By Clare Saliba E-Commerce Times
01/21/02 11:37 AM PT
Though still pursuing their merger, Internet measurement firms Jupiter Media Metrix
and NetRatings now intend to re-open their patent litigation.
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With their proposed merger still under federal scrutiny, Internet research
firms Jupiter Media Metrix (Nasdaq: JMXI) and
NetRatings (Nasdaq: NTRT) said late Friday that
they will go ahead with a patent infringement lawsuit that had previously
been put on hold as a condition of the acquisition.
The action, filed by Jupiter in March 2001, charges that
NetRatings violated its rival's proprietary online measurement and tracking
methods. When the roughly US$71 million stock-and-cash deal
was struck in late October,
however, both firms said they would defer settlement of the complaint
pending completion of the merger.
In a brief statement, Jupiter and NetRatings said they modified the terms of
their acquisition agreement to allow the litigation to proceed in order to
protect their own interests and "preserve their respective positions" in the
suit.
Under the Microscope
While the two have said that the integration would allow them to
develop a single standard for measuring online traffic, the U.S. Federal
Trade Commission (FTC) asked the firms to supply it with additional information on
the deal in December.
The FTC has been actively examining antitrust
concerns posed by online mergers in recent years, though recently
the Bush Administration proposed that similar
antitrust reviews be handled solely by the Justice Department.
Despite the federal inquiry, Jupiter and NetRatings said they are
"continuing to work diligently" to respond to the FTC's request in a
timeframe that would allow the transaction to close before the end of the
first quarter.
Waiting for Green
Under the U.S. law known as the Hart-Scott-Rodino Antitrust Improvements Act,
if the research firms demonstrate "substantial compliance" with the FTC request for
information they would be free to merge after 30 days, pending the
government's approval.
Jupiter shareholders must also greenlight the deal as well. Additionally,
the companies said the patent lawsuit will be terminated upon the closing of
the merger.
Going Court Side
As one of the online industry's most heated sectors, the Internet measuring
niche has given rise to bitter rivalries as niche players seek
to prove that their qualitative methods are more accurate than their competitors'.
The ratings are often used to lure strategic partners.
Jupiter's complaint against NetRatings is not the first time it has sought
redress for alleged patent infringement violations in court.
For instance, the New York-based company
filed an action
against PC Data in the U.S. District Court for the District of Delaware in
September 2000.
At the time, Jupiter said it filed suit to ensure that its
competitors could not duplicate its technology and procedures, which the
firm maintained had given it a strategic market advantage over its rivals.
The suit wound up forcing PC Data and its Internet division out of the
Internet measurement business, with the company signing off on
a permanent injunction that prohibited it from using its tracing software.
PC Data also agreed to transfer its rights to the technology to Jupiter.