2-Way Computing, Inc. v. Unify Inc.
Filing
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STIPULATED PROTECTIVE ORDER Granting 27 Stipulation for Protective Order. Signed by Magistrate Judge Carl W. Hoffman on 7/5/16. (Copies have been distributed pursuant to the NEF - MMM)
Case 2:16-cv-00423-GMN-CWH Document 27 Filed 07/05/16 Page 1 of 34
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Reza Mirzaie, Esq.
(Pro Hac Vice)
rmirzaie@raklaw.com
Paul S. Kroeger, Esq.
(Pro Hac Vice)
pkroeger@raklaw.com
Stanley H. Thompson, Jr., Esq.
(Pro Hac Vice)
sthompson@raklaw.com
RUSS, AUGUST & KABAT
12424 Wilshire Boulevard, 12th Floor
Los Angeles, California 90025
Telephone: (310) 826-7474
Facsimile: (310) 826-6991
Mark Borghese, Esq.
Nevada Bar No. 6231
mark@borgheselegal.com
Borghese Legal, Ltd.
10161 Park Run Drive, Suite 150
Las Vegas, Nevada 89145
T: (702) 382-0200
F: (702) 382-0212
Attorneys for Plaintiff 2-Way Computing, Inc.
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(Additional Counsel Listed on Signature Page)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
DISTRICT OF NEVADA
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2-WAY COMPUTING, INC.,
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Plaintiff,
vs.
Case No. 2:16-cv-00423-GMN-CWH
UNIFY INC., F/K/A SIEMENS
ENTERPRISE COMMMUNICATIONS,
[PROPOSED] STIPULATED
PROTECTIVE ORDER
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Defendant.
1.
PURPOSES AND LIMITATIONS
Disclosure and discovery activity in this action are likely to involve production of
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confidential, proprietary, or private information for which special protection from public
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disclosure and from use for any purpose other than prosecuting this litigation may be warranted.
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The Parties agree that this Order, which is entered pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure
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26(c), will expedite the flow of discovery materials, facilitate the prompt resolution of disputes
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over confidentiality of discovery materials, adequately protect information the Parties are
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entitled to keep confidential, and ensure that the Parties are permitted reasonably necessary uses
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of such materials in preparation for and in the conduct of trial. The parties acknowledge that this
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Order does not confer blanket protections on all disclosures during discovery, responses to
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discovery, or in the course of making initial or supplemental disclosures under Rule 26(a). As
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set forth in Section 14.3 below, this Protective Order does not entitle the Parties to file
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confidential information under seal; Local Rule (“LR”) IA 10-5 sets forth the procedures that
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must be followed when a party seeks permission from the Court to file material under seal.
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2.
DEFINITIONS
2.1
Challenging Party: a Party or Non-Party that challenges the designation of
information or items under this Order.
2.2
“CONFIDENTIAL” Information or Items: information (regardless of how it is
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generated, stored or maintained) or tangible things that a Producing Party considers in good faith
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to contain confidential, commercially sensitive, and/or proprietary information not otherwise
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known or available to the public.
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2.3
Counsel (without qualifier): Outside Counsel of Record and House Counsel (as
well as their support staff).
2.4
Designating Party: a Party or Non-Party that designates information or items that it
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produces in disclosures or in responses to discovery as “CONFIDENTIAL,” “HIGHLY
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CONFIDENTIAL – OUTSIDE ATTORNEYS' EYES ONLY,” or “HIGHLY CONFIDENTIAL
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– SOURCE CODE.”
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2.5
Disclosure or Discovery Material: all items or information, regardless of the
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medium or manner in which it is generated, stored, or maintained (including, among other things,
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testimony, transcripts, and tangible things), that are produced or generated in disclosures or
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responses to discovery in this matter.
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2.6
Expert: a person with specialized knowledge or experience in a matter pertinent to
the litigation who (1) has been retained by a Party or its counsel to serve as an independent
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outside expert witness or as a consultant in this action, (2) is not a past or current employee of a
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Party or of a Party's competitor, (3) at the time of retention, is not anticipated to become an
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employee of a Party or of a Party's competitor, and (4) as to whom the procedures set forth in
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paragraph 7.4 have been followed.
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2.7
“HIGHLY CONFIDENTIAL – OUTSIDE ATTORNEYS’ EYES ONLY”
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Information or Items: “CONFIDENTIAL” information or items that constitutes or contains
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(a) commercially sensitive marketing, financial, sales, web traffic, research and development, or
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technical data or information; (b) commercially sensitive competitive information, including,
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without limitation, information obtained from a Non-Party pursuant to a current Nondisclosure
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Agreement (“NDA”); (c) information or data relating to future products not yet commercially
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released and/or strategic plans; (d) commercial agreements, licenses and licensing terms,
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settlement agreements, or settlement communications, the disclosure of which is likely to cause
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harm to the competitive position of the Producing Party; (e) trade secrets, pricing or profit
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information, sales or marketing forecasts or plans, business plans, sales or marketing strategy,
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product development information, engineering documents, testing documents, employee
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information, customer lists, and other non-public information of similar competitive and business
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sensitivity; or (f) information that is likely to cause economic harm or significant competitive
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disadvantage to the Producing Party if disclosed. Documents marked “CONFIDENTIAL
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OUTSIDE ATTORNEYS’ EYES ONLY” or “HIGHLY CONFIDENTIAL” shall be treated as if
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designated “HIGHLY CONFIDENTIAL – OUTSIDE ATTORNEYS’ EYES ONLY.”
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2.8
“HIGHLY CONFIDENTIAL – SOURCE CODE” Information or Items:
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“CONFIDENTIAL” information or items that contains or substantively relates to a Producing
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Party’s “Source Code,” which shall mean documents containing or substantively relating to
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confidential, proprietary, and/or trade secret source code or technica l design documentation,
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including computer code, scripts, assembly, object code, source code listings and descriptions of
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source code, object code listings and descriptions of object code, and Hardware Description
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Language (HDL) or Register Transfer Level (RTL) files that describe the hardware design of any
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ASIC or other chip. The Receiving Party shall not attempt to compile any Source Code.
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2.9
Counsel does not include Outside Counsel of Record or any other outside counsel.
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House Counsel: attorneys who are employees of a Party to this action. House
2.10
Non-Party: any natural person, partnership, corporation, association, or other legal
entity not named as a Party to this action.
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2.11
Outside Counsel of Record: attorneys who are not employees of a party to this
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action but are retained to represent or advise a party to this action and have appeared in this action
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on behalf of that party or are affiliated with a law firm which has appeared on behalf of that party.
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2.12
consultants, retained experts, and Outside Counsel of Record (and their support staffs).
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Party: any party to this action, including all of its officers, directors, employees,
2.13
Producing Party: a Party or Non-Party that produces Disclosure or Discovery
Material in this action.
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2.14
Professional Vendors: independent legal translators retained to translate in
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connection with this action; independent stenographic reporters and videographers retained to
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record and transcribe testimony in connection with this action; graphics, translation, or design
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services retained by counsel for purposes of preparing demonstrative or other exhibits for
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deposition, trial, or other court proceedings in the actions; non-technical jury or trial consulting
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services not including mock jurors; persons or entities that provide litigation support services
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such as photocopying, preparing exhibits or demonstrations, organizing, storing, retrieving data in
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any form or medium; provided that all such outside vendors agree to maintain the confidentiality
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of documents pursuant to this Order.
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2.15
Protected Material: any Disclosure or Discovery Material that is designated as
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“CONFIDENTIAL,” “HIGHLY CONFIDENTIAL – OUTSIDE ATTORNEYS’ EYES ONLY,”
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or “HIGHLY CONFIDENTIAL – SOURCE CODE.”
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2.16
Receiving Party: a Party that receives Disclosure or Discovery Material from a
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Producing Party.
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3.
