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Intel hit with $2.2 bn verdict in US patent trial
by AFP Staff Writers
San Francisco (AFP) March 2, 2021

A federal jury in Texas on Tuesday ruled that US computer chip giant Intel should pay $2.2 billion to VLSI Technology in a patent infringement case.

Intel said it would appeal the decision.

"Intel strongly disagrees with today's jury verdict," spokesman William Moss said in reply to an AFP inquiry.

"We intend to appeal and are confident that we will prevail."

The suit filed by patent-holding company VLSI in early 2019 accused Intel of violating patents involving memory cache and voltage regulation in its chips, according to legal documents.

The litigation contended that the chip-maker was "willfully blind" to the patents to the extent that it forbade employees from reading about them.

VLSI, which obtained the rights to the chips from Dutch tech firm NXP, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.


Related Links
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CHIP TECH
Drought hits Taiwan drive to plug global chip shortage
Taipei (AFP) Feb 25, 2021
Taiwan's drive to plug a global shortage of microchips has hit a snag - a lack of water for its foundries caused by a drought. Taiwanese high-tech chip foundries are some of the world's biggest and most advanced, and European car manufacturers have been reaching out to Taipei for help. Semiconductor shortages, caused by supply chain priorities changing because of the coronavirus pandemic, have forced some major manufacturers to suspend production lines. Taiwan has said it will try to ramp up ... read more

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