Friday, March 5, 2021

German patent injunction reform bill fails "Keep It Simple, Stupid" efficacy test: automotive industry, smartphone makers won't save license fees

In any legislative context, a reform proposal will be described as overreaching by its opponents, while its supporters will typically ask for more. However, there's a wide corridor to which this applies. In a section of that corridor, there may be room for a reasonable compromise. At its margins, only one camp is happy and the other merely pretends to be not, and later one or even both sides may claim victory.

Sadly, there's also another possibility: the proposal may really suck to the extent that both sides, if the bill was adopted, would be worse off than before. This rarely happens, but the German patent injunction reform process has gone so wrong that this is precisely where things stand.

It's not specific to the German patent policy debate, but the same thing in other jurisdictions, that the pharmaceutical and chemical sector opposes any weakening of intellectual property enforcement. Even if a bill was carefully crafted so as not to affect that part of the economy, they'd use their influence to avert any legislative change that would move the front line closer to them.

Those seeking to preserve the status quo not only outnumbered but also outperformed the pro-reform camp at last week's parliamentary hearing. In late 2019 and early 2020 I met many of those begging the German government for patent injunction reform, and by and large I saw people who just didn't have what it takes to win in terms of skills, expertise, strategic thinking, and forcefulness. Worse still, there may even be saboteurs at work, which would serve to explain the "singularity" ("Einzelfall") non-starter.

The problem surfaces in patent policy all the time: different industries deal with patent enforcement under different parameters, but lawmakers seek to avoid sectorial rules.

Owing to those sector-specific parameters, the proposed patent injunction statute unnecessarily creates uncertainty and complications for the enforcement of pharmaceutical and chemical patents while automotive companies and smartphone makers won't save a single cent in license fees (they're just going to spend more on lawyers and experts).

That's why my advice is to shelve that part of the reform. It's counterproductive, so politicians should just adopt the package without it, then go on the campaign trail (this is an election year for the Federal Parliament), and look at patent injunctions again in a future legislative term.

Let's apply a Keep It Simple, Stupid type of test to the reform proposal in order to gauge its efficacy for the purposes of the information and communications technology industry (also including connected cars):

  • The patent is objectively worth a per-unit royalty somewhere between $.05 and $.10.

  • The patent holder is a troll, operates in a different industry (example: Nokia makes base stations, not cars, but sues Daimler anyway), or may even be a direct competitor but doesn't consider this patent to be key to product differentiation. In all those scenarios, it's just about money.

  • The patent holder demands $2.00 per unit and proposes a written license agreement, as a binding offer and for the court to see, in time for the trial.

  • The damages from the enforcement of a Germany-wide injunction would easily amount to several times that amount.

What would happen in that scenario?

  1. Under the U.S. eBay standard, the court would deny injunctive relief. The licensing offer would indicate that monetary relief isn't inadequate, so one of the eBay factors would simply not be met. It wouldn't even take that specific licensing offer for the court to arrive at that conclusion: prior offers to, or agreements with, third parties would also have that effect. The injunction is denied.

  2. Under the current German framework, the injunction would simply issue, and the licensing offer wouldn't be considered. The injunction is ordered.

  3. Under the proposed reform statute, the defendant would argue that the cost of shutting down a car factory or of stopping the sale of smartphones constitutes intolerable hardship.

    The court, however, would say that those doomsday scenarios miss the point: this is just another run-of-the-mill patent case in which an infringer doesn't want to pay, and there is a licensing offer on the table, so the alternative is not to shut down, but to sign the agreement.

    The defendant would say that $2.00 per unit is excessive. The actual value is a few cents per unit.

    The court would then say: look, we want to decide this case quickly, so we're not going to bring in a patent valuation expert. We don't know, and don't even want to know, what the right number is. Maybe $2.00 is too high, but without the expert we don't want to bring in we can't rule out that it's more or less a reasonable demand. The injunction is ordered.

