Article 6D87P Jury orders Google to pay $339M for patent-infringing Chromecast

Jury orders Google to pay $339M for patent-infringing Chromecast

by
Scharon Harding
from Ars Technica - All content on (#6D87P)
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Enlarge / Google Chromecast with Google TV. (credit: Google)

Google Chromecast infringed upon three patents of Touchstream Technologies, Inc. and should pay $338.7 million in damages, a Western District of Texas jury decided on Friday, as reported by Law360.

The verdict [PDF] shows the jury agreeing with Touchstream's allegations that Google violated patents 8,356,251, 8,782,528, and8,904,289 (Touchstream Technologies Inc. v. Google LLC, case number 6:21-cv-00569 in the US District Court for the Western District of Texas).

The ruling comes after Touchstream filed a complaint in June 2021 claiming that it met with Google in December 2011 and was told that the tech giant wasn't interested in partnering with it in February 2012. Google then released Chromecast in 2013. The complaint points to the first Chromecast and the second and third generations, Chromecast Ultra and Chromecast with Google TV, as well as other Chromecast-integrated products, as infringements of Touchstream patents.

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