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Re: JJSeabrook post# 44807

Tuesday, 11/05/2013 11:38:16 AM

Tuesday, November 05, 2013 11:38:16 AM

Post# of 68424
PACER #1042: BRIEF IN SUPPORT OF DEFENDANTS’ MOTION FOR LEAVE TO FILE RESPONSE
TO PLAINTIFF I/P ENGINE, INC.’S SUPPLEMENTAL MEMORANDUM IN
SUPPORT OF REQUEST FOR DEFAULT JUDGMENT IN I/P ENGINE’S MOTION
FOR DEFENDANTS TO SHOW CAUSE UNDER RULE 37 FOR NONCOMPLIANCE
WITH THE AUGUST 13, 2013 ORDER

Case 2:11-cv-00512-RAJ-TEM Document 1042 Filed 11/05/13 Page 1 of 5 PageID# 24764
1
On October 7, 2013, Plaintiff filed its Motion for Leave to File Supplemental
Memorandum of New Additional Facts Justifying Its Motion for Defendants to Show Cause
Under Rule 37 for Noncompliance with August 13, 2013 Order. (Dkt. 993.) On the same day,
Plaintiff filed its supplemental memorandum that was the subject of the motion for leave. (Dkt.
998.) On October 21, 2013, Defendants filed their opposition responding to Plaintiff’s motion
for leave. (Dkt. 1003.) Because Plaintiff had separately filed the Supplemental Memorandum at
the same time as its Motion for Leave (Dkt. 998), Defendants responded to Plaintiff’s motion for
leave and additionally responded to the Supplemental Memorandum.
On October 30, 2013, the Court Granted Plaintiff’s Motion and gave Plaintiff leave to file
a supplemental memorandum that “shall not exceed ten (10) pages including any attachments.”
(Dkt. 1016.) Plaintiff filed its Supplemental Memorandum on October 31, 2013. (Dkt. 1032.)
While Defendants have previously explained why the arguments in Plaintiff’s
Supplemental Memorandum (filed along with the original Motion for Leave at Dkt. 998) are
flawed (Dkt. 1003), Defendants seek leave to file their response to Plaintiff’s new Supplemental
Memorandum in the event that (1) the Court would prefer in the record a separate brief in
response to the Supplemental Memorandum, or (2) if the Court had not considered Defendants'
response to Plaintiff’s Supplemental Memorandum in ruling on Plaintiff’s Motion for Leave to
File the Supplemental Memorandum. Accordingly, Defendants respectfully request that this
Court grant Defendants leave to file a ten-page memorandum (including any attachments)
responding to Plaintiff’s October 31, 2013 memorandum. Defendants' proposed memorandum is
attached hereto as Exhibit A.
Case 2:11-cv-00512-RAJ-TEM Document 1042 Filed 11/05/13 Page 2 of 5 PageID# 24765
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DATED: November 5, 2013 /s/ Stephen E. Noona
Stephen E. Noona
Virginia State Bar No. 25367
KAUFMAN & CANOLES, P.C.
150 West Main Street, Suite 2100
Norfolk, VA 23510
Telephone: (757) 624-3000
Facsimile: (757) 624-3169
senoona@kaufcan.com
David Bilsker
David A. Perlson
QUINN EMANUEL URQUHART &
SULLIVAN, LLP
50 California Street, 22nd Floor
San Francisco, California 94111
Telephone: (415) 875-6600
Facsimile: (415) 875-6700
davidbilsker@quinnemanuel.com
davidperlson@quinnemanuel.com
Counsel for Google Inc., Target Corporation,
IAC Search & Media, Inc., and Gannett Co., Inc.
/s/ Stephen E. Noona
Stephen E. Noona
Virginia State Bar No. 25367
KAUFMAN & CANOLES, P.C.