The difference between the second scenario and the third is not the outcome: it's an injunction either way. In one case, they at least get there efficiently. In the other case, the defendant has probably paid more to lawyers and experts, but to no avail: the license offer that U.S. courts hold against plaintiffs would be held against the defendant in Germany if the proposed reform bill was adopted.

That Keep It Simple, Stupid test describes exactly the scenario that the automotive industry is complaining about. It is, however, not the one the pharmaceutical and chemical sector is concerned about.

Pharmaceutical and chemical companies are interested in exclusivity. They want to shut down counterfeiting operations.

Pharmaceutical and chemical companies typically won't make a license offer like a (software or semiconductor) patent troll.

They don't want to get into a debate over whether they're entitled to an injunction. They don't want to waste time and money on additional expert reports. And they criticize that the reference to third-party interests in the current proposal might hurt them the most, as even willful infringers would argue that there are ill people who need those (counterfeit) medications.

By contrast, even Deutsche Telekom wouldn't get mileage out of third-party interests. While telecommunications networks are obviously critical infrastructure, the Keep It Simple, Stupid test presupposes a plaintiff who is not stupid. Therefore, there will be a licensing offer on the table. It may be overpriced, even usurious, but unless the court can safely rule out that it might be remotely acceptable, the defendant's doomsday scenarios--and their impact on third parties--just won't matter.

It doesn't make sense to adopt a statute that will hurt some but won't help anyone, except in cases in which plaintiffs are so unsophisticated as to not make a formal licensing offer. I already explained this problem based on the original draft bill early last year (1, 2). Unfortunately, the current proposal has the same structural shortcoming, but pharmaceutical and chemical companies are now worried about the impact of the consideration of third-party interests on their cases. The draft injunction statute belongs into the dustbin of patent policy history.

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Wednesday, March 3, 2021

Arizona House of Representatives adopts law untying in-app payment method from mobile app store monopolies: now on to the State Senate

Here's a follow-up to my very recent commentary on HB2005, a legislative proposal preventing Apple and Google from requiring developers to use only one payment system per mobile app store. Republican state lawmakers Dr. Regina Cobb and Leo Biasiucci sponsored the bill.

Today, the Arizona House of Representatives--one of the two chambers of the state legislature--PASSED the bill!

This screenshot is from the status webpage (click on the image to enlarge; the "PASSED" information may not be visible otherwise):

The result of the third reading vote was 31-29. There are 31 Republicans and 29 Democrats in the Arizona State House, and one member per party crossed the aisle, thereby canceling each other out.

A couple of proposed amendments failed, while a proposal by Dr. Cobb (enabling app developers to complain to Arizona's Attorney General about any failure by Apple or Google to comply) was adopted. (Technically, the App Store part of HB2005 was an amendment to a multi-purpose bill, which amendment then in turn got amended in the way just described.)

The Coalition for App Fairness is pleased, but notes that this is merely a first step toward a level playing field for all:

In order for this measure to be passed into law, the Arizona Senate would have to adopt it as well, and the Governor would have to sign it (as opposed to vetoing it). The (counter)lobbying onslaught by Apple and Google has been massive already, and may further intensify. There are 16 Republican and 14 Democratic senators. It is counterintuitive that Arizona Democrats have such strong reservations concerning this measure, considering that the Democratic majority in the United States House of Representatives took a clear position on tech monopolies and walled gardens in October.

This remains interesting, and meanwhile there are initiatives in various other states. Today, the Minnesota Reformer website published an opinion piece by Justin Stofferahn and Pat Garofalo, calling on the Minnesota state legislature to "curb anti-competitive tactics" in order to become, once again, "an innovation center."

And in precisely two months from today, the Epic Games v. Apple antitrust trial will start in Oakland, California.