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SCOPE
Discovery materials produced in this case may be labeled as one of three categories,
each of which is defined above: CONFIDENTIAL, HIGHLY CONFIDENTIAL – OUTSIDE
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ATTORNEYS’ EYES ONLY, or HIGHLY CONFIDENTIAL – SOURCE CODE as defined in
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items 2.2, 2.7, and 2.8 above. All three of the identified categories of information shall be
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identified collectively in this Order by the title “Protected Material” as set forth in item 2.15
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above. The protections conferred by this Order cover not only Protected Material, but also (1)
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any information copied or extracted from Protected Material; (2) all copies, excerpts,
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summaries, or compilations of Protected Material; (3) any testimony, conversations, or
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presentations by Parties or their Counsel that might reveal Protected Material; and (4) briefs,
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memoranda, or other writings filed with the Court and exhibits thereto that contain or reflect the
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content of any such Protected Material. However, the protections conferred by this Order do not
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cover the following information: (a) any information that is in the public domain at the time of
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disclosure to a Receiving Party, including but not limited to (i) advertising materials that have
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been actually published or publicly disseminated, (ii) materials that have been published or
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disseminated to the general public, or (iii) documents that have been submitted to any
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governmental entity without request for confidential treatment; (b) any information that
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becomes part of the public domain after its disclosure to a Receiving Party as a result of
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publication not involving a violation of this Order or other obligation to maintain the
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confidentiality of such information, including becoming part of the public record through trial or
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otherwise; (c) any information that the Receiving Party can show was already publicly known
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prior to the disclosure or that the Receiving Party can show by written records was received by
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it from a source who obtained the information lawfully and under no obligation of
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confidentiality to the Producing Party; and (d) any information which the Receiving Party can
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show was independently developed by it after the time of disclosure by personnel who did not
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have access to the Producing Party’s Protected Material.
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Nothing in this Order shall restrict in any way a Producing Party’s use or disclosure of
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its own Protected Material. Nothing in this Order shall be construed to prejudice any Party’s
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right to use any Protected Material in court or in any court filing with the consent of the
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Producing Party or by order of the Court. This Order is without prejudice to the right of any
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Producing Party to seek further or additional protection of any Protected Material or to modify
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this Order in any way, including, without limitation, an order that certain matter not be produced
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at all. Any use of Protected Material at trial shall be governed by a separate agreement or order.
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4.
DURATION
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Even after final disposition of this litigation, the confidentiality obligations imposed by
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this Order shall remain in effect until a Designating Party agrees otherwise in writing or a court
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order otherwise directs. Final disposition shall be deemed to be the later of (1) dismissal of all
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claims and defenses in this action, with or without prejudice; and (2) final judgment herein after
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the completion and exhaustion of all appeals, rehearings, remands, trials, or reviews of this
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action, including the time limits for filing any motions or applications for extension of time
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pursuant to applicable law.
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5.
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DESIGNATING PROTECTED MATERIAL
5.1
Exercise of Restraint and Care in Designating Material for Protection.
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Designations under this Order shall be made with care and shall not be made absent a good faith
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belief that the designated material satisfies the criteria set forth above. If it comes to a
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Designating Party’s attention that information or items that it designated for protection do not
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qualify for protection at all or do not qualify for the level of protection initially asserted, that
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Designating Party must promptly notify all other Parties that it is withdrawing or changing the
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mistaken designation.
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5.2
Manner and Timing of Designations. Except as otherwise provided in this Order
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(see, e.g., second paragraph of section 5.2(a) below), or as otherwise stipulated or ordered,
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Disclosure or Discovery Material that qualifies for protection under this Order may be designated
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as such by the Producing Party by marking it “CONFIDENTIAL,” “HIGHLY CONFIDENTIAL
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– OUTSIDE ATTORNEYS’ EYES ONLY,” or “HIGHLY CONFIDENTIAL – SOURCE
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CODE” prior to or at the time copies are furnished to the Receiving Party.
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(a)
for information in documentary or tangible form (e.g., written discovery,
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documents including both paper documents and “electronically stored information” as that
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phrase is used in Federal Rule of Procedure 34, and tangible things, but excluding transcripts of
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depositions or other pretrial or trial proceedings) may be designated by placing the appropriate
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designation on every page of the written material prior to production. For digital files being
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produced, the Producing Party may mark each viewable page or image with the appropriate
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designation, and mark the medium, container, and/or communication in which the digital files
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were contained. Documents produced in native format may be designated by including the
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designation in the document’s file name.
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In the event that a Party or Non-Party makes original documents or materials available
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for inspection, the original documents shall be presumed “HIGHLY CONFIDENTIAL –
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OUTSIDE ATTORNEYS’ EYES ONLY” (unless otherwise designated at the time of
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inspection) during the inspection and re-designated, as appropriate, during the copying process.
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Any documents (including physical objects) made available for inspection by counsel for the
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Receiving Party prior to producing copies of selected items shall initially be considered, as a
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whole, designated “HIGHLY CONFIDENTIAL – OUTSIDE ATTORNEYS’ EYES ONLY”
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(unless otherwise designated at the time of inspection) and shall be subject to this Order.
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Thereafter, the Producing Party shall have a reasonable time to review and designate the
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appropriate documents as Protected Material (as appropriate) prior to furnishing copies to the
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Receiving Party.
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(b)
for testimony given in deposition or in other pretrial or trial proceedings,
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any transcript, in whole or in part, may be designated “CONFIDENTIAL,” “HIGHLY
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CONFIDENTIAL – OUTSIDE ATTORNEYS’ EYES ONLY,” or “HIGHLY
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CONFIDENTIAL – SOURCE CODE” by an appropriate statement at the time such testimony is
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given or thereafter by notifying the other Parties in writing of the portions of such testimony to
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be so designated within thirty (30) days from receipt of the final certified transcript. Upon such
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request, the reporter shall mark on the title page the original and all copies of the transcript as
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designated. Deposition transcripts, in their entirety, shall be treated by default as HIGHLY
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CONFIDENTIAL – OUTSIDE ATTORNEYS’ EYES ONLY,” until the expiration of the time
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to make a confidentiality designation. Any Party that wishes to disclose the transcript, or
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information contained therein, may provide written notice of its intent to treat the transcript as
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non-confidential, after which time, any Party that wants to maintain any portion of the transcript
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as confidential must designate the confidential portions within fourteen (14) days, or else the
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transcript may be treated as non-confidential.
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(c)
for information not reduced to documentary, tangible, or physical form,
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or which cannot be conveniently designated as set forth in paragraph 2, the Producing Party
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must inform the Receiving Party of the designation in writing.
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5.3
Inadvertent Failures to Designate. An inadvertent failure to designate qualified
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information or items does not, standing alone, waive the Designating Party’s right to secure
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protection under this Order for such material. Upon correction of a designation, the Receiving
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Party must make reasonable efforts to assure that the material is treated in accordance with the
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provisions of this Order.
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6.
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CHALLENGING CONFIDENTIALITY DESIGNATIONS
6.1
Nothing in this Order shall prevent a Receiving Party from contending that any
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documents or information designated as Protected Material have been improperly designated. A
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Receiving Party may at any time request that the Producing Party cancel or modify the Protected
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Material designation with respect to any document or information contained therein.
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6.2
Timing of Challenges. A Party shall not be obligated to challenge the propriety of
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a designation of any category of Protected Material at the time of production, and a failure to do
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so shall not preclude a subsequent challenge thereto. Any Party or Non-Party may challenge a
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designation of confidentiality at any time. Such a challenge shall be written, shall be served on
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counsel for the Producing Party, and shall particularly identify the documents or information that
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the Receiving Party contends should be differently designated.
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6.3
Meet and Confer. The parties shall attempt to resolve each challenge in good faith
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and shall use their best efforts to resolve promptly and informally such disputes. A Challenging
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Party may proceed to the next stage of the challenge process only if it has engaged in a meet and
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confer process (in voice to voice dialogue; other forms of communication are not sufficient) first
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or establishes that the Designating Party is unwilling to participate in the meet and confer process
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within five (5) business days of receipt of the Receiving Party’s written challenge.