150 W. Main Street, Suite 2100
Norfolk, VA 23510
Telephone: (757) 624-3000
Facsimile: (757) 624-3169
senoona@kaufcan.com
Robert L. Burns
FINNEGAN, HENDERSON, FARABOW, GARRETT &
DUNNER, LLP
Two Freedom Square
11955 Freedom Drive
Reston, VA 20190
Telephone: (571) 203-2700
Facsimile: (202) 408-4400
Cortney S. Alexander
FINNEGAN, HENDERSON, FARABOW, GARRETT &
DUNNER, LLP
Case 2:11-cv-00512-RAJ-TEM Document 1042 Filed 11/05/13 Page 3 of 5 PageID# 24766
3
3500 SunTrust Plaza
303 Peachtree Street, NE
Atlanta, GA 94111
Telephone: (404) 653-6400
Facsimile: (415) 653-6444
Counsel for Defendant AOL Inc.
Case 2:11-cv-00512-RAJ-TEM Document 1042 Filed 11/05/13 Page 4 of 5 PageID# 24767
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CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
I hereby certify that, on November 5, 2013, I will electronically file the foregoing with
the Clerk of Court using the CM/ECF system, which will send a notification of such filing (NEF)
to the following:
Jeffrey K. Sherwood
Kenneth W. Brothers
DICKSTEIN SHAPIRO LLP
1825 Eye Street NW
Washington, DC 20006
Telephone: (202) 420-2200
Facsimile: (202) 420-2201
sherwoodj@dicksteinshapiro.com
brothersk@dicksteinshapiro.com
Donald C. Schultz
W. Ryan Snow
Steven Stancliff
CRENSHAW, WARE & MARTIN, P.L.C.
150 West Main Street, Suite 1500
Norfolk, VA 23510
Telephone: (757) 623-3000
Facsimile: (757) 623-5735
dschultz@cwm-law.cm
wrsnow@cwm-law.com
sstancliff@cwm-law.com
Counsel for Plaintiff, I/P Engine, Inc.
/s/ Stephen E. Noona
Stephen E. Noona
Virginia State Bar No. 25367
KAUFMAN & CANOLES, P.C.
150 West Main Street, Suite 2100
Norfolk, VA 23510
Telephone: (757) 624-3000
Facsimile: (757) 624-3169
senoona@kaufcan.com
Case 2:11-cv-00512-RAJ-TEM Document 1042 Filed 11/05/13 Page 5 of 5 PageID# 24768
EXHIBIT A
Case 2:11-cv-00512-RAJ-TEM Document 1042-1 Filed 11/05/13 Page 1 of 14 PageID# 24769
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
EASTERN DISTRICT OF VIRGINIA
NORFOLK DIVISION
I/P ENGINE, INC. Plaintiff,
v.
AOL, INC., et al., Defendants.
Civil Action No. 2:11-cv-512
DEFENDANTS' RESPONSE TO PLAINTIFF'S SUPPLEMENTAL MEMORANDUM
REGARDING MOTION TO SHOW CAUSE
Case 2:11-cv-00512-RAJ-TEM Document 1042-1 Filed 11/05/13 Page 2 of 14 PageID# 24770
1
Through its Supplemental Memorandum, Plaintiff yet again seeks to falsely cast
aspersions on Google in support of its fourth motion for sanctions in this case.1 (See Dkts. 200,
277, 282 (Plaintiff's first three sanctions motions); Dkts. 275, 697 (denying all three motions)).
Google already demonstrated why, like Plaintiff's prior three motions, this one also should be
denied. As discussed more fully in Google's Opposition to Plaintiff's underlying Motion to Show
Cause (Dkt. 982), Google first produced 986 highly-confidential source code files (two million
lines of code) as well as other technical documents showing the changes to the accused systems.
Not only did Google produce the source code, but it went to great lengths to make this code as
accessible and digestible as possible. For example, rather than dumping irrelevant code on
Plaintiff and forcing Plaintiff to "go fish" for the relevant portions, Google carefully targeted its
production to the source code files that show the changes between Old AdWords and New
AdWords. As Google engineer Bartholomew Furrow explained at his deposition:
So what happened is I – I looked for changes to the code that were relevant in my
opinion to the changes between old AdWords and new AdWords. And what I did
is I identified particular change lists that corresponded to changes – relevant
changes. And each change list corresponds to a certain set of files.