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Samsung asks federal court in Texas to throw out Ericsson's FRAND claims: no subject-matter jurisdiction over foreign patents

After a post on a Texas-size patent damages verdict in the Western District, we're now hopping over to the traditional patent (troll) litigation hotspot, the Eastern District of Texas.

In Judge Rodney Gilstrap's court, Ericsson brought a FRAND action against Samsung in mid-December, not even knowing that the Korean electronics giant had pre-empted it by filing suit in China, and the Swedish former handset maker amended its Texas case in early January, right after the expiration of the previous cross-license agreement, by throwing in eight standard-essential patent (SEP) infringement claims. Yesterday (Tuesday, March 2) Samsung had to respond to Ericsson's complaint. It decided

  • to move for the outright dismissal of Ericsson's FRAND claims, at least with respect to foreign patents, and

  • to respond (i.e., dispute and deny) Ericsson's infringement claims.

The answer and counterclaims to the infringement part, which I uploaded to Scribd, do not contain any surprise or reveal any particularly interesting information. If anything from that document is worth quoting here, it's the following passage:

"In the last two years, SEA [Samsung Electronics America] has provided thousands of 5G base stations to U.S. carriers including Verizon, Sprint/T-Mobile, and AT&T [...]"

That competitive situation between Samsung and Ericsson presumably complicates the patent licensing dispute. Ericsson would like to tax its competition. It asserts patents against everyone, but in the base station market, there's a strategic aspect to it. It's also possible that Samsung's increasing success in the base station market makes some decision makers on Ericsson's side even more determined to maximize the license fees it can siphon off.

Let's now look at Samsung's above-mentioned motion to dismiss Ericsson's FRAND claims, as this is related to the wider issue of extraterritoriality in patent litigation, a high-priority topic for this blog. Last week, Samsung filed the opening brief in its Federal Circuit appeal of Ericsson's anti-antisuit injunction from Texas, and earlier this week, six law professors explained that the Chinese approach to antisuit injunctions is actually pretty consistent and--as far as I can see--perfectly compatible with U.S. antisuit injunction case law (Gallo and Unterweser). Samsung's motion to dismiss is not based on the fact that Ericsson brought those claims in contravention of the Wuhan antisuit injunction, but on the lack of subject-matter jurisdiction even under Judge Gilstrap's own case law (this post continues below the document):

21-03-02 Samsung Motion to ... by Florian Mueller

In the introductory part, Samsung explains from its perspectives why pre-litigation renewal negotiations failed:

"With the expiration of the cross license looming, the parties entered into a confidential NDA to negotiate a new cross license, including for 5G cellular technology that is currently being introduced into the marketplace. Ericsson made a proposal with emphasis on its unilateral 4G and 5G rates for its SEPs and accorded minimal weight to any cross license for Samsung's patents."

Now, the key thing here is that whatever licensing offers the parties made each other during those negotiations were of a global scope. According to Samsung's motion, there never were "any offers directed specifically to U.S. patents." And that's why Samsung argues a U.S. district court doesn't have jurisdiction--at least not with respect to the majority of foreign patents the parties hold.

Ericsson's objective in Texas is, as Samsung describes it, "to eliminate any obligations [Ericsson] owes to Samsung as a third-party beneficiary to Ericsson's ETSI contract, and thus leave Ericsson unfettered ability to seek worldwide injunctions on SEPs and damages not limited by FRAND." At the moment, of course, Ericsson's access to injunctive relief is not unfettered at all, but that's because of the Wuhan antisuit injunction. If Ericsson managed to neutralize the Chinese antisuit injunction, and simultaneously obtained the declaratory judgment it's seeking in Texas, it could do what Samsung says and extort even supra-FRAND royalties (through the pursuit and actual or threatened enforcement of injunctive relief).

A recent filing indicated that injunctions are so far being sought only over non-SEPs, while all SEP claims are apparently merely damages claims. However, in the U.S., Germany, and other jurisdictions, Ericsson could always amend its prayers for relief and throw in an injunction request.

