NEON, a Texas-based maker of mainframe utility software, has settled its
lawsuit with IBM and has agreed to stop selling its zPrime product.

NEON Enterprise Software, a maker of mainframe software, announced it has
settled its legal dispute with IBM and will immediately withdraw its zPrime
product from the market. 

In the May 31 announcement, NEON said that pursuant to the terms of a
permanent injunction, NEON and its distribution partners and affiliates will
no longer market, sell, license--including any renewal or extension of any
existing license, install, distribute, export, import, offer to sell, offer
to license, offer to install, offer to distribute, offer to export or offer
to import zPrime.
 
Moreover, the legal dispute was settled with no payments having been made by
either party to the other as part of the settlement.

According to the NEON press release on the settlement:

“The U.S. District Court has ruled that (1) only workloads expressly
authorized by IBM may be processed on Specialty Engines (including zIIPs and
zAAPs) and (2) IBM’s contracts, including the IBM Customer Agreement and the
License Agreement for Machine Code, prohibit software (a) that enables
workloads not expressly authorized by IBM to be processed on Specialty
Engines or (b) that circumvents IBM’s technological measures in Machine Code
that protect the Built-in Capacity of Specialty Engines and enables
workloads not expressly authorized by IBM to be processed on Specialty
Engines. Neon has agreed to a permanent injunction under which it will
withdraw zPrime from the market and request that licensees and customers
remove and destroy their copies of zPrime. Neon will not renew, extend or
transfer any existing zPrime license or any warranty, maintenance or service
period of any existing zPrime license (or any portion thereof).”

NEON filed suit against IBM in the U.S. District Court for the Western
District of Texas in December 2009, claiming IBM was using anticompetitive
mainframe tactics. IBM came back and countersued NEON in January of 2010 for
unfair business practices and anticompetitive behavior of its own, namely
copyright violation. NEON then amended its complaint in February 2010
sharing more specific details of IBM’s alleged anticompetitive behavior.

In a June 2009 press release announcing zPrime, NEON said:

“NEON zPrime can save companies with System z mainframes 20 percent or more
of their annual mainframe hardware and software costs under conventional
use-pricing structures. Unlike any approach to date that attempts to offload
processing from a System z central processor, or CP, to IBM specialty
processors such as System z Integrated Information Processor (zIIP) or
System z Application Assist Processors (zAAP), zPrime easily enables the
shift of huge amounts of routine workloads running on CPs to these
equally-fast but lower-cost specialty processors.”

Meanwhile, this settlement with IBM does not affect any other NEON products,
the company said. 

http://www.eweek.com/c/a/IT-Infrastructure/NEON-Settles-Mainframe-Software-L
awsuit-with-IBM-848628/


Lizette

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