(Dkt. 1005,2 Ex. 8 (Furrow Dep. 224:1-7).) Google then produced "before" and "after" versions
of this code, since this would be the easiest way for Plaintiff to identify and review the changes
that were made to the code. (Id., 224:18-21 ("And so I thought it would be most helpful to you if
we – if I provided a version that – or both versions that would highlight the changes that took
1 Plaintiff’s first and third sanctions motions were denied in their entirety, while for the
second sanctions motion the Court denied Plaintiff’s actual sanctions requests and merely
ordered Google to update certain U.S. revenue figures, as Google had already agreed to do.
(Dkt. 697).
2 The Declaration of Joshua L. Sohn and attached exhibits was filed on October 21,
2013 along with Defendants’ Opposition to Plaintiff’s Motion For Leave to File a Supplemental
Memorandum Regarding Motion to Show Cause and Motion to Strike Plaintiff’s Supplemental
Memorandum. (Dkt. 1005.) In order to avoid re-filing documents already before the Court,
Defendants’ brief here cites to the October 21, 2013 Sohn Decl.
Case 2:11-cv-00512-RAJ-TEM Document 1042-1 Filed 11/05/13 Page 3 of 14 PageID# 24771
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place . . . .").) Google even instructed Plaintiff on how to make a "diff" or redline copy to
specifically show these changes between the "before" and "after" versions of the code. (Dkt. 983
(Sistos Decl.), ¶ 7.)
In neither his report nor his declaration does Dr. Frieder cite to a single document that
Google had not produced by the August 25 deadline for production of relevant documents. Nor
did Plaintiff in its Opening Brief on Post-Judgment Royalties. (Dkt. 1028.) And neither Dr.
Frieder nor Plaintiff point to any fact regarding New AdWords that they could not ascertain from
this initial production. Indeed, as shown by both parties’ Opening Briefs, the facts underlying
Plaintiff's claim that Google's New AdWords system is no more than a colorable variation from
the Old AdWords system are not in dispute. In other words, Google's production of documents
that were actually “relevant” to whether New AdWords is no more than a colorable variation of
the old AdWords was spot-on.
Nevertheless, after Google had already produced any document that either party would
rely on, Plaintiff engaged in a campaign to generate discovery disputes in order to create the
false impression that Google had not complied with the Court’s Order. Plaintiff first demanded
that Google also produce custodial emails discussing the new system. Google did not agree that
custodial emails were relevant to determining whether New AdWords is no more than a
colorable variation of Old AdWords; that is shown in the source code Google produced.
Moreover, the parties had agreed during pre-trial discovery that there was no obligation to
preserve emails after the start of the litigation. (Dkt. 1005 ¶ 2 & Ex. 3.) It was also entirely
reasonable for Google to read the Court's August 14 Order to implicate source code and technical
documents rather than custodial emails, given that custodial emails are extremely voluminous
and could not practically be collected and produced in just 10 days. (Dkt. 982, 5-6.) In the pre-
Case 2:11-cv-00512-RAJ-TEM Document 1042-1 Filed 11/05/13 Page 4 of 14 PageID# 24772
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trial discovery phase, review and production of custodial emails took two months. (See id.) The
Court explicitly blessed that two-month timetable, finding it reasonable. (See id.)
Nonetheless, in the interest of compromise and to avoid unnecessary motion practice,
Google agreed on August 28 to collect and produce custodial emails. (Id. at 4.) Google
completed this production by September 13, 2013, producing over 9,000 pages of custodial
emails to Plaintiff. Rather than meeting and conferring with Google about the scope of this
production, the timing of this production, or anything else, Plaintiff abruptly filed its Motion to
Show Cause on August 29, the day after Google had agreed to produce the emails in question.
(Dkt. 978.)