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6.4
Judicial Intervention. If the Parties cannot resolve a challenge within five (5)
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business days after receipt of the Receiving Party’s written challenge, the Receiving Party shall
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request, via motion under Local Civil Rule (“LCR”) 7-2 (and in compliance with LR IA 10-5, if
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applicable), that the Court cancel or modify a designation. The burden of demonstrating the
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confidential nature of any information shall at all times be and remain on the Designating Party.
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Until a determination by the Court, the information in issue shall be treated as having been
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properly designated and subject to the terms of this Order.
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7.
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ACCESS TO AND USE OF PROTECTED MATERIAL
7.1
Basic Principles. A Receiving Party may use Protected Material that is disclosed or
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produced by another Party or by a Non-Party in connection with this case only for prosecuting,
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defending, or attempting to settle this litigation. Such Protected Material may be disclosed only to
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the categories of persons and under the conditions described in this Order.
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(a)
All Protected Material shall be held in confidence by each person to whom
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it is disclosed, shall be used only for purposes of this litigation, shall not be used for any business
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purpose or in connection with any other proceeding, including without limitation any other
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litigation, patent prosecution or acquisition, patent reexamination or reissue proceedings,
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opposition proceeding, or any business or competitive purpose or function, and shall not be
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distributed, disclosed or made available to any person who is not entitled to receive such
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information as herein provided.
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(b)
To the extent any Defendant in this litigation provides Protected Material
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under the terms of this Order to Plaintiff, and to the extent this litigation is consolidated with any
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other case for discovery, claim construction, or any other purpose, see Notice of Related Cases,
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Feb. 26, 2016, ECF No. 31; Notice of Related Cases, Mar. 4, 2016, ECF No. 32, Plaintiff shall
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not share that Protected Material with any defendant in any other related or consolidated case,
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absent express written permission from the producing Defendant. This Order does not confer any
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right to any defendant in any other related or consolidated case to access the Protected Material of
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any Defendant in this litigation.
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(c)
Nothing in this Order shall bar or otherwise restrict any attorney herein
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from rendering advice to his or her client with respect to this litigation and, in the course thereof,
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referring to or relying upon his or her examination of Protected Material produced by another
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party or a third-party; provided, however, that in rendering such advice and in otherwise
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communicating with his client, the attorney shall not make specific disclosure of any item of the
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Protected Material.
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(d)
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When the litigation has been terminated, a Receiving Party must comply
with the provisions of section 15 below (FINAL DISPOSITION).
(e)
Protected Material must be stored and maintained by a Receiving Party at a
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location and in a secure manner that ensures that access is limited to the persons authorized under
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this Order. All produced Protected Material shall be carefully maintained so as to preclude access
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by persons who are not entitled to receive such information.
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(f)
All transcripts of depositions, exhibits, answers to interrogatories,
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pleadings, briefs, and other documents submitted to the Court, which have been designated as
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Protected Information, or which contain information so designated, shall be filed under seal in a
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manner prescribed by the Court for such filings.
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(g)
Outside Counsel of Record and their staff for the Parties are hereby
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authorized to be the persons who may retrieve confidential exhibits and/or other confidential
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matters filed with the Court upon termination of this litigation without further order of this Court,
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and are the persons to whom such confidential exhibits or other confidential matters may be
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returned by the Clerk of the Court, if they are not so retrieved. No material or copies thereof so
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filed shall be released except by order of the Court, to Outside Counsel of Record or their staff, or
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as otherwise provided for hereunder. Notwithstanding the foregoing, and with regard to material
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designated as “HIGHLY CONFIDENTIAL – SOURCE CODE,” the provisions of Paragraph 8.1
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are controlling to the extent those provisions differ from this paragraph.
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(h)
Protected Material shall not be copied or otherwise produced by a
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Receiving Party, except for transmission to qualified recipients, without the written permission of
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the Producing Party, or, in the alternative, by further order of the Court. Nothing herein shall,
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however, restrict a qualified recipient from making working copies, abstracts, digests, and
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analyses of “CONFIDENTIAL” and “HIGHLY CONFIDENTIAL – OUTSIDE ATTORNEYS’
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EYES ONLY” information for use in connection with this litigation and such working copies,
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abstracts, digests, and analyses shall be deemed Protected Material under the terms of this Order.
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Further, nothing herein shall restrict a qualified recipient from converting or translating
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“CONFIDENTIAL” and “HIGHLY CONFIDENTIAL – OUTSIDE ATTORNEYS’ EYES
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ONLY” information into machine readable form for incorporation into a data retrieval system
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used in connection with this action, provided that access to that Protected Material, in whatever
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form stored or reproduced, shall be limited to qualified recipients.
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(i)
No Party may remove, or cause to be removed, Protected Material
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produced by another Party from the territorial boundaries of the United States of America.
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Without limitation, this prohibition extends to Protected Material (including copies) in physical
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and electronic form. The viewing of Protected Material through electronic means outside the
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territorial limits of the United States of America is similarly prohibited. Notwithstanding this
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prohibition, Protected Material, exclusive of material designated “HIGHLY CONFIDENTIAL –
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SOURCE CODE,” and to the extent otherwise permitted by law, may be taken outside the
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territorial limits of the United States if it is reasonably necessary for a deposition in this litigation
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taken in a foreign country. The restrictions contained within this paragraph may be amended
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through the consent of the producing Party to the extent that such agreed to procedures conform
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with applicable export control laws and regulations.
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(j)
Nothing in this Order shall restrict in any way the use or disclosure of
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Protected Material by a Receiving Party: (i) previously produced, disclosed and/or provided by
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the Producing Party to the Receiving Party or a non-party without an obligation of confidentiality
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and not by inadvertence or mistake; (ii) with the consent of the Producing Party; or (iii) pursuant
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to order of the Court.
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(k)
The Parties agree to meet and confer prior to the pretrial conference to
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negotiate a proposal for treatment of Protected Material at trial to be submitted for approval by
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the Court. A Party shall provide a minimum of two business days’ notice to the Producing Party
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in the event that a Party intends to use any Protected Material during trial. In addition, the Parties
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will not oppose any request by the Producing Party that the courtroom should be sealed, if
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allowed by the Court, during the presentation of any testimony relating to or involving the use of
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any Protected Material.
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7.2
Disclosure of “CONFIDENTIAL” Information or Items. Unless otherwise ordered
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by the Court or permitted in writing by the Designating Party, a Receiving Party may disclose any
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information or item designated “CONFIDENTIAL” only to:
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(a)
the Receiving Party’s Outside Counsel of Record in this action, as well as
supporting personnel employed in the law firm(s) of Outside Counsel of Record, such as
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attorneys, paralegals, legal translators, legal secretaries, legal clerks, and shorthand reporters to
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whom it is reasonably necessary to disclose the information for this litigation;
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(b)
up to two House Counsel of the Receiving Party who are members of at
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least one state bar in good standing (or a foreign equivalent thereof), to whom disclosure is
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reasonably necessary for purposes of this litigation and who have signed the “Acknowled gment
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and Agreement to Be Bound” (Exhibit A);
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(c)
Experts (as defined in this Order) of the Receiving Party and their
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necessary support personnel to whom disclosure is reasonably necessary for this litigation and
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who have signed the “Acknowledgment and Agreement to Be Bound” (Exhibit A);
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(d)
other suitable precautions determined by the Court);
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the Court and its personnel and stenographic reporters (under seal or with
(e)
Professional Vendors to whom disclosure is reasonably necessary for this
(f)
the author, signatory, or recipient of a document containing the information
litigation;
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or the original source of the Protected Material. Such person shall be given access only to the
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specific document or information therein;
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(g)
any mediator who is assigned to hear this matter, and his or her staff,
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subject to their agreement to maintain confidentiality to the same degree as required by this
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Order.