Samsung points not only to Federal Circuit case law (Voda v. Cordis), according to which U.S. courts shouldn't adjudicate claims over foreign patents, but also to Judge Gilstrap's own Optis v. Huawei decision in July 2018:

"[A]ny portion of [a FRAND claim] that seeks a declaration that Plaintiffs have complied with their obligations under foreign laws or as they relate to foreign patents, or that [the defendant] may not raise a FRAND defense in a foreign jurisdiction, are dismissed."

In Optis v. Huawei, the absence of licensing offers for U.S.-only patents also made it impossible for the district court to "determine whether [the plaintiff] complied with its FRAND obligations as to their U.S. SEPs and [the defendant}."

Samsung's legal argument involves questions of diversity and supplemental jurisdiction. In connection with diversity jurisdiction, Samsung argues--and substantiates by means of a sworn declaration attached to its motion--that any of its SEPs are assigned to Samsung Electronics in Korea, and never to a U.S. subsidiary.

I'll go into more detail on the jurisdictional questions when Ericsson has filed its opposition brief. For now it is quite conceivable that Ericsson's original December case may go away soon, or be narrowed substantially, while its early-January infringement claims will continue to be litigated.

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Wac(k)o record verdict: jury in Western District of Texas says Intel owes Softbank-owned patent troll $2.175 billion over two patents

Texas has a reputation for being big and going big. With respect to patents, it's unfortunately also notorious for going off the deep end at times--not all parts of the Lone Star State, but two of its federal districts. For a long time, the Eastern District was synonymous with patent troll-friendly pretrial rulings and juries. More recently, the Western District's Waco division has put into evidence that nothing is ever so bad it couldn't get worse.

What happened in Waco yesterday is shocking for most of us while it's precisely what patent trolls' political friends like Senators Thom Tillis (R-N.C.) and Chris Coons (D-Del.) would like to see on a monthly if not weekly basis: the potential of money being sucked out of companies that make innovative products by those in the business of patent assertion. VLSI, which used to make products decades ago, went out of business, and whose empty shell formed the basis for a patent troll belonging to the Softbank-owned Fortress Investment group, has won a jury verdict worth (unless overturned or adjusted) $2.175 billion against Intel (click on the image to enlarge):

As the above screenshot shows, this is the sum of a $1.5B damages award for U.S. Patent No. 7,523,373 on a "minimum memory operating voltage technique" and $675 million for U.S. Patent No. 7,7254,759 on a "system and method of managing clock speed in an electronic device."

Intel will obviously appeal. Theoretically, District Judge Albright could set aside or adjust this verdict, but that would be a huge surprise. So it will all depend on the Federal Circuit. In this case, there won't be damages enhancements (up to "treble damages") either, as the jury did not find Intel's infringement to be willful. It's astonishing that a jury practically agrees with a patent troll's damages theory all the way over an incidental infringement (while Intel argued that even if it was found to infringe, the amount should be on the order of a couple million). Intel is a large and deep-pocketed company, but it's not an Apple or Google. If one extrapolates the outcome of this jury trial to a hypothetical case in which similar claims would have succeeded against Apple, you could add another zero on the right side of the damages figure...

The '373 patent was found to be literally infringed; for the '759 patent, the jury found an infringement under the doctrine of equivalents, and rejected Intel's invalidity contentions.

The judge was so eager to hold this trial that he conducted an in-person patent trial despite the COVID-19 pandemic.

The verdict is the highest one ever in an information technology patent case. Only one patent damages verdict in U.S. history was larger; it was about a pharmaceutical patent and, as Professor Mark Lemley (Stanford) notes on Twitter, was "erased on appeal."

The verdict comes just a week before Intel and Apple will file their second amended complaint (i.e., "version 3.0" in total) in their antitrust action against Fortress in the Northern District of California. Last year they already amended the complaint once, but the case has to be narrowed further.