On September 20, 2013, Plaintiff took the deposition of Google engineer Bartholomew
Furrow. Plaintiff did not question Mr. Furrow on any of the 9,000 pages of custodial emails that
Plaintiff argued were so critical in its Motion for Sanctions, despite Plaintiff's prior insistence
that these emails be produced in time for the deposition. Then, after the Furrow deposition,
Plaintiff requested additional categories of documents, and – continuing its efforts to work with
Plaintiff in good faith to avoid unnecessary disputes before the Court – Google worked quickly
to produce these newly-requested documents within 30 hours and in time for Plaintiff's expert
reports. Google's actions do not remotely show a party that is disregarding its discovery
obligations and/or deserves sanctions. Rather, Google's actions show a party that is working
hard to accommodate Plaintiff's serial discovery requests in good faith to avoid unnecessary
disputes and motion practice. Despite Google's good-faith efforts, Plaintiff has again rushed to
the Court raising baseless requests for sanctions. As detailed below, Plaintiff's new accusations
are just as baseless as its prior ones.
Case 2:11-cv-00512-RAJ-TEM Document 1042-1 Filed 11/05/13 Page 5 of 14 PageID# 24773
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First, Plaintiff alleges that Google improperly deleted instant message chats about New
AdWords. But the parties had agreed long ago that instant messages occurring after the filing
date of the litigation need not be preserved or produced. In any event, Google's company-wide
policy since 2008 has been not to record IMs in the first place. Google did not "delete" anything;
it simply followed its long-time corporate policy in not recording these communications.
Second, Plaintiff alleges that Google did not create launch documents about New
AdWords. But litigants have no obligation to create new documents just because their opponents
would like to discover them. Google's decision not to create certain launch documents cannot be
deemed improper as a matter of law.
Third, Plaintiff alleges that Google withheld calendaring documents and textual notes
about its source code changes. These ministerial documents about the source code changes have
little if any relevance to determining whether New AdWords is no more than a colorable
variation of Old AdWords, particularly compared to the source code itself. But when Plaintiff
stated that it believed these ministerial documents were relevant and asked that they be produced,
Google promptly did so. Tellingly, Plaintiff did not cite any of these documents in its expert
reports either, thus confirming that these ministerial documents about the source code (as
opposed to the source code itself) are not relevant.
In reality, Plaintiff's Motion to Show Cause is nothing more than an unjustified attempt to
win its post-judgment royalty case by default. Plaintiff seeks a default "death penalty" sanction –
namely, an order that New AdWords is no more than a colorable variation of Old AdWords.
Yet, as explained in Defendants' Opposition to the underlying Motion to Show Cause, such
sanctions are reserved for "flagrant" behavior that is materially prejudicial to the opposing party.
(Dkt. 982, 14 (citing Wilson v. Volkswagen of Am., 561 F.2d 494, 504 (4th Cir. 1977)). Plaintiff
Case 2:11-cv-00512-RAJ-TEM Document 1042-1 Filed 11/05/13 Page 6 of 14 PageID# 24774
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cannot show flagrantly improper behavior by Google. To the contrary, Google has worked hard
to accommodate Plaintiff's serial discovery requests, even after Plaintiff cast its net wider and
wider by deeming more and more documents supposedly relevant to its case. And Plaintiff
cannot show prejudice, as the only documents that Plaintiff's expert actually cited in his report
are the source code and technical documents that Google originally produced by the Court's
August 25 deadline.
Likewise, civil contempt sanctions of any kind are designed "to coerce the contemnor
into compliance with court orders or to compensate the complainant for losses sustained."
Bradley v. Am. Household Inc., 378 F.3d 373, 378 (4th Cir. 2004). But Google has complied
even with Plaintiff's serial, seemingly never-ending document requests. There is nothing to
"coerce." And Plaintiff has suffered no prejudice, so there are no "losses" that require
compensation. Accordingly, contempt sanctions of any kind are inappropriate, much less the
death penalty sanction of a default judgment.
I. PLAINTIFF'S ALLEGATIONS OF DISCOVERY MALFEASANCE ARE
MERITLESS
A. Google Did Not Delete Electronic Records
Plaintiff first argues that Google "deleted relevant electronic records" (Dkt. 1032, 1) by
not preserving "chats" conducted over Google's instant messaging services, Google Talk or
Google Hangouts. (Id. at 2-3.) But the parties explicitly agreed that “[n]o party ha[d] an
obligation to preserve corporate voicemails or corporate instant messages created after”
September 15, 2011. (Dkt. 1005 ¶¶ 3-6 & Exs. 1-2.) Here, Google's internal electronic chats
certainly qualify as "corporate instant messages" that Google had no obligation to preserve, per
the parties' agreement. That Plaintiff would seek a default judgment for Google's following the
parties' agreement shows how meritless Plaintiff's request is.