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7.3
Disclosure of “HIGHLY CONFIDENTIAL – OUTSIDE ATTORNEYS’ EYES
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ONLY” Information or Items. Unless otherwise ordered by the Court or permitted in writing by
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the Designating Party, a Receiving Party may disclose any information or item designated
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“HIGHLY CONFIDENTIAL – OUTSIDE ATTORNEYS’ EYES ONLY” or “HIGHLY
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CONFIDENTIAL – SOURCE CODE” only to the persons or entities listed in paragraphs 7.2(a),
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(c), (d), (e), (f), and (g), subject to any terms set forth or incorporated therein, and not any person
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or entity listed in paragraph 7.2(b). Notwithstanding any contrary provisions of paragraphs 7.2
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and 7.3, those persons identified in paragraph 7.2(b) herein shall be allowed access to the scope
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and settlement amount of any license agreement or settlement agreement regarding the asserted
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patents in this litigation solely for the purpose of facilitating settlement negotiations in this action.
7.4
Procedures for Approving or Objecting to Disclosure of Protected Material to
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Experts. Information designated by the Producing Party under any category of Protected Material
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and such copies of this information as are reasonably necessary for maintaining, defending, or
14
evaluating this litigation may be furnished and disclosed to the Receiving Party’s Experts and
15
their necessary support personnel. However, no disclosure of Protected Material to an Expert or
16
their necessary support personnel shall occur until that person has signed the “Acknowledgment
17
and Agreement to Be Bound” (Exhibit A), and a signed copy has been provided to the Producing
18
Party; and to the extent there has been an objection under paragraph 7.4(b), that objection is
19
resolved according to the procedures set forth below. No disclosure of Protected Material may be
20
provided to an expert or consultant that is a current officer, director, or employee of a Party or of
21
a competitor of a Party, nor anticipated at the time of retention to become an officer, director or
22
employee of a Party or of a competitor of a Party. No disclosure of Protected Material may be
23
provided to an expert or consultant that is involved in competitive decision-making, as defined by
24
U.S. Steel v. United States, 730 F.2d 1465, 1468 n.3 (Fed. Cir. 1984), on behalf of a Party or a
25
competitor of a Party.
26
(a)
Unless otherwise ordered by the Court or agreed to in writing by the
27
Designating Party, a Party that seeks to disclose to an Expert (as defined in this Order) any
28
Protected Material first must provide prior written notice by email to all counsel of record in the
13
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1
litigation that (1) sets forth the full name and address of the Expert, (2) attaches a copy of the
2
Expert’s current resume or curriculum vitae, (3) identifies the Expert’s current employer(s),
3
title, job responsibilities, and employment history for the past three years including the name of
4
each entity for whom the Expert has worked during that time, (4) identifies each person or entity
5
from whom the Expert has received compensation or funding for work in his or her areas of
6
expertise or to whom the expert has provided professional services, including in connection with
7
a litigation, at any time during the preceding five years, 1 (5) identifies (by name and number of
8
the case, filing date, and location of court) any litigation in connection with which the Expert
9
has offered expert testimony, including through a declaration, report, or testimony at a
10
deposition or trial, during the preceding five years; (6) an identification of any past or present
11
affiliation, whether on an employment or consulting basis, with the Receiving Party; and (7) an
12
identification of any issued patents or published patent applications in which the Expert is
13
identified as an inventor or applicant, is involved in prosecuting or maintaining, or has any
14
pecuniary interest.
15
(b)
The Producing Party shall have five business days after the notice under
16
paragraph 7.4(a) is given to object in writing to the disclosure of Protected Material to the
17
Expert. No Protected Material shall be disclosed to such expert(s) or consultant(s) until after the
18
expiration of the foregoing notice period and resolution of any objection. A Producing Party
19
objecting to disclosure of Protected Material to an Expert shall, within five (5) business days of
20
receiving notice of the intended disclosure, state with particularity the ground(s) of the
21
objection. The objecting Party’s consent to the disclosure of Protected Material to an Expert
22
shall not be unreasonably withheld, and its objection must be based on that Party’s good faith
23
belief that disclosure of its Protected Material to the Expert will result in specific business or
24
25
1
26
27
If the Expert believes any of this information is subject to a confidentiality obligation to a thirdparty, then the Expert should provide whatever information the Expert believes can be disclosed
without violating any confidentiality agreements, and the Party seeking to disclose to the Expert
shall be available to meet and confer with the Designating Party regarding any such engagement.
28
14
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1
economic harm to that Party. If no Party raises such an objection within five (5) business days
2
of receiving notice of the intended disclosure, the Expert shall be deemed qualified to receive
3
the Protected Material described in the notice of intended disclosure.
4
(c)
If after consideration of the objection, the Party desiring to disclose the
5
Protected Material to an Expert refuses to withdraw the Expert, that Party shall provide notice to
6
the objecting Party and the Parties shall in good faith meet and confer (through direct voice to
7
voice dialogue) to attempt to resolve the objection informally. Thereafter, if the informal efforts
8
do not resolve the dispute within five business days of receiving such notice of refusal to
9
withdraw the Expert, the Party objecting to disclosure of Protected Material may file a motion
10
as provided in LCR 7-2 (and in compliance with LR IA 10-5, if applicable) requesting that the
11
Expert not be allowed to view the Protected Material. A failure to file a motion within seven (7)
12
business days of receiving such notice of refusal to withdraw the Expert, absent an agreement of
13
the Parties to the contrary or for an extension of such seven (7) business day period, shall
14
operate to allow disclosure of the Protected Material to the Expert objected to. The Parties agree
15
to cooperate in good faith to shorten the time frames set forth in this paragraph if necessary to
16
abide by any discovery or briefing schedules. seeking permission from the Court to do so.
17
(d)
The objecting Party filing a motion pursuant to paragraph 7.4(c) shall
18
have the burden of showing by a preponderance of the evidence that the disclosure sought
19
should be prohibited. The Protected Material subject to the objection shall not be disclosed to
20
the Expert objected to unless and until the Court determines that the disclosure should be
21
allowed.
22
(e)
Without the express prior written consent of the Defendant that produced
23
the Protected Material, no expert or consultant retained by a defendant in any other related or
24
consolidated case shall have access to Protected Material produced by a Defendant in this
25
matter.
26
27
7.5
Examination of Witnesses. Except as may be otherwise ordered by the Court, any
person may be examined as a witness at depositions and trial and may testify concerning all
28
15
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1
Protected Material of which such person has prior knowledge. Without in any way limiting the
2
generality of the foregoing:
3
(a)
A present director, officer, and/or employee of a Producing Party may be
4
examined and may testify concerning all Protected Material which has been produced by that
5
Party and of which the witness has personal knowledge;
6
(b)
A former director, officer, agent and/or employee of a Producing Party
7
may be interviewed, examined, and may testify concerning all Protected Material of which he or
8
she has personal knowledge, including any Protected Material that refers to matters of which the
9
witness has personal knowledge, which has been produced by that Party and which pertains to
10
the period or periods of his or her employment; and
11
(c)
Any person other than the witness, his or her attorney(s), or any person
12
qualified to receive Protected Material under this Order shall be excluded from the portion of
13
the examination concerning such information, unless the Producing Party consents to persons
14
other than qualified recipients being present at the examination. If the witness is represented by
15
an attorney who is not qualified under this Order to receive such information, then prior to the
16
examination, the attorney must provide a signed statement, in the form of Exhibit A hereto, that
17
he or she will comply with the terms of this Order and maintain the confidentiality of Protected
18
Material disclosed during the course of the examination. In the event that such attorney declines
19
to sign such a statement prior to the examination, the Parties, by their attorneys, shall jointly
20
seek a protective order from the Court prohibiting the attorney from disclosing Protected
21
Information.
22
(d)
Any Protected Material that is used in the taking of a deposition shall
23
remain subject to the provisions of this Protective Order, along with the transcript pages of the
24
deposition testimony dealing with such Protected Material. In such cases the court reporter shall
25
be informed of this Protective Order and shall be required to operate in a manner consistent with
26
this Protective Order. In the event the deposition is videotaped, the original and all copies of the
27
videotape shall be marked by the video technician to indicate that the contents of the videotape
28
are subject to this Protective Order, substantially along the lines of “This videotape contains
16
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1
confidential testimony used in this case and is not to be viewed or the contents thereof to be
2
displayed or revealed except pursuant to the terms of the operative Protective Order in this
3
matter or pursuant to written stipulation of the Parties.”
