Incumbent Badgers Vonage With Patent Allegation Print E-mail
Written by Adam Gosling   
Tuesday, 20 June 2006
Verizon Communications is delivering recently listed VoIP service provider Vonage a whole mess of trouble with an Intellectual Property suit that alleges Vonage pinched a bunch of Verizon technology to launch its service.

Vonage, a pioneering broadband telephony service provider which was recently punished by Wall Street losing some 50 per cent of its stock price since floating a few weeks ago, stands accused of using Verizon technology to deliver its low-cost calling services.

It's not the first time the company has had to face such allegations. Last year Sprint is also pursuing a claim it made last year alleging that Vonage breaches seven patents it owns.

Vonage is also facing intellectual property suits from a company called Rates Technology which claims Vonage is infringing its lowest-cost call routing technology.

But these latest allegations comes as something of a surprise for Vonage, which says Verizon has never approached it about the alleged infringements and has elected to take the matter straight to court rather than attempt to negotiate a settlement.

Vonage says it intends to vigorously defend the lawsuit saying its services have been developed with its own proprietary technology augmented with technology licensed from third parties.

The range of patent infringement alleged is impressive

With patents for billing, fraud detection, call services including the ability to connect to PSTN phones, call forwarding, voicemail even the use of Wi-Fi handsets among the list of seven under dispute.

The legal challenge comes after Vonage has been seen to aggressively pursue Verizon customers. Verizon is the second largest telecommunications provider in the US and has reportedly lost some 1.1 million customers to Vonage in the past 15 months.

While Vonage is likely seen as a threat by legacy telco's it has amassed huge loses as it attempts to buy market share from the entrenched providers. Running about US$120 million a year in the red, the company's US$530 million Initial Public Offering was meant to provide a marketing war chest to take further customers from the likes of Verizon.

Vonage also faces several Class Action lawsuits concerning its disastrous IPO which say investors shareholdings plummet in value from the first day on the NASDAQ.
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