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Symantec seeks unspecified damages and an injunction barring Microsoft from using the storage technology. If granted, the injunction would put a halt on Windows Vista and the Longhorn server, two major Microsoft products slated for availability in 2007.
Microsoft's counterclaim actually strengthens Symantec's case, Schallop said. In the suit, it charges that Symantec infringes on three of its patents related to automated system recovery technology. However, Symantec contends that those patents are invalid because they are based on technology it bought years ago.
"We acquired this technology from Seagate (Technology) years ago, and we actually have the earlier filed patents to this automated system recovery technology," Schallop said. "We believe that the patents they assert against us are invalid."
Headed to court
In addition to approving the protective order to seal documents, Coughenor on Tuesday dismissed a Microsoft request to split Symantec's complaint in two. The company had sought to separate the case into one on patent infringement and another on breach of contract.
Symantec and Microsoft have tried to resolve the dispute, but were unable to, they said when the patent lawsuit was filed. The companies "agreed to disagree" and go to court. Symantec alleges that Microsoft put the disputed technology into use in Windows Server 2003, Windows Vista and the upcoming Longhorn server release.
Microsoft initially licensed the technology from Veritas in 1996 and used it in Windows 2000, Symantec said. It then used the technology to develop a feature in Windows Server 2003 that competes with Veritas' Storage Foundation for Windows and filed patent requests based on Veritas' trade secrets, Symantec charges.
The company is also taking on Microsoft outside the courtroom. Its security research arm has published three reports critiquing security in Vista. Also, Symantec has complained that a feature in the 64-bit versions of Windows XP and Windows Vista stifles innovation in the security space.
No trial date has been set. Both parties are scheduled to appear in court for another status conference on Nov. 11.
See more CNET content tagged:
Symantec Corp., patent, intellectual property, data storage, trial





Björn Lundahl
Göteborg Sweden
Thank God I switched to OS X one year ago, I love it, and would never look back. Linux also is great.
HA! Like that will ever happen.
Gates & Ballmer just keep on with the same old stuff - crush the competition, apologize - $30 mil to Netscape, $10 mil to Brian Dougherty via Wink, others - & repeat.
On the contrary, anyone today (including Symantec) can innovate on the Web and have a good chance at making a viable business. In the Windows world, you are sure to be screwed by Microsoft if your idea is a success.
The only IT platform where you can innovate without being put out of business today is the Web. The Web is the biggest and richest platform out there.
We all own the Web and it flourishes because it is open. All you will see in Vista are a whole lot of Web tools that they copied from the likes of Google. So Vista is just copying the Web and Google and they expect you pay hundreds of dollars for services you can already get today for free. So Windows is already behind in innovation compared to the Web and it will be suckers that buy into it.
In the future you will access the Web from all kinds of devices. The OS won't matter that much. People will be running weblications from cellphones and other mobile wireless devices. All that matters is that you are connected and have a browser.
No need for clunky software and less viruses too, if you work online and save files online that is. You can always sync your files offline if you want. But the need to install software and the vulnerabilities in getting a virus on your computer is dying out in the online era.
Windows is now a clunky old idea that is waning. Vista is Microsofts last stab and there won't be people lining up for it either.
In light of the future Web, Symantec should be innovating in that space.
There is money to be made patching the security vulnerabilities in Windows in the meantime, but the writing is on the wall.
The Web is the place to go for new innovations and services. You can access it from anywhere at anytime.
If Vendors can get clear access into the heart of windows, the kernel and there are hidden parts that only MS can access and/or benefit from, then what's the point in developing software for MS Windows.
I would start switching work force to deveop for OS X or Linux, it will be a force to recon with into the future.
- Buying MS Security is Like Buying Meat at Jeffrey Dahmer's Butcher Shop
- by Sumatra-Bosch August 29, 2006 9:34 PM PDT
- Or hiring Charles Manson to guard your family from predators.
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(15 Comments)Roberto