4
(e)
Counsel for any Producing Party shall have the right to exclude from oral
5
depositions, other than the deponent, deponent’s counsel, the reporter and videographer (if any),
6
any person who is not authorized by this Protective Order to receive or access Protected
7
Information based on the designation of such Protected Material. Such right of exclusion shall
8
be applicable only during periods of examination or testimony regarding such Protected
9
Material.
10
11
8.
SOURCE CODE
8.1
To the extent production of source code becomes necessary in this case, a
12
Producing Party may designate source code as “HIGHLY CONFIDENTIAL – SOURCE
13
CODE” if it comprises or includes confidential, proprietary, or trade secret source code as
14
defined in paragraph 2.8 above. The following conditions shall govern the production, review,
15
and use of source code or design documentation information that has been designated as
16
“HIGHLY CONFIDENTIAL – SOURCE CODE”:
17
(a)
Source Code, to the extent any Producing Party agrees to provide any
18
such information, shall ONLY be made available for inspection, not produced except as
19
provided for below, and shall be made available in electronic format at one of the following
20
locations chosen at the sole discretion of the Producing Party: (1) the offices of the Producing
21
Party’s primary outside counsel of record in this action; (2) a single, third-party site located
22
within any judicial district in which the Source Code is stored in the ordinary course of business
23
(e.g., an escrow company); or (3) a location mutually agreed upon by the Receiving and
24
Producing Parties. Any location under (1), (2) or (3) above shall be in the continental United
25
States. Source Code will be loaded on a single, standalone, non-networked personal computer
26
that is password protected, maintained in a secure, locked area, and disabled from having
27
external storage devices attached to it (“Source Code Computer”). Whenever there is an update,
28
supplement, or other modification of the Source Code Computer (not including operating
17
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1
system security patches and similar updates not relating to the production of Source Code), the
2
Producing Party shall give notice of the nature of the update, supplement, or modification within
3
five (5) business days. Use or possession of any input/output or storage device (e.g., USB
4
memory stick, cameras or any camera-enabled device, CDs, floppy disk, portable hard drive,
5
laptop, cellular telephones, PDA, smartphones, voice recorders, etc.) is prohibited while in the
6
secured, locked area containing the Source Code Computer. All persons entering the locked
7
room containing the Source Code must agree to submit to reasonable security measures to
8
insure they are not carrying any prohibited items before they will be given access to the locked
9
room. The Source Code Computer will be made available for inspection until the close of
10
discovery in this action between the hours of 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. local time on business days (i.e.,
11
weekdays that are not Federal holidays), upon reasonable written notice to the Producing Party,
12
which shall not be less than five (5) business days in advance of the requested inspection. The
13
Receiving Party shall provide fourteen (14) days’ notice prior to the first inspection of any
14
requested Source Code. Defendants shall not be required to make Source Code available for
15
inspection prior to the date set forth in the Court’s scheduling order for producing documents
16
pursuant to LPR 1-9.
17
(b)
The Producing Party shall install tools that are sufficient for viewing and
18
searching the code produced, on the platform produced, if such tools exist and are generally
19
commercially available. The Receiving Party’s outside counsel and/or experts may request that
20
commercially available software tools for viewing and searching Source Code be installed on
21
the Source Code Computer, provided, however, that (a) the Receiving Party possesses an
22
appropriate license to such software tools; (b) the Producing Party approves such software tools;
23
and (c) such other software tools are reasonably necessary for the Receiving Party to perform its
24
review of the Source Code consistent with all of the protections herein. The Receiving Party
25
must provide the Producing Party with the CD or DVD containing such licensed software
26
tool(s) at least five (5) days in advance of the date upon which the Receiving Party wishes to
27
have the additional software tools available for use on the Source Code Computer.
28
(c)
The Receiving Party’s outside counsel and/or expert shall be entitled to
18
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1
take notes relating to the Source Code but may not copy any portion of the Source Code into the
2
notes. Any notes relating to the Source Code will be treated as “HIGHLY CONFIDENTIAL –
3
SOURCE CODE.” No copies of all or any portion of the Source Code may leave the room in
4
which the Source Code is inspected except as otherwise provided herein. Further, no other
5
written or electronic record of the Source Code is permitted except as otherwise provided
6
herein. The Producing Party may visually monitor the activities of the Receiving Party’s
7
representative(s) during any Source Code review, but only to ensure that there is no
8
unauthorized recording, copying, or transmission of the Source Code.
9
(d)
No person shall copy, e-mail, transmit, upload, download, print,
10
photograph or otherwise duplicate any portion of the designated Source Code, except as the
11
Receiving Party may request a reasonable number of pages of Source Code to be printed on
12
watermarked or colored pre-Bates numbered paper, which shall be provided by the Producing
13
Party. The Receiving Party may not request paper copies for the purposes of reviewing the
14
Source Code other than electronically as set forth in paragraph 8.1(a) in the first instance. In no
15
event may the Receiving Party print any continuous block of Source Code that result in more
16
than 10 printed pages, or an aggregate total of more than 150 pages during the duration of the
17
case without prior written approval by the Producing Party. Within 5 business days or such
18
additional time as necessary due to volume requested, the Producing Party will send a copy of
19
the requested material on watermarked or colored paper bearing Bates numbers and the legend
20
“HIGHLY CONFIDENTIAL – SOURCE CODE” unless objected to as discussed below. The
21
printed pages shall constitute part of the Source Code produced by the Producing Party in this
22
action. At the inspecting Party’s request, up to two additional sets (or subsets) of printed Source
23
Code may be requested and provided by the Producing Party in a timely fashion.
24
(e)
If the Producing Party objects that the printed portions are not reasonably
25
necessary to any case preparation activity, the Producing Party shall make such objection known
26
to the Receiving Party within five business days. If after meeting and conferring the Producing
27
Party and the Receiving Party cannot resolve the objection (where such meet-and-confer need
28
not take place in person), the Receiving Party may seek a Court resolution of whether the
19
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1
printed Source Code in question is reasonably necessary to any case preparation activity.
2
Contested Source Code print outs need not be produced to the requesting party until the matter
3
is resolved by the Court.
4
(f)
The Receiving Party shall not create any electronic or other images of any
5
printed pages of Source Code or any other documents or things reflecting Source Code that have
6
been designated by the Producing Party as “HIGHLY CONFIDENTIAL – SOURCE CODE.”
7
The Receiving Party shall only make additional paper copies of selected excerpts of Source
8
Code if such additional copies are necessary for any filing with the Court, the service of any
9
pleading or other paper on any Party, testifying expert reports, consulting expert written
10
analyses, deposition exhibits as discussed below, or any draft of these documents (“SOURCE
11
CODE DOCUMENTS”). The Receiving Party shall only make additional copies of such
12
excerpts as are reasonably necessary for the purposes for which such part of the Source Code is
13
used. Any paper copies used during a deposition shall be retrieved by the Producing Party at the
14
end of each day and must not be given to or left with a court reporter or any other individual.
15
(g)
Any paper copies designated “HIGHLY CONFIDENTIAL – SOURCE
16
CODE” or notes, analyses, or descriptions of such paper copies of Source Code shall be stored
17
or viewed only at (i) the offices of outside counsel for the Receiving Party, (ii) the offices of
18
outside experts or consultants who have been approved to access Source Code; (iii) the site
19
where any deposition is taken (iv) the Court; or (v) any intermediate location necessary to
20
transport the information to a hearing, trial, or deposition. Any such paper copies or notes,
21
analyses, or descriptions of such paper copies of Source Code shall not be transported via mail
22
service or any equivalent service and shall be maintained at all times in a secure location under
23
the direct control of a person authorized to access the Source Code under the terms of this
24
Protective Order and in a manner that prevents duplication of or unauthorized access to the
25
Source Code, including, without limitation, storing the Source Code in a locked room or cabinet
26
at all times, when it is not in use or being transported.