This week's Texas verdict makes next week's filing in California even more significant. The same law firms (Irell & Manella for Fortress/VLSI, and Wilmer Hale for Intel and, in California, also for Apple) are working on the infringement cases as well as the antitrust action.

Here's the complete verdict form:

21-03-02 VLSI v. Intel Jury... by Florian Mueller

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Epic Games v. Apple App Store antitrust case: written order confirms May 3 trial date, further details of trial format

No surprises here: Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers of the United States District Court for the Northern District of California entered a written order confirming what she already discussed with counsel for Epic Games and Apple on Monday. According to Pretrial Order No. 1, the App Store antitrust bench trial will start on Monday, May 3, 2021 (this post continues below the document):

21-03-02 Epic Games v. Appl... by Florian Mueller

Just like on Monday, it's still unclear how many trial days will be required. Over the next 16 days, the parties will provide different versions of their witness lists to the court. The deadlines for those filings are March 12 (Epic's tentative list), March 16 (Apple's tentative list), March 18 (Epic's supplemental list), and March 19 (either party's consolidated list). There will be another pretrial conference on March 26, and I guess at that one the judge presiding over this landmark case--to me, the most important smartphone litigation ever, eclipsing even Apple v. Samsung and FTC v. Qualcomm--will indicate how many trial days are needed. On Monday, different numbers of weeks were tossed out as hypothetical possibilities. It's hardly going to be shorter than three weeks, I guess.

Trials in that district often have a rhythym that leaves one, two or even three days per week to the court for other matters. That is particularly the case when there are urgent criminal trials that must be held. In this case, however, Judge Gonzalez Rogers expects to be able to hear Epic Games v. Apple every day Monday through Friday.

They'll start early (at 8 AM and finish at 3:15 PM, giving her enough time in the afternoon for orders (related to this case and to others she's presiding over). Considering the time zone from which I'll be following the proceedings, this schedule makes it easy for me to listen to the entirety of the public proceedings.

They will presumably have to "seal the courtroom" on a few occasions, but unlike in a patent licensing dispute, there won't really be too many--if any--private agreements to talk about. This is largely about facts that are public, such as Apple's exceedingly restrictive App Store terms and policies. Third parties like Valve may, howevever, seek protection of some of their sales data.

The order says "[p]ublic access shall be by way of telephone access." The court actually broadcast the audio of Monday's case management conference via its YouTube channel, and my guess is that a YouTube audio stream will be provided again for the actual trial, sure to set a new record for the number of concurrent listeners at least in that district and probably far beyond. As the order notes, "video access is not an option for evidentiary proceedings including trials." In the Ninth Circuit, appellate hearings and sometimes also district court hearings (I remember at least one TRO/PI hearing in the Western District of Washington) are livestreamed with pictures. But in those cases, there are only legal professionals speaking in the courtroom (judge and counsel), not witnesses.

Besides the March 26 pretrial conference, April 7 is also an important milestone. On that day, the parties will file their Proposed Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law. Those documents will provide an outline of what the parties seek to prove, and how--and, ultimately, what the legal relevance the proven facts should have. The single most important battle here is about market definition, which may create a situation in which Apple would have no chance of successfully defending itself (short of a successful appeal).

In the very short term, the Arizona state legislature is going to vote on an App Store bill introduced by Republican state lawmakers Dr. Regina Cobb and Leo Biasiucci (the majority whip in the Arizona House of Representatives). I wrote about that initiative a few days ago. Apple and Google are fighting against it, but I hope the Grand Canyon State will make technology policy history. I've read that "free market" groups are lobbying on Apple and Google's behalf, but as an app developer I'd like to tell them that those app store regimes are--in their current form--antithetical to the notion of a "free market." Those groups have either failed to understand the problem or they have incentives not to understand.

