Microsoft suggests a flat fee while Motorola wants a cut in Xbox patent case

It would appear that one of the many titanic battles in the patent universe is coming to fisticuffs for Motorola and Microsoft as they duel between one another over how much the latter owes the former for patented technology used in the Xbox. The trial at hand was held on November 13th through the 20th down in the Western District of Washington in a federal court designed to settle on how much Microsoft owes Motorola for two of its standard, essential patents used in the Xbox gaming console as well as products such as Windows 7. Now the talks have hit monetary amounts with suggested sums equalling out to be millions of dollars apart from one another.

xbox2-580x386

If Microsoft had its way in this case as it is today, the amount of cash paid to Motorola would be more than $736,000 per year for Motorola’s 802.11 wi-fi technology and no more than $502,000 per year for Motorola’s H.264 video compression patent. This information comes from a redacted filing read by Reuters this week. The filing was revealed on Monday of this week and also contained suggestions from Motorola.

If Motorola had their way, they’d be receiving 2.25 percent of the selling price of Microsoft products with their patents embedded within them. This includes Windows 7 and the Xbox, for starters. This amount of cash was said to appear acceptable to Microsoft just so long as a cap was set in place for final amounts each year with different percentages listed for each of the two patents.

For the 802.11 patents Motorola suggested that Microsoft pay them 1.15 percent to 1.73 percent of Microsoft end-product prices. Microsoft suggested that for the H.264 patent portfolio, the cost be capped between $100 million and $125 million per year. The case will continue early 2013 with US District Judge James Robart ruling the court. Have a peek at the timeline below for more Motorola vs Microsoft action and stay tuned as the cash is tossed!

Story Timeline

Microsoft suggests a flat fee while Motorola wants a cut in Xbox patent case is written by SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

Related posts

Latest posts

Samsung will buy your old phone, no strings attached

Samsung has launched a new program where it will purchase your used, old Galaxy phone without the requirement of buying a new device at the same time.

4 tech products that changed my life last year

Despite using more tech products than ever before last year, there are only a handful that have become a necessity. Here are the four that changed my life.

AMD may still wait for Nvidia before unleashing RDNA 4

According to a new leak, AMD's plans regarding the RDNA 4 release date may have changed.

It’s 2025, and the iPhone still has an annoying alarm bug

If your iPhone alarm doesn't always ring, you aren't alone. Dozens of users have reported the problem, but Apple hasn't issued a fix.

I bought a dumb phone for my grandma, but ended up using it myself

To tickle my monkey brain, I momentarily switched to an unusual dumb phone and ended up loving my time with it.

The 2025 iPad Air may get a two-generation performance boost

The next iPad Air could see a considerable performance boast over the current model.

High blood pressure monitoring may finally come to the Apple Watch in 2025

Mark Gurman has suggested the next iteration of Apple Watch and Apple Watch Ultra could come with blood pressure sensors, a long-awaited feature.

The Samsung Galaxy Ring just got four big updates. Here’s what’s new

The Samsung Galaxy Ring is gaining new wellness features and is now available for those with larger fingers.

Nvidia celebrates Trump, slams Biden for putting AI in jeopardy

Nvidia has some harsh words for the outgoing Biden administration and high praise for the upcoming Trump administration concerning AI.

An unusual image has revealed a world-beating OnePlus Open 2 spec

A teaser image for the OnePlus Open 2's equivalent in China, the Oppo Find N5, has revealed that it's all set to beat a world record.