27
28
(h)
A list of names of persons who will view the Source Code will be
provided to the Producing Party in conjunction with any written (including email) notice
20
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1
requesting inspection. The Receiving Party shall maintain a daily log of the names of persons
2
who enter the locked room to view the Source Code and when they enter and depart. The
3
Producing Party shall be entitled to have a person observe all entrances and exits from the
4
Source Code viewing room, and to a copy of the log upon request.
5
(i)
Unless otherwise agreed in advance by the Parties in writing, following
6
each inspection, the Receiving Party’s outside counsel and/or experts shall remove all notes,
7
documents, and all other materials from the room that may contain work product and/or
8
attorney-client privileged information. The Producing Party shall not be responsible for any
9
items left in the room following each inspection session.
10
(j)
The Receiving Party will not copy, remove, or otherwise transfer any
11
portion of the Source Code from the Source Code Computer including, without limitation,
12
copying, removing, or transferring any portion of the Source Code onto any other computers or
13
peripheral equipment. The Receiving Party will not transmit any portion of the Source Code in
14
any way from the location of the Source Code inspection.
15
(k)
No recordable media or recordable devices, including without limitation
16
sound recorders, computers, cellular telephones, peripheral equipment, cameras, CDs, DVDs, or
17
drives of any kind, shall be permitted into the Source Code reviewing room. The Producing
18
Party may visually monitor the activities of the Receiving Party’s representatives during any
19
Source Code review, but only to ensure compliance with the prohibition on recordable media,
20
recordable devices, and input/output or storage devices set forth in this paragraph and Paragraph
21
8.1(a) above.
22
(l)
Only the following individuals shall have access to “HIGHLY
23
CONFIDENTIAL – SOURCE CODE” materials, absent the express written consent of the
24
Producing Party or further court order:
25
(1)
Outside Counsel of Record for the Parties to this action, including
26
any attorneys, paralegals, technology specialists, and clerical employees of their respective law
27
firms;
28
(2)
Up to three (3) outside Experts per Party, pre-approved in
21
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1
accordance with paragraphs 7.4(a)-(e) above, and specifically identified as eligible to access
2
Source Code;
3
(3)
The Court, its technical advisor (if one is appointed), the jury,
4
court personnel, and court reporters or videographers recording testimony or other proceedings
5
in this action. Court reporters and/or videographers shall not retain or be given copies of any
6
portions of the Source Code; for depositions, the Receiving Party shall not bring copies of any
7
printed Source Code. Rather, at least ten (10) days before the date of the deposition, the
8
Receiving Party shall notify the Producing Party about the specific portions of Source Code it
9
wishes to use at the deposition, and the Producing Party shall bring printed copies of those
10
portions to the deposition for use by the Receiving Party. Copies of Source Code that are
11
marked as deposition exhibits shall not be provided to the Court Reporter or attached to
12
deposition transcripts; rather, the deposition record will identify the exhibit by its production
13
numbers.
14
(4)
While testifying at deposition or trial in this action only: (i) any
15
current officer, director, or employee of the Producing Party or original source of the
16
information; (ii) any person designated by the Producing Party to provide testimony pursuant to
17
Rule 30(b)(6) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure; and/or (iii) any person who authored or
18
was directly involved in creating, modifying, or editing the Source Code, as evident from its
19
face or reasonably certain in view of other testimony or evidence. Persons authorized to view
20
Source Code pursuant to this sub-paragraph shall not retain or be given copies of the Source
21
Code except while so testifying.
22
(m)
The Receiving Party’s outside counsel shall maintain a log of all copies
23
of the Source Code (received from a Producing Party or created by the Receiving Party pursuant
24
to paragraph 8.1(f) above) that are delivered by the Receiving Party to any qualified person
25
under paragraph 8.1(l) above. The log shall include the names of the recipients and reviewers of
26
copies, the dates when such copies were provided, and the locations where the copies are stored.
27
Upon request by the Producing Party, the Receiving Party shall provide reasonable assurances
28
and/or descriptions of the security measures employed by the Receiving Party and/or qualified
22
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1
person that receives a copy of any portion of the Source Code. Within thirty (30) days after the
2
issuance of a final non-appealable decision resolving all issues in the case, the Receiving Party
3
must serve upon the Producing Party the log and serve upon the Producing Party all paper
4
copies of the Producing Party’s Source Code as well as documents, pleadings, reports, and notes
5
reflecting or referring to such Source Code. In addition, all persons to whom the paper copies of
6
the Source Code were provided must certify in writing that all copies of the Source Code were
7
returned to the counsel who provided them the information and that they will make no use of the
8
Source Code or of any knowledge gained from the Source Code in any future endeavor.
9
(n)
To the extent portions of Source Code are quoted in a SOURCE CODE
10
DOCUMENT, either (1) the entire document will be stamped and treated as “HIGHLY
11
CONFIDENTIAL – SOURCE CODE,” or (2) those pages containing quoted Source Code will
12
be separately bound, and stamped and treated as “HIGHLY CONFIDENTIAL – SOURCE
13
CODE.”
14
(o)
All copies of any portion of the Source Code shall be returned to the
15
Producing Party if they are no longer in use. Copies of Source Code that are marked as
16
deposition exhibits shall not be provided to the Court Reporter or attached to deposition
17
transcripts; rather, the deposition record will identify the exhibit by its production numbers.
18
(p)
The Receiving Party’s outside counsel may only disclose a copy of the
19
Source Code to individuals specified in paragraph 8.1(l) above (e.g., Source Code may not be
20
disclosed to House Counsel). In no case shall any information designated as “HIGHLY
21
CONFIDENTIAL – SOURCE CODE” by a Defendant be provided to any other defendant or
22
defendant’s counsel in any other related or consolidated case by any Party or counsel absent
23
explicit agreement from the Party designating the information.
24
(q)
Any Expert retained on behalf of a Receiving Party who is to be given
25
access to a Producing Party’s produced Source Code (whether in electronic form or otherwise)
26
must agree in writing not to perform software development work directly or indirectly intended
27
for commercial purposes relating to any functionality covered by the Source Code reviewed by
28
such Expert for a period of six months after the issuance of a final, non-appealable decision
23
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1
resolving all issues in the case. This shall not preclude such Experts from consulting in future
2
litigation, so long as such consulting does not involve software development work directly or
3
indirectly intended for commercial purposes relating to any functionality covered by the Source
4
Code reviewed by such Expert.
5
(r)
Access to and review of the Source Code shall be strictly for the purpose
6
of investigating the claims and defenses at issue in the above-captioned case. No person shall
7
review or analyze any Source Code for purposes unrelated to this case, nor may any person use
8
any knowledge gained as a result of reviewing Source Code in this case in any other pending or
9
future dispute, proceeding, or litigation.
10
11
9.
PROSECUTION BAR
9.1
Absent the written consent of the Producing Party, no person on behalf of Plaintiff,
12
including without limitation any technical advisor of Plaintiff, who reviews a Defendant’s
13
Protected Material shall, for a period commencing upon receipt of such information and ending
14
three years following the conclusion of this case (including any appeals) engage in any
15
Prosecution Activity (as defined below) on behalf of any Party other than the Producing Party or
16
engage in any Prosecution Activity involving claims on a method, apparatus, or system relating to
17
VoIP phone or IP phone technologies for placing and transmitting telephone calls over an IP
18
network (“VoIP communications”) .
19
20
21
(a)
For clarity and the avoidance of doubt, Counsel of any Defendant in this
action are not subject to this Prosecution Bar.
(b)
Prosecution Activity shall mean any activity related to (1) the preparation
22
or prosecution (for any person or entity) of patent applications relating to VoIP communications
23
or audio communication devices that support VoIP communications, or advising or counseling
24
clients regarding the same, including but not limited to providing any advice, counseling,
25
preparing, prosecuting, editing, amending and/or drafting of claims, or communication with a
26
domestic or foreign patent office for purpose of allowance of any claims, for any patent
27
application, reexamination, or reissue application before any domestic or foreign patent office;
28
and/or (2) the acquisition of patents (including patent applications), or the rights to any such
24
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1
patents or patent applications with the right to sublicense, relating to the functionality, operation,
2
and design of VoIP communications. Nothing in this paragraph shall prevent any attorney from
3
sending non-confidential prior art to an attorney involved in patent prosecution for purposes of
4
ensuring that such prior art is submitted to the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (or any similar
5
agency of a foreign government) to assist a patent applicant in complying with its duty of candor.
