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To: hroark2000 who wrote (33641)3/15/2001 11:43:47 AM
From: Uncle Frank  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 65232
 
electronicnews.com

Rambus Ruling Limits Scope of Patents
By Steven Fyffe, Electronic News

Mar 14, 2001 --- A judge has made a pre-trial ruling limiting the scope
of Rambus Inc.’s patents in the U.S. court case against Infineon
Technologies AG, according to industry sources close to the case.

This afternoon’s ruling by judge Robert E Payne, who is hearing the
case in the U.S. District Court in Richmond, Va., could kill Rambus’
(nasdaq: RMBS) royalty claims on SDRAM and double data rate
(DDR) memory, sources said.

In the ruling, the judge sided with an expert witness from Infineon
(nyse: IFX), sources said.

“(The Markman) testimony was that the Rambus patent is a
multiplex bus, and that we don’t use the multiplex bus in our SDRAM
or DDR products,” the source said. “It means that because we don’t
use the multiplex bus they use in their patents…we are not in
violation of their patents.”

Micron Technology Inc. and Hyundai Electronics Industries Co. Ltd.
use the same bus architecture as Infineon.

A summary judgement that would end the trial and throw out
Rambus’ royalty claims to SDRAM and DDR could be made as
soon as Thursday morning (March 15) at 7a.m. Pacific Standard
Time, when the judge is scheduled to hold a hearing to set the trial
dates.

The judge has also agreed to allow crime-fraud allegations to be
heard at the trial, according to an article in The Register. The judge
issued the following statement on March 7, they reported today.

“Attorney-client privilege has been forfeited under the crime-fraud
exception as to certain topics, and therefore the Defendants may
conduct depositions of Messrs Diepenbrock, Vincent, Crisp,
Mitchell and Tate respecting the legal advice provided about
disclosures of patents and patent applications to JEDEC by
Rambus Inc, the disclosure policy of JEDEC and about the efforts
by Rambus, Inc. to broaden its patents to cover matters pertaining
to the JEDEC standards.”

If individuals are convicted of fraud, it could mean more than a
financial slap on the wrist, sources said.

“This means that people could go to jail. That’s what this means,”
the source said.



To: hroark2000 who wrote (33641)3/15/2001 11:44:25 AM
From: edamo  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 65232
 
hroark2000...the only thing that is evident in rmbs is that its market dynamic broke down...it was holding above tested lows and was able to rally at times...when a new low is set on higher then normal volume, then the floor is taken out, and the support oft times becomes the upside resistance...its doing this on a day where most semis are up....hard to predict what weakness it may have due to lack of buying interest on an overall down day.....it has always been a high pe/no pe valuation risk...its minute pattern today is not encouraging...its overbought at 26 7/8 at the moment....if it sets a new low on its next swing to oversold, which it has been doing since the open, then it has not found support....long term probable it may be higher if the fundamentals and ip are certain...short term any time sensitive positions are not in good shape