If the lawsuit filed on May 1 by wireless-messaging concern Visto against Blackberry maker Research In Motion looks familiar, it's no accident.
Visto, you may remember, is one of the companies that sought to profit on the long-running patent battle between Canada's RIM and the Virginia holding company NTP. In that case, NTP asserted that its patents predated RIM's and sought an injunction that could have shut down the popular Blackberry wireless e-mail service in the U.S.
Ultimately, the two companies settled, and RIM coughed up $612.5 million to make the suit go away.
Visto had been fighting in court with a smaller wireless-messaging company known as Seven Networks, in a conflict that in many ways mirrored the RIM-NTP litigation: Visto asserted patent infringement on wireless-messaging technology and sought to close Seven down.
Victory in court
On May 1, Visto announced it had prevailed in court and that it would be awarded $3.6 million or the equivalent of 19.75% of its revenue.
Seven said it was awaiting the outcome of a re-examination of the patents, and said business would not be disrupted in the short term. It also said it would have a non-infringing version of its messaging service available later this year. Seven also has a countersuit pending against Visto that is expected to come to trial next year.
Boosted by the momentum of its win against Seven, Visto promptly filed a patent lawsuit against RIM in a U.S. District Court in Texas. It's seeking an injunction and monetary damages for the infringement of four patents, three of which had been part of its suit against Seven. Visto has also filed patent-infringement suits against Microsoft and Good Technology, which both provide wireless e-mail technology.
Visto CEO Brian Bogosian has previously portrayed the lawsuit against Seven as aimed at putting the company out of business. When asked if he'd like to do the same thing to RIM, he said: "Absolutely. But that doesn't mean there's not a deal to be done. We want them to stop misappropriating


