Google countersues Sonos for patent infringement
Google has countersued Sonos for patent infringement, following Sonos
originally filing a patent lawsuit against Google in January. The
lawsuit alleges that Sonos is infringing five Google patents covering
mesh networking, echo cancellation, DRM, content notifications, and
personalized search.
Google’s suit seems to serve a few purposes.
One is obviously to countersue Sonos with its own patents. Another is
for Google to show how it has been aggrieved after what it sees as
helpful support for Sonos’ product development efforts.
“While
Google rarely sues other companies for patent infringement, it must
assert its intellectual property rights here,” the company says in its
lawsuit. It characterizes the work it’s done to provide Google’s music
services and Assistant voice assistant technology on Sonos products as
“significant assistance in designing, implementing, and testing.”
The
Sonos lawsuit filed in January alleged that Google had infringed five
patents covering the setup, control, and synchronization of multiroom
network speaker systems. Sonos claimed Google had stolen the technology
after working with Sonos to integrate Google Play Music and had further
insisted on harsh terms for Sonos to include the Google Assistant on its
products, including sharing the full Sonos product roadmap for six
months, even as Google was developing competing speaker products.
Earlier this year, Sonos CEO Patrick Spence testified before the House
Antitrust Committee that Google had blocked the company from enabling
both Amazon’s Alexa assistant and the Google Assistant from being active
at the same time.
“We had it ready, we showed it to Google and
Amazon. Amazon said yes. Google has said, if you’re going to do that,
Assistant will not be available at all,” Spence testified. Spence also
told Congress that Google was intentionally using patented technology in
a practice called “efficient infringement” — a bet that the cost of
patent lawsuits will be dwarfed by the profits of dominating the market,
and that Google was deeply undercutting the prices of its products to
crowd out competitors because the company’s business model is the
collection of consumer data to better serve ads.
“In furtherance
of this strategy, Google has not merely copied Sonos’s patented
technology, it has also subsidized the prices of its patent-infringing
products, including at the entry level, and flooded the market,” Sonos
says in its lawsuit.
In its response, Google says Sonos needed
its help, and the company was happy to provide. In 2013, it worked with
Sonos to integrate Play Music, and in 2016, it stepped up to integrate
the Google Assistant. “This effort again involved substantial Google
engineering resources, including significant months of employee work
time,” the complaint reads. And while the patent claims are aggressive,
Google is careful to paint Sonos as a partner with special standing.
“Google
is proud of its more than five-year partnership with Sonos, and has
worked constructively with Sonos to make the companies’ products work
seamlessly by building special integrations for Sonos,” the complaint
reads. “For instance, when Google rolled out the ability to set a Sonos
speaker as the default option for Google Assistant, it was the first
time Google had done that for any partner company.”
“We are
disappointed that Sonos has made false claims about our work together
and technology,” Jose Castaneda, a Google spokesperson, said in a
statement to The Verge. “We are reluctantly defending ourselves by
asserting our patent rights. While we look to resolve our dispute, we
will continue to ensure our shared customers have the best experience
using our products.”
In a response, Sonos CEO Patrick Spence told
The Verge: “Instead of simply addressing the merits of our case, and
paying us what we’re owed, Google has chosen to use their size and
breadth to try and find areas in which they can retaliate. We look
forward to winning our original case, and winning this newly filed
retaliatory case as well.”
“As we saw in the past with Eero, and
have seen most recently with Zoom, Google seems to have no shame in
copying the innovations of smaller American companies in their attempts
to extend their search and advertising monopolies into new categories.”
“We’re
mostly sad to see a once innovative company that started with the
mission of ‘Do No Evil’ avoid addressing the fact they’ve infringed on
our inventions, and have instead turned to strong arm tactics that the
robber barons of old would have applauded.”