6
Nothing in this provision shall prohibit any attorney of record in this litigation from discussing
7
any aspect of this case that is reasonably necessary for the prosecution or defense of any claim or
8
counterclaim in this litigation with his/her client.
9
(c)
For the avoidance of doubt, the patent prosecution bar above shall be
10
deemed to preclude persons who have received Defendants’ Protected Material, other than
11
Counsel of Defendant in this action, who shall not be so barred from participating directly or
12
indirectly in post-grant proceedings relating to the patent-in-suit, or of any patent that claims
13
priority, in whole or part, to the patent-in-suit.
14
10.
PROTECTED MATERIAL SUBPOENAED OR ORDERED PRODUCED IN OTHER
15
LITIGATION
16
If at any time Protected Material in any form is subpoenaed by any court, arbitral,
17
administrative or legislative body, or are otherwise requested in discovery, the person or entity
18
to whom the subpoena or other request is directed shall promptly (a) notify in writing the person
19
or entity who caused the subpoena or other request to issue that some or all of the material
20
covered by the subpoena or request is subject to a Protective Order and include a copy of this
21
Order with such notice, (b) give written notice thereof to every Party or nonparty, and their
22
counsel, who has produced such documents and include a copy of the subpoena or request with
23
such notice, and (c) provide each such Producing Party or nonparty with an opportunity to
24
object to the production of such documents. If a Producing Party or nonparty does not take steps
25
to prevent disclosure of such documents within ten business days of the date written notice is
26
given, the Party to whom the referenced subpoena is directed may produce such documents in
27
response thereto, but shall take all reasonable measures to have such documents treated in
28
accordance with terms of this Protective Order.
25
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1
11.
A NON-PARTY’S PROTECTED MATERIAL SOUGHT TO BE PRODUCED IN THIS
2
LITIGATION
3
The terms of this Order are applicable to information produced by a Non-Party in this
4
action and designated as “CONFIDENTIAL,” “HIGHLY CONFIDENTIAL – OUTSIDE
5
ATTORNEYS’ EYES ONLY,” or “HIGHLY CONFIDENTIAL – SOURCE CODE.” Such
6
information produced by Non-Parties in connection with this litigation is protected by the
7
remedies and relief provided by this Order. Nothing in these provisions should be construed as
8
prohibiting a Non-Party from seeking additional protections. A nonparty’s use of this Protective
9
Order to protect its Protected Material does not entitle that nonparty access to the Protected
10
Material produced by any Party in this case.
11
12.
12
UNAUTHORIZED DISCLOSURE OF PROTECTED MATERIAL
If a Receiving Party learns that, by inadvertence or otherwise, it has disclosed Protected
13
Material to any person or in any circumstance not authorized under this Protective Order, the
14
Receiving Party must immediately (a) notify in writing the Designating Party of the
15
unauthorized disclosures, (b) use its best efforts to retrieve all unauthorized copies of the
16
Protected Material, (c) inform the person or persons to whom unauthorized disclosures were
17
made of all the terms of this Order, and (d) request such person or persons to execute the
18
“Acknowledgment and Agreement to Be Bound” that is attached hereto as Exhibit A.
19
13.
INADVERTENT PRODUCTION OF PRIVILEGED OR OTHERWISE PROTECTED
20
MATERIAL
21
13.1
Nothing in this Order shall require production of documents, information or other
22
material that a Party contends is protected from disclosure by the attorney-client privilege, the
23
work product doctrine, or other privilege, doctrine, or immunity (“Privile ged Material”).
24
Inadvertent or unintentional production of Privileged Material shall in no way prejudice or
25
otherwise constitute a waiver or estoppel as to any such privilege, doctrine, right, or immunity,
26
or other ground for withholding production to which the Producing Party would otherwise be
27
entitled to assert. Any Party that inadvertently or unintentionally produces documents,
28
information or other material it reasonably believes are Privileged Material may obtain the
26
Case 2:16-cv-00423-GMN-CWH Document 27 Filed 07/05/16 Page 27 of 34
1
return of such documents, information or other material by promptly notifying the recipient(s).
2
The Producing Party shall provide a privilege log for the inadvertently or unintentionally
3
produced documents, information or other material as soon as reasonably possible after
4
requesting their return. The recipient(s) shall gather and return all copies of such documents,
5
information or other material to the producing Party no later than five (5) business days after
6
receiving a request for their return, except for any pages containing privileged or otherwise
7
protected markings added by the recipient(s), which pages shall instead be destroyed and
8
certified as such to the producing Party. The recipient shall also destroy and certify such
9
destruction within five (5) business days after receiving a request for return of inadvertently
10
produced materials all documents or parts thereof summarizing or otherwise disclosing the
11
content of the inadvertently produced material and shall not use such material for any purpose.
12
Notwithstanding this provision, outside litigation counsel of record are not required to delete
13
information that may reside on their respective firm’s electronic back-up systems that are over-
14
written in the normal course of business. Such return or confirmation of destruction shall not
15
preclude the Receiving Party from seeking to compel production of the materials and shall not
16
constitute an admission by the Receiving Party that the materials were, in fact, privileged or
17
otherwise protected in any way. The Producing Party shall retain the Privileged Material for
18
submission to the Court in the event the Receiving Party moves to compel. If the Receiving
19
Party contests the privilege or work product designation by the Producing Party, the Receiving
20
Party shall give the Producing Party written notice of the reason for the disagreement. The
21
Receiving Party shall seek an Order from the Court compelling the production of the material.
22
Absent a Court Order to the contrary, the Parties hereby agree and stipulate that any privilege or
23
immunity that was originally present will remain intact once any such document is returned or
24
confirmed as destroyed by the recipient.
25
13.2
Inadvertent or unintentional production of documents or things containing
26
Protected Material which are not designated as one or more of the three categories of Protected
27
Material at the time of production shall not be deemed a waiver in whole or in part of a claim
28
for confidential treatment. With respect to documents, the Producing Party shall notify all
27
Case 2:16-cv-00423-GMN-CWH Document 27 Filed 07/05/16 Page 28 of 34
1
Receiving Parties that such documents are protected under one of the categories of this Order
2
within fourteen (14) days of the Producing Party learning of the inadvertent failure to designate.
3
The Producing Party shall reproduce the Protected Information with the correct confidentiality
4
designation within seven (7) days upon its notification to the Receiving Parties. Within seven
5
(7) days of receiving the Protected Information with the correct confidentiality designation, the
6
Receiving Parties shall return or securely destroy and certify such destruction, at the Producing
7
Party’s option, all Protected Material that was not designated properly.
8
9
13.3
In the event of any disclosure of Protected Material other than in a manner
authorized by this Protective Order, including any unintentional or inadvertent disclosure, the
10
Party responsible for having made such disclosure, and each Party with knowledge thereof, shall
11
immediately notify counsel for the Producing Party and provide to such counsel all known
12
relevant information concerning the nature and circumstances of the disclosure. The responsible
13
disclosing Party shall also make every effort to further prevent unauthorized disclosure,
14
including retrieving all copies of the Protected Information from the recipient(s) thereof, and
15
securing the agreement of the recipients not to further disseminate the Protected Information in
16
any form. Compliance with the foregoing shall not prevent the Producing Party from seeking
17
further relief from the Court. Unauthorized or inadvertent disclosure does not change the status
18
of Protected Material or waive the right to hold the disclosed document or information as
19
Protected.
20
13.4
A Receiving Party shall not be in breach of this Order for any use of such
21
Protected Material before the Receiving Party receives the Protected Material with the correct
22
confidentiality designation, unless an objectively reasonable person would have realized that the
23
Protected Material should have been appropriately designated with a confidentiality designation
24
under this Order. Once a Receiving Party has received notification of the correct confidentiality
25
designation for the Protected Material with the correct confidentiality designation, the Receiving
26
Party shall treat such Protected Material at the appropriately designated level pursuant to the
27
terms of this Order. Notwithstanding the above, a subsequent designation of Protected Material
28
shall apply on a going forward basis only and shall not disqualify anyone who reviewed
28
Case 2:16-cv-00423-GMN-CWH Document 27 Filed 07/05/16 Page 29 of 34
1
Protected Material while the materials were not appropriately marked from engaging in any
2
activities otherwise permitted by this Order.