It's similarly absurd to suggest that the Arizona state legislature would somehow insert itself into the Epic Games v. Apple dispute. Further above I was talking about proposed findings of facts and conclusions of law. None of them would be affected by the Arizona decision in any way. A federal antitrust action in the Northern District of California is not controlled by Arizona state law. "Don't legislate while they litigate" would allow anyone to delay or derail an important piece of legislation by suing someone over the same issue in anticipation of a legislative proposal.

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Tuesday, March 2, 2021

Law profs to Federal Circuit: China's antisuit injunction case law is consistent and compatible with U.S. approach, Ericsson's anti-antisuit injunction against Samsung should be overturned

Many people in other parts of the world, especially in Europe, don't like to hear this, but this world isn't as multipolar as some would have it. Instead, there are simply two economic superpowers, the U.S. and China, who are rivals in many ways and whose political systems are fundamentally different, but quite often it is in their interest to work together. Coopetition, so to speak.

Ignorant of that reality, the anti-antisuit injunction Ericsson obtained in the Eastern District of Texas against Samsung's antisuit injunction from the Wuhan Intermediate People's Court is premised on a disdain for China as a patent jurisdiction--and the underlying assumption that what's good for China must be bad for the U.S., and vice versa. Like a zero-sum game. The Texas court also wrongly accused Samsung of hypocrisy due to a misunderstanding that happened to me as well: Samsung's requests for U.S. import bans (in response to similar petitions by Ericsson) didn't involve SEPs.

Antisuit injunctions (ASIs), anti-antisuit injunctions (A2Sis), anti-anti-antisuit injunctions (A4SIs) and recently even anti-anti-anti-anti-antisuit injunctions (A4SIs; see this Juve Patent article of Februar 26 on a Munich ruling) are a mess--if not mayhem--that needs to be addressed through an international treaty sooner or later (sooner if you ask me, but definitely not in the form of mandatory arbitration). Until a sustainable solution has been put in place, the question is when a national court should defer to a foreign court--or keep escalating until someone will issue an A5SI, A6SI or whatever else might earn an entry in the Guinness Book of Records.

Are U.S. interests served by the Federal Circuit lifting the A2SI from Texas, or by affirmance?

Affirmance would mean to accelerate the race to the bottom--a race that U.S. courts couldn't win in the end due to constitutional constraints. Someone else would always find ways to impose more drastic sanctions. The U.S. has a well-respected jurisdiction and a huge market. It stands more to gain from de-escalation.

De-escalation, however, involves deference. In Ericsson v. Samsung, that's deference to a Chinese court's ASI (and A3SI) that came down in an earlier-filed case, and under circumstances where Ericsson doesn't really have strong arguments why a dispute between a European and an Asian company, at the heart of which you have a FRAND licensing pledge under French law, must be resolved in Texas. If two American companies were embroiled in a FRAND dispute, and one of them went to Germany and obtained an ASI (and additionally an A2SI, A3SI, A4SI, ...), questions would have to be asked. Similarly, if a company generated most of its sales of SEP-implementing products in the U.S. market, and the SEP holder was a non-practicing entity, a U.S. court might simply be the logical forum. But Ericsson v. Samsung is not the kind of dispute that U.S. courts absolutely have to adjudicate.

It may be counterintuitive, but there actually are reasons for which the U.S. judiciary would have less of a problem with Chinese antisuit injunctions than, for example, their German counterparts. An amicus curiae brief filed yesterday with the Federal Circuit by six law professors (Jorge Contreras of the University of Utah, Ann Bartow of the University of New Hampshire, Michael Carrier of Rutgers Law Schooo, Chrstia Laser of the Cleveland-Marshall College of Law, Joshua Sarnoff of DePaul University, and Peter Yu of Texas A&M University) explains just how consistent and compatible Samsung's Chinese antisuit injunction is with the U.S. Gallo and Unterweser case law (this post continues below the document):

21-03-01 Professors' Am... by Florian Mueller

In connection with Nokia v. Continental I already criticzed in 2019 that German courts have a pretty one-dimensional perspective on anti-antisuit injunctions. Basically, they hold that a patentee's interests in enforcement are sacrosanct, and any interference by other jurisdictions is unacceptable. Therefore, the Munich appeals court upheld Nokia's A2SI despite the fact that German courts cannot enter ASIs, without conducting any Gallo/Unterweser type of multifactorial analysis. Just black or white. Antisuit is always bad, so let's do anti-antisuit.

