in a case against Jeffrey Howell. Reportedly, the Scottsdale, Arizona resident is being sued by the RIAA, and rather than Mr. Howell just writing a check and calling it a day, he’s fighting back in court. Interestingly, it seems that the industry is maintaining that “it is illegal for someone who has legally purchased a CD to transfer that music into their computer.” Ira Schwartz, the industry’s lawyer in the case, is arguing that MP3 files created on his computer from legally purchased CDs are indeed “unauthorized copies,” and while we’ve no idea what will become of all this, we suppose you should go on and wipe those personal copies before you too end up in handcuffs.
[Via BlogRunner]
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Posted in drm, lawsuit, legal, sue, suit, riaa | No Comments »
December 21st, 2007 by
Filed under: Cellphones
So, you’ve got an outstanding ticket from talking while behind the wheel in Chicago, do you? Meet attorney Blake Horwitz, who is now likely to be the best friend you don’t even know. Reportedly, Mr. Horwitz is suing the city and claiming that arrests of citizens caught driving and talking were in fact illegal, and furthermore, he’s demanding that Chicago “dismiss any outstanding tickets and refund almost $2 million in fines collected since 2005.” Apparently, the actual law that prevents users from yapping and motoring requires that the city erect signs that instruct drivers not to converse while driving, yet such signs have purportedly not been posted across Chi-town. The devil’s in the details, we suppose.
[Image courtesy of ImportTuner]
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Posted in lawsuit, legal, sue, suit, chicago, ban, police, illegal, cellphone ban, CellphoneBan | No Comments »
December 21st, 2007 by
Filed under: HDTV, Home Entertainment
Apparently, DirecTV isn’t looking to pay its lawyers any overtime over the holiday break, as it has been settling outstanding lawsuits recently like it’s going out of style. Just over a week after it put aside its differences with Cox, the satellite provider has decided to make amends with Comcast over a suit filed in May. If you’ll recall, DirecTV was quite flustered by Comcast’s “survey,” which allegedly found that two-thirds of respondents preferred Comcast’s HD picture over that offered up by DISH Network / DirecTV. Notably, the actual terms of the deal weren’t disclosed, but spokespeople from both outfits affirmed that they were satisfied with the outcome — which, by the way, does allow Comcast to continue to cite the survey.
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Posted in lawsuit, legal, sue, suit, comcast, directv, resolution | No Comments »
November 30th, 2007 by
Filed under: Laptops
It’s not like ThinkPads have been immune to the notorious overheating battery issue, but a fiery incident in Ohio may not be IBM’s fault. In a somewhat bizarre tale, it’s reported that an Ohioan purchased a replacement battery from Shentech for his ThinkPad, only to later have it overheat, catch on fire and damage his machine. After discovering that the faulty cell was actually a counterfeit, IBM took the liberty of ordering a dozen batteries from the Flushing, New York-based company, and it soon discovered that all twelve received were indeed fakes. As you can probably guess, IBM has filed suit against the outfit and has asked the court to require Shentech to hand over all of its batteries for destruction, profits it made from selling the fakes and a million dollars “per counterfeit mark per type of item sold.” That’ll teach ‘em to mess with Big Blue.
[Via TGDaily]
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Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!

Posted in ibm, lawsuit, legal, sue, suit, battery, exploding battery, ExplodingBattery, explosion, lenovo, counterfeit, exploding, Shentech, ThinkPad | No Comments »
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