
The Federal Circuit’s recent decision in the litigation between Columbia University and Gen Digital is notable not only for its treatment of software patent eligibility, but also for what it says about potential expansions in the geographic limits of patent damages, especially in the context of software patents.
As discussed in our prior blog, the court remanded the § 101 issue for further analysis of whether the asserted software claims, though directed to an abstract idea, contain an inventive concept under Alice, step two. But even if its patents survive § 101 on remand, Columbia lost the $94 million of royalty damages attributable to Norton’s sales to customers located outside the U.S. Applying the principle from the 2006 Microsoft v. AT&T decision that software code reproduced overseas from a master copy sent from the U.S. does not contain any U.S.-made components, the Federal Circuit held that Columbia was not entitled to damages for Norton’s foreign software sales because, similarly, that software was not “made in or distributed from” the U.S.







