Zenimax wins $500 million infringement case against Oculus

by Mark Tyson on 2 February 2017, 09:31

Tags: Facebook

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A US court has ruled that Oculus unlawfully used VR technology owned by video game developer Zenimax. The Dallas, Texas Jury has awarded $500 million in damages to Zenimax, a sum which will require significant contributions split between Facebook and Oculus co-founders Palmer Luckey and Brendan Iribe.

Polygon reports that the $500 million award is split as follows:

  • Oculus pays $200 million for breaking the NDA
  • Oculus pays $50 million for copyright infringement
  • Oculus pays $50 million for false designation
  • Luckey pays $50 million for false designation
  • Iribe pays $150 million for false designation

Oculus Rift headset sales to be blocked?

We first heard about Zenimax Media's claims that its intellectual property was improperly shared back in May 2014. That wasn't long after the Facebook buyout of Oculus (March 2014). Following the court judgement yesterday, the Zenimax CEO, Robert Altman, said "technology is the foundation of our business and we consider the theft of our intellectual property to be a serious matter. We appreciate the jury's finding against the defendants, and the award of half a billion dollars in damages for those serious violations." Altman told Polygon that his company may now seek an injunction to stop the sale of Oculus Rift headsets.

Of course Oculus had something to say about the judgement. The Facebook owned firm says it was "disappointed" and will appeal yesterday's decision. Understandably, this multimillion dollar court case put a shadow over Facebook's latest set of financial results, released last night. (The headline figure of the results was Facebook's net profit doubling to $3.6bn in the fourth quarter.)

Google > How to wipe a hard drive?

So if neither Luckey nor Iribe were charged with misappropriating Zenimax's trade secrets, where did the intellectual property 'leak' from? Some believe it was John Carmack, as we mentioned back in 2014. From yesterday's court case ruling news, we see that Zenimax asserts "Carmack intentionally destroyed data on his computer after he got notice of this litigation and right after he researched on Google how to wipe a hard drive." Zenimax says that other Oculus computers and USB storage devices were similarly wiped, according to a court-appointed, independent expert in computer forensics.



HEXUS Forums :: 16 Comments

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Good.
What a shame! :)
I find it hard to believe John Carmack had to google how to wipe a hard drive.
anyone knows the best way is a hammer, fun and permanent
If oculus gets blocked from selling more headsets in the future then I hope this moves VR towards a more open standard way of implementing VR features into games, so that more companies can start pushing cheaper headsets for PC's.