Court bars Vonage from signing up new customers
'Cutting off oxygen as opposed to a bullet in the head'
Posted in VoIP, 6th April 2007 16:54 GMT
Whitepaper - What is the best data center energy storage for you?
Vonage is not allowed to sign up new customers while it appeals a court ruling that it infringed three Verizon patents. This is the price the VoiP telephony provider must pay for gaining some breathing space in its appeal against an injunction from using technology "owned" by Verizon.
Vonage asked the trial judge to reconsider the ban. Vonage lawyer Roger Warin said the ruling is "like cutting off oxygen as opposed to a bullet in the head [which would] in effect slowly strangle Vonage," he said, Bloomberg reports. The firm is certain to appeal this ruling, the newswire says.
Last month, a federal jury in Alexandria, Virginia found that Vonage should pay $58m and 5.5 per cent royalties to Verizon for infringing its patents. U.S. District Judge Claude Hilton issued a permanent injunction against Vonage, agreeing with Verizon that its business would suffer irreperable harm, if Vonage was allowed to conduct business as usual.
Vonage says it used "open-standard, off-the-shelf technology when developing its service" and that the court evidence failed to prove otherwise. ®
Free whitepaper: Calculating total power requirements for data centers

Ten cooling solutions to support high-density server deployment [WP42]
The Business Case for Virtualization
HP and VMware take the cost and complexity out of IT
Distribute the workload for greater efficiency and power
Rethink virtualization in business terms

101 uses for a former merchant banker
The Year in Operating Systems: No battle of big ideas
Photography: Yes, you have rights
Enormous HP box spotted from space