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In re Innovatio IP Ventures, LLC Patent Litigation
2012 WL 3594400
N.D. Ill.
2012
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Background

  • Innovatio IP Ventures sues Wireless Network Users nationwide over alleged patent infringement; related actions by manufacturers seek declaratory judgments; all matters consolidated in MDL in this court.
  • Innovatio uses commercially available sniffing tools (Riverbed AirPcap Nx, Wireshark) to capture data on open Wi‑Fi networks for analysis.
  • Court previously allowed Innovatio to seek admissibility ruling and required a detailed sniffing protocol due to potential Wiretap Act privacy concerns.
  • Disputes focus on whether sniffing collects the contents of communications and whether the data captured falls within Wiretap Act exemptions; expert testimony debates whether payloads are initially intercepted.
  • Court analyzes applicability of the Federal Wiretap Act and Pen Registers/Trap and Trace Act to sniffing; ultimately concludes the protocol is permissible under the Wiretap Act’s public-access exception for readily accessible electronic communications.
  • Court grants Innovatio’s Rule 16(c)(2) motion, approving the sniffing protocol for public-facing networks and stating collected information may be admissible if properly Foundationed under the Federal Rules of Evidence.

Issues

Issue Plaintiff's Argument Defendant's Argument Held
Whether Wiretap Act applies to Innovatio’s sniffing protocol. Innovatio contends no interception of contents occurs due to overwriting payloads. Defendants argue initial interception occurs when data payload is captured. Wiretap Act does not bar admissibility under the public-access exception.
Does the network’s configuration make transmitted communications readily accessible to the general public? Innovatio argues unencrypted networks are readily accessible. Defendants disagree on accessibility standards and privacy implications. Unencrypted Wi‑Fi communications are readily accessible to the general public under 2511(2)(g)(i).
Application of Pen Registers and Trap and Trace Devices Act to Wi‑Fi sniffing. Court declines to apply the Act to Wi‑Fi packet capture devices.
Whether information collected via sniffing is admissible under the Federal Rules of Evidence. Evidence obtained via protocol should be admissible if foundationally proper. Admissibility depends on proper foundation; protocol approved for public-facing networks.

Key Cases Cited

  • Noel v. Hall, 568 F.3d 743 (9th Cir. 2009) (separation of interception vs. use of captured communications)
  • United States v. Rodriguez, 968 F.2d 130 (2d Cir. 1992) (interception occurs when contents are captured or redirected)
  • Hamilton v. Lanning, 130 S. Ct. 2464 (2010) (ordinary meaning governs undefined statutory terms)
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Case Details

Case Name: In re Innovatio IP Ventures, LLC Patent Litigation
Court Name: District Court, N.D. Illinois
Date Published: Aug 22, 2012
Citation: 2012 WL 3594400
Docket Number: MDL No. 2303; Case No. 11 C 9308
Court Abbreviation: N.D. Ill.