back to article Google-Moto pulls in $228m following settlement with RIM

Google's new acquisition Motorola Mobility says it has bagged $228m so far from a patent licensing deal with another, unnamed company – which appears likely to be BlackBerry maker RIM. The Chocolate Factory's new mobile hardware tentacle got an upfront cash payment of $175m and a licensing agreement that brought its pre-tax …

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  1. Arctic fox
    Flame

    I am just wondering when this preposterous and destructive game.......

    ...........of musical patents is going to stop. Unless any one of these corporates actually believes that they are going to emerge as the "winner" by going the courtroom route then the industry better sit down and work out a framework for a deal. It really ought to have begun to dawn on them that any "victory" in the courtroom will likely be the very definition of a "pyrrhic victory". "If we are victorious in one more battle with the Romans, we shall be utterly ruined."

  2. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Oh really..

    What a surprise, according to the Android cheerleading gang posting here and elsewhere Google only used patents for their own defence.

    I'm shocked repeat, shocked, at this development. I shall never believe an Android fanboy post ever again.

    1. KjetilS
      FAIL

      Where in the article does it say that Google started the lawsuit against RIM?

      Motorola going against RIM != Google going against RIM.

    2. Daf L
      Facepalm

      Not wanting to stick up for anyone apart from the literates but...

      RTFA...June 2010!

  3. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    No, no

    This was started before Google's acquisition, you see. I'm sure Google will now drop the whole case including all future royalties payments - or, even better, give all the royalties to the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.

    Google does no evil, none at all. Saint Schmidt and Saint Page are true angels on Earth. Amen.

  4. Displacement Activity
    Paris Hilton

    What interests me is that the value of a company can be entirely dependent on the value of something as intangible, and potentially undisclosed, as a US patent. Surely this sort of thing makes it next to impossible to invest in a tech company? This isn't how the patent system was meant to work.

    And it strikes me that Olympus missed a trick here. Why bother siphoning billions to the Caymans, when you can just buy a few dud patents? They should have called me.

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