![]() ![]() ![]() Patent and Trademark Office should add two Columbia professors as joint inventors of a patent issued to Norton, but they rejected the university’s contention that the professors, of Columbia’s Intrusion Detection Systems Laboratory, were the sole inventors. Jurors also found that Columbia had proven that the U.S. after finding that the infringing product sold to such customers was made in and distributed from the U.S. The jury awarded a royalty of $94 million for sales to customers outside the U.S. ![]() Of the total award, $91.1 million was a royalty for Norton’s sales to U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia. The jury also found that Norton’s infringement was intentional, meaning the judge may increase the award by up to three times the jury’s amount, according to the verdict in the U.S. must pay Columbia University $185.1 million after a federal jury on Monday found that a feature of five families of its antivirus products infringes two patents for technology that uses emulators to monitor programs for malicious behavior. ![]()
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