Case 2:11-cv-00512-RAJ-TEM Document 1042-1 Filed 11/05/13 Page 7 of 14 PageID# 24775
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And to be clear, Google did not "delete" anything. Nor did Google, as Plaintiff implies,
alter its practices with respect to the chats at issue here. At Google, chats are not recorded as a
matter of course. Google's company-wide corporate policy since 2008 has been by default to
conduct all intra-company chats in "off-the-record" mode, meaning that such chats are not stored
or recorded. (Dkt. 1004, ¶ 8.) This policy is consistent with the caselaw, which recognizes that
parties have no obligation to preserve or record ephemeral, real-time conversations such as
instant message chats. As one court noted, demanding that a defendant log every chat would be
"akin to a demand that a party to a litigation install a system to monitor and record phone calls
coming in to its office on the hypothesis that some of them may contain relevant information.
There is no such requirement . . . ." Malletier v. Dooney & Burke, No. 04-5316, 2006 WL
3851151, at *2 (S.D.N.Y. Dec. 22, 2006). While Plaintiff's allegations may have some
superficial rhetorical appeal, Google's engineers did nothing untoward here. Rather, they
followed the parties' agreement in the case and the policy in place at Google since 2008.
B. Google Had No Obligation to Create Launch Documents
Plaintiff next argues that Google "purposefully avoided producing relevant launch
documents" about changes to the accused systems. (Dkt. 1032, 1.) This allegation is also false.
As Plaintiff indicates later on, its real complaint is that Google did not "create" documents, not
that Google failed to produce documents that it had created. (Id. at 4 ("Google changed its
general business practices to avoid creating relevant documents. . . . ").) So Plaintiff's real
allegation is that Google somehow engaged in impropriety by not creating launch documents.
This allegation also fails as a matter of law. It is a basic rule of civil discovery that parties have a
duty to produce documents within their possession, but have no duty to create new documents.
See, e.g., Washington v. Garrett, 10 F.3d 1421, 1437 (9th Cir. 1993) (affirming ruling "that the
defendant was not required to create documents to satisfy [plaintiff's] discovery requests");
Case 2:11-cv-00512-RAJ-TEM Document 1042-1 Filed 11/05/13 Page 8 of 14 PageID# 24776
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Brown v. Warden Ross Correctional Inst., No. 2:10-cv-822, 2011 WL 1877706, at *5 (S.D. Ohio
May 16, 2011) (similar). Thus, Google's decision not to create launch documents cannot be
deemed improper or sanctionable as a matter of law. Here too, Plaintiff has made spurious
allegations of malfeasance with superficial rhetorical appeal, but devoid of any substance.
C. Google Promptly Produced the Textual Source Code Notes and Launch Cal
Documents That Plaintiff Requested After the Furrow Deposition
Plaintiff finally enumerates other categories of documents that Google supposedly
withheld – namely, a single Launch Cal document and textual notes about Google's source code
changes. (Dkt. 1032 at 4-5.) The former is one ministerial calendaring document3 while the
latter are "vague" and "brief" notes on the source code changes. (Dkt. 1005, Ex. 8 (Furrow Dep.
230:17-22).) Notably, Plaintiff had one Launch Cal document in its possession before the
Furrow deposition (Dkt. 1005, Ex. 10 and ¶ 15), yet Plaintiff gave no indication before the
deposition that these Launch Cal documents had any relevance or that additional Launch Cal
documents should be produced. Likewise, it is hardly uncommon for Google or any other
software company to have a change list with textual notes of source code changes, yet Plaintiff
expressed no desire for such textual notes before the Furrow deposition. Only three days after
the Furrow deposition did Plaintiff first say anything about desiring these documents. The fact
that Plaintiff waited until three days after the deposition before uttering a word about these
3 As Mr. Furrow explained, "Launch Cal" is "short for Launch Calendar, and the basic
notion is it contains a list of upcoming and past and current launches, thus the calendar aspect."
