Audible Sued for Alleged Streaming Technology Patent Infringement
The plaintiff contends Audible had notice that it was infringing on its patents more than 10 years ago.
June 03, 2024 at 03:24 PM
3 minute read
What You Need to Know
- Audio Pod IP has filed three patent infringement suits against Amazon, AWS and Audible in the Eastern District of Virginia.
- The plaintiffs allege that after a meeting to discuss sharing Audio Pod's technology with Audible went nowhere, the company started using their innovations without permission.
- So far defense counsel has only appeared in one case and has moved for either a full dismissal, a partial dismissal or a transfer to New Jersey.
An audiobook company represented by Chandran Iyer, Ronald Daignault and Kevin Sprenger of intellectual property firm Daignault Iyer recently filed three patent infringement lawsuits against Amazon, Amazon Web Services and Audible in the Eastern District of Virginia.
The company, Audio Pod IP, alleges in one complaint that it invented "several key media streaming technologies" after it was founded in 2005, including segmenting and sequencing streaming files to work around long download times for large files, bookmarking digital content so it can be paused and played at a later time and a subscriber-paid streaming service launched in 2006. The complaint cited a January 2008 front-page article in the Ottawa Citizen to document its early trajectory.
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