netbuzz writes “Judge William Alsup of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California has no problem calling Network Protection Sciences (NPS) a patent troll. What he does have a problem with is NPS telling a Texas court that NPS had an ‘ongoing business concern’ in that state run by a ‘director of business development’ when all it really had was a rented file-cabinet room and the ‘director’ was actually the building landlord who merely signed legal papers when NPS told him to do so. Judge Alsup calls the alleged business a ‘sham’ and the non-employee ‘Mr. Sham,’ yet he declined to dismiss the patent infringement lawsuit filed by NPS against Fortinet from which this information emerged. Instead, he told NPS, ‘this jury is going to hear all of this stuff about the closet. And you’re going to have to explain why “Mr. Sham” was signing these documents.'”… netbuzz writes “Judge William Alsup of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California has no problem calling Network Protection Sciences (NPS) a patent troll. What he does have a problem with is NPS telling a Texas court that NPS had an ‘ongoing business concern’ in that state run by a ‘director of business development’ when all it really had was a rented file-cabinet room and the ‘director’ was actually the building landlord who merely signed legal papers when NPS told him to do so. Judge Alsup calls the alleged business a ‘sham’ and the non-employee ‘Mr. Sham,’ yet he declined to dismiss the patent infringement lawsuit filed by NPS against Fortinet from which this information emerged. Instead, he told NPS, ‘this jury is going to hear all of this stuff about the closet. And you’re going to have to explain why “Mr. Sham” was signing these documents.'”

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