(Dkt. 1005, Ex. 8 (Furrow Dep. 201:8-12).) Because Launch Cal documents are ministerial
calendaring documents, they typically do not have significant notes on the substance of the
various launches. (Id., 201:25-202:23.) The one additional Launch Cal document that Google
was able to find and produce after the Furrow deposition was attached as Dkt. 1005, Ex. 9. The
Launch Cal document that Google had produced with its previous production was attached as
Dkt. 1005, Ex. 10.
Case 2:11-cv-00512-RAJ-TEM Document 1042-1 Filed 11/05/13 Page 9 of 14 PageID# 24777
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ministerial documents shows that Plaintiff's demands are driven more by gamesmanship than a
legitimate need for relevant documents.
Google did not focus on these ministerial documents in its initial production because
Google was focusing on producing the actual source code changes that these documents relate to.
Google's focus on the source code, rather than additional ministerial documents about the source
code, was borne out by the fact that Plaintiff's technical expert did not ultimately cite any of
these additional ministerial documents in his expert report. Yet Plaintiff seeks the death penalty
sanction of a default judgment simply because Google did not produce these ministerial
documents before Plaintiff specifically asked for them.
In any event, Plaintiff admits that it first asked for these ministerial documents after the
Furrow deposition and that Google promptly produced them at that time. (Dkt. 1032, 4-5.)
Indeed, the parties' email correspondence shows that Plaintiff first asked for these documents the
evening of September 23 and that Google produced them just 30 hours later. (Dkt. 1005, Exs. 4-
5.) Thus, Plaintiff's allegation that Google engaged in malfeasance with respect to these
documents should be rejected too. Rather, Google's production of these documents immediately
after Plaintiff requested them shows Google's good-faith efforts to promptly produce all
documents that Plaintiff deems relevant and asks to be produced. Google respectfully submits
that entertaining Plaintiff's empty complaints only further encourages the parties not to
cooperate, and to further waste party and Court resources with unnecessary motion practice as
here.
II. PLAINTIFF HAS SUFFERED NO PREJUDICE
Even if the Court somehow found any impropriety in Google's good-faith initial
production and its continued good faith in dealing with Plaintiff's subsequent requests, Plaintiff
shows no prejudice from anything Google has done. Plaintiff points to no relevant fact as to
Case 2:11-cv-00512-RAJ-TEM Document 1042-1 Filed 11/05/13 Page 10 of 14 PageID#
24778
9
whether New AdWords is more than a colorable variation from Old AdWords that it does not
have or could not have discovered from Google's initial production of documents pursuant to the
Court's August 14 Order. Indeed, Plaintiff's technical expert cited nothing other than the
documents Google produced before the Court's deadline for production of documents regarding
whether New AdWords is more than a colorable variation from Old AdWords. Nor did he state
that he was unable to determine any of the relevant facts about New AdWords from Google's
document production.4 And to the extent Plaintiff needed more time to digest any of the
documents subsequently produced in good faith in response to Plaintiff's serial requests, Plaintiff
did not seek any extension of its expert report deadline in order to digest these documents (Dkt.
1005, ¶ 10) – an extension that Defendants would have gladly granted, had Plaintiff requested it.
In fact, Defendants had previously offered up to a one-month extension of Plaintiff's expert
report deadline in exchange for Plaintiff withdrawing its Motion to Show Cause. Yet Plaintiff,
far from agreeing to an extension to moot the Motion to Show Cause, demanded that Google
present Mr. Furrow for 14 hours of deposition (even though it ultimately ended up taking less
than a seven hour deposition of Mr. Furrow), and, even though not called for under the Court’s
Order, answer an interrogatory before Plaintiff would withdraw this Motion. (See Dkt. 1005, Ex.
11, 2 & Ex. 12.)
