MikeD-C05 said:
People the reason why Tivo is suing Dish is that their past and their future still does not look good. Even if they black mail Dish into giving them money in the settlement and force a software license deal they will still not make it long term. That is why they keep suing other companies and forcing these deals.
And you got this info from what source? You need a reality check.
TIVO is suing EchoStar for patent infringement. TIVO inventions protected by this patent, and illegally infringed on by EchoStar, include a method for recording one program while playing back another; watching a show as it is recording; and a storage format that supports advanced capabilities -- such as pausing live television, fast-forwarding, rewinding, instant replays, and slow motion.
They invented, developed, spent capital in doing so, and obtained legal patents for this product. As a result TIVO justifiably owns the rights which EchoStar took with no royality paid to TIVO. The trial court agreed and do not be surprised if the final appelate court upholds the lower court. That certainly is not blackmail. It is protecting one's property from corporate theft. Something you obviously either do not agree with; or have a hard time swallowing because you pay a monthly fee for a service that may be interupted by EchoStar's foolish and arrogant approach in the way it conducts business in this industry.
The court of appeals temporarily stayed the district court injunction only until it decides whether a stay should or should not be in effect for the duration of the appeals process. The court stated that the temporary stay is not based on a consideration of the merits of EchoStar’s appeal.
The district court ruled that EchoStar pay TIVO nearly $74 million in damages as awarded by jury (in addition to disabling all DVR's used by subscribers ). The final penalty would increase to $90 million based on $5.4 million in interest payments and $10.3 million in supplemental damages. If the decison stands the long term damage would be the loss of numerous current and future customers which translates into a serious revenue drop and a rise in monthly fees to compensate. The issue now puts EchoStar in a precarious position: either negotiate with TIVO, or risk losing subscribers.
By the way who else is TIVO suing?