China's more differentiated approach to antisuit injunctions bears a strong resemblance to Gallo and Unterweser, including that the impact on international comity is considered. By contrast, German courts simply consider any antisuit injunction, no matter how well-reasoned by U.S. standards, to represent a terrible and unacceptable encroachment. From that one-dimensional (if not zero-dimensional) analysis they conclude that they're free to retaliate.

China's antisuit injunction regime is just as differentiated and balanced as the standard applied in the U.S., while Germany has yet to develop a more sophisticated approach than its current "an eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth" anti-antisuit regime. Of course, Germany is just an example, but a particularly relevant one in the context of patent litigation. Others will do the same, or even worse. In those cases, there's a pressing reason for U.S. courts to retaliate--but not when a jurisdiction, even if a country's political system may be distinct from Western democracies, adjudicates antisuit injunction motions in a manner consistent with the U.S. Gallo and Unterweser case law.

The professors have a point. The Federal Circuit could lift Ericsson's Texas A2SI based on a finding that the Wuhan Intermediate People's Court rightfully protected its jurisdiction on a basis that is materially consistent with how a U.S. court could have arrived at the same decision. In doing so, the Federal Circuit would set an example, and the U.S. could then expect China to honor American antisuit injunctions under comparable circumstances. The alternative is chaos--if we want to call chaos an alternative in the first place.

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Monday, March 1, 2021

Epic Games v. Apple trial scheduled to start on May 3: exact duration and in-person vs. video testimony to be determined

Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers of the United States District Court for the Northern District of California said at the outset of today's Epic Games v. Apple case management conference that this is a very significant case, so the judiciary should give it the best it has to offer, which is an in-person trial. But under the circumstances of the COVID-19 pandemic, it may be necessary to conduct the trial, in whole or in part, via Zoom. Even if it's fully in-person, the number of persons simultaneously present in the courtroom will be very limited.

The judge won't take it lightly if someone who's a "COVID denier" on Facebook or goes on extensive travel for other purposes asks to be excused from showing up in person for the trial. She expects counsel for the parties to "investigate" the witnesses in that regard.

For now the plan is that witnesses won't have to wear masks when testifying. Judge Gonzalez Rogers mentioned that the court has plexiglass shields. Actually, experts doubt or even ridicule the effectiveness of such shields as I reported last summer. But Judge Gonzalez Rogers explained she would be closer to the witnesses than anyone else, and by May she'd be "fully vaccinated." While I remain skeptical of plexiglass shields, I don't doubt at all that this judge is very committed to preventing COVID infections in the courtroom. She is in contact with Judge Albright in the Western District of Texas, who is holding patent trials all the time despite the pandemic.

The trial will start on May 3, 2021. This appears to be a pretty definitive plan, though the judge also noted one would have to keep looking at "the [infection] numbers." The exact length of the trial depends on the number of trial exhibits etc. the parties plan to present. Based on the potential durations the judge tossed out, it sounded like the length of the trial will most likely be somewhere between three and five weeks. At some point she said she'd give three weeks, but that was apparently just a hypothetical example.

Today's case management conference was audio-livestreamed via the court's YouTube channel, with only about 25 concurrent listeners when I checked. A YouTube audio stream will apparently also be the basis on which the general public will be able to follow the May trial.

Epic Games v. Apple will be a bench trial (i.e., no jury), while some other App Store antitrust cases against Apple will be put before juries a few months later.

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