In reality, the operation of New AdWords is undisputed. The expert reports of Plaintiff's
technical expert (Dr. Frieder) and Defendants' expert (Dr. Ungar) do not conflict at all in their
descriptions of how New AdWords actually operates. (Compare Dkt. 1005, Ex. 6 with Dkt.
1005, Ex. 7.) They merely conflict in their opinions on whether this undisputed functionality
4 Plaintiff’s complaints regarding not having any electronic chats also ring hollow given
that Plaintiff did not ask Mr. Furrow at his deposition regarding the substance of what was
actually discussed in the chats, again showing that they were not genuinely interested in what
was discussed, but rather in generating disputes.
Case 2:11-cv-00512-RAJ-TEM Document 1042-1 Filed 11/05/13 Page 11 of 14 PageID#
24779
10
represents more than a colorable difference from Old AdWords. But that, of course,
demonstrates no prejudice.5
In sum, Plaintiff presents no evidence that it suffered any prejudice from Google's
document production, including its source code production. Indeed, as detailed above, the facts
show just the opposite. Plaintiff is simply ginning up meritless accusations in an attempt to win
its post-judgment royalty case by default. The Court should not indulge these tactics. As noted
above, default sanctions are limited to flagrantly improper behavior that materially prejudices the
rights of the opposing party, and Plaintiff has shown neither flagrantly improper behavior nor
prejudice. Nor are contempt sanctions of any kind appropriate, as there is no need to coerce
Google into compliance with the Court's Order or compensate Plaintiff for any losses that
Plaintiff sustained (because Plaintiff sustained no losses).
DATED: November 5, 2013 /s/ Stephen E. Noona
Stephen E. Noona
Virginia State Bar No. 25367
KAUFMAN & CANOLES, P.C.
150 West Main Street, Suite 2100
Norfolk, VA 23510
Telephone: (757) 624-3000
Facsimile: (757) 624-3169
senoona@kaufcan.com
David Bilsker
David A. Perlson
QUINN EMANUEL URQUHART &
5 On the issue of prejudice, Plaintiff also argues that Google's allegedly untimely
production of English-language source code descriptions prejudiced Plaintiff because it "le[ft]
I/P Engine to sort through the underlying code (968 source code files and almost two million
lines of code (Dkt. 982, 3)) without the aid of these descriptions." (Dkt. 1032, 4.) If Plaintiff is
trying to insinuate that Google dumped source code on Plaintiff without giving Plaintiff the tools
to properly analyze it, this insinuation is meritless. As discussed above, Google carefully
targeted its source code production to the files showing the changes between Old AdWords and
New AdWords, and even instructed Plaintiff how to make a redline copy to highlight those
changes.
Case 2:11-cv-00512-RAJ-TEM Document 1042-1 Filed 11/05/13 Page 12 of 14 PageID#
24780
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SULLIVAN, LLP
50 California Street, 22nd Floor
San Francisco, California 94111
Telephone: (415) 875-6600
Facsimile: (415) 875-6700
davidbilsker@quinnemanuel.com
davidperlson@quinnemanuel.com
Counsel for Google Inc., Target Corporation,
IAC Search & Media, Inc., and Gannett Co., Inc.
/s/ Stephen E. Noona
Stephen E. Noona
Virginia State Bar No. 25367
KAUFMAN & CANOLES, P.C.
150 W. Main Street, Suite 2100
Norfolk, VA 23510
Telephone: (757) 624-3000
Facsimile: (757) 624-3169
senoona@kaufcan.com
Robert L. Burns
FINNEGAN, HENDERSON, FARABOW, GARRETT &
DUNNER, LLP
Two Freedom Square
11955 Freedom Drive
Reston, VA 20190
Telephone: (571) 203-2700
Facsimile: (202) 408-4400
Cortney S. Alexander
FINNEGAN, HENDERSON, FARABOW, GARRETT &
DUNNER, LLP
3500 SunTrust Plaza
303 Peachtree Street, NE
Atlanta, GA 94111
Telephone: (404) 653-6400
Facsimile: (415) 653-6444
Counsel for Defendant AOL Inc.



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