3
14.
4
5
6
MISCELLANEOUS
14.1
Right to Further Relief. Nothing in this Order abridges the right of any person to
seek its modification by the Court in the future.
14.2
Right to Assert Other Objections. No Party waives any right it otherwise would
7
have to object to disclosing or producing any information or item on any ground not addressed in
8
this Protective Order. Similarly, this Order is not a waiver of any applicable privilege or any
9
objection that might be raised as to a discovery request or the admissibility of evidence.
10
14.3
Filing Protected Material. Without written permission from the Designating Party
11
or a court order secured after appropriate notice to all interested persons, a Party may not file in
12
the public record in this action any Protected Material. A Party that seeks to file under seal any
13
Protected Material must comply with LR IA 10-5 and any applicable restrictions pertaining to
14
“HIGHLY CONFIDENTIAL – SOURCE CODE” material set forth in paragraph 8.1 above. If a
15
Receiving Party's request to file Protected Material under seal is denied by the Court, then the
16
Receiving Party may file the Protected Material in the public record with or without redactions as
17
instructed by the Court.
18
14.4
The computation of any period of time prescribed or allowed by this Order shall be
19
governed by the provisions for computing time set forth in Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 6,
20
except that the additional three-day period set forth in Rule 6(d) shall not apply when service is
21
made by electronic means under Rule 5(b)(2)(E).
22
14.5
Any of the notice requirements herein may be waived, in whole or in part, but only
23
in writing signed by the attorney-in-charge for the Party against whom such waiver will be
24
effective.
25
14.6
Testifying experts shall not be subject to discovery of any draft of their reports in
26
this case and such draft reports, notes, outlines, or any other writings leading up to an issued
27
report(s) in this litigation are exempt from discovery. In addition, all communications between
28
counsel for a Party and that Party’s testifying expert(s) related to the content of expert reports are
29
Case 2:16-cv-00423-GMN-CWH Document 27 Filed 07/05/16 Page 30 of 34
1
exempt from discovery, provided that this limitation on discovery does not permit a Party to
2
withhold any material relied upon by testifying experts solely on the ground that such material
3
was provided to the expert by counsel. All materials generated by a testifying expert with respect
4
to that person’s work are also exempt from discovery unless they identify facts, data or
5
assumptions relied upon by the expert in forming any opinions in this litigation and such
6
information is not already disclosed in the expert’s report.
7
14.7
No Party shall be required to identify on their respective privilege log any
8
document or communication related to this litigation dated on or after the filing of this lawsuit,
9
which absent this provision, the Party would have been obligated to so identify on said privilege
10
log. The Parties shall exchange their respective privilege document logs at a time to be agreed
11
upon by the Parties following the production of documents.
12
14.8
Nothing in this Order shall limit any Producing Party’s use of its own documents
13
or shall prevent any Producing Party from disclosing its own Protected Material to any person.
14
Such disclosures shall not affect any “CONFIDENTIAL,” “HIGHLY CONFIDENTIAL –
15
OUTSIDE ATTORNEYS’ EYES ONLY,” or “HIGHLY CONFIDENTIAL – SOURCE CODE”
16
designation made pursuant to the terms of this Order so long as disclosure is made in a manner
17
which is reasonably calculated to maintain the confidentiality of the information.
18
14.9
The United States District Court for the District of Nevada is responsible for the
19
interpretation and enforcement of this Order. After termination of this litigation, the provisions of
20
this Order shall continue to be binding except with respect to those documents and information
21
that become a matter of public record. This Court retains and shall have continuing jurisdiction
22
over the Parties and recipients of the Protected Material for enforcement of the provision of this
23
Order following termination of this litigation. All disputes concerning Protected Material
24
produced under the protection of this Order shall be resolved by the United States District Court
25
for the District of Nevada. In the event anyone shall violate or threaten to violate the terms of this
26
Protective Order, the aggrieved Designating Party may immediately apply to obtain injunctive
27
relief against any such person violating or threatening to violate any of the terms of this
28
Protective Order.
30
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1
14.10 Each of the Parties agrees to be bound by the terms of this Protective Order as of
2
the date counsel for such Party executes this Protective Order, at which time the provisions of this
3
Order shall retroactively apply to any Protected Material obtained by that Party or its counsel
4
prior to execution, even if prior to entry of this order by the Court.
5
14.11 This Protective Order shall be binding upon the Parties and their attorneys,
6
successors, executors, personal representative, administrators, heirs, legal representatives, assigns,
7
subsidiaries, divisions, employees, agents, independent contractors, or other persons or
8
organizations over which they have control.
9
14.12 All notices required by this Protective Order are to be served on the attorney(s) for
10
each of the Defendants and Plaintiff listed in the signature block below for each Party.
11
15.
12
FINAL DISPOSITION
The provisions of this Order shall continue to be binding after final termination of this
13
case until a Producing Party agrees otherwise in writing or a court order otherwise directs.
14
Except as otherwise herein, within sixty days after the entry of a final non-appealable judgment
15
or order, or the complete settlement of all claims asserted against all Parties in this action, each
16
Party (including technical advisors who received Protected Material) shall, at the option of the
17
Producing Party, either return or destroy all physical objects and documents which embody
18
Protected Material it has received, and shall destroy in whatever form stored or reproduced, all
19
physical objects and documents, including but not limited to, correspondence, memoranda,
20
notes and other work product materials, which contain or refer to any category of Protected
21
Material. All Protected Material not embodied in physical objects and documents shall remain
22
subject to this Order. In the event that a Party is dismissed before the entry of a final non-
23
appealable judgment or order, this same procedure shall apply to any Protected Material
24
received from or produced to the dismissed Party. Notwithstanding this provision, outside
25
litigation counsel of record are not required to delete information that may reside on their
26
respective firm’s electronic back-up systems that are over-written in the normal course of
27
business. Notwithstanding the foregoing, outside counsel shall be entitled to maintain two (2)
28
copies of all pleadings, motions and trial briefs (including all supporting and opposing papers
31
Case 2:16-cv-00423-GMN-CWH Document 27 Filed 07/05/16 Page 32 of 34
1
and exhibits thereto), written discovery requests and responses (and exhibits thereto), deposition
2
transcripts (and exhibits thereto), trial transcripts, and exhibits offered or introduced into
3
evidence at any hearing or trial, and their attorney work product which refers or is related to any
4
“CONFIDENTIAL” and “HIGHLY CONFIDENTIAL – OUTSIDE ATTORNEYS’ EYES
5
ONLY” information for archival purposes only. Any such archived copies that contain or
6
constitute Protected Material remain subject to this Order and shall be maintained in confidence
7
by outside counsel for the Party retaining the materials. All Parties that have received any such
8
///
9
///
10
///
11
///
12
///
13
///
14
///
15
///
16
///
17
///
18
///
19
///
20
///
21
///
22
///
23
///
24
///
25
///
26
///
27
///
28
///
32
Case 2:16-cv-00423-GMN-CWH Document 27 Filed 07/05/16 Page 33 of 34
1
Protected Material shall certify in writing that all such materials have been returned to the
2
respective outside counsel of the Producing Party or destroyed.
3
4
DATED this 5th day of July, 2016.
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
RUSS, AUGUST & KABAT
HOLLEY DRIGGS WALCH FINE
WRAY PUZEY & THOMPSON
/s/ Stanley H. Thompson, Jr.,
REZA MIRZAIE, ESQ.
PAUL S. KROEGER, ESQ.
STANLEY H. THOMPSON, JR., ESQ.
12424 Wilshire Boulevard, 12th Floor
Los Angeles, California 90025
/s/ James D. Boyle
JAMES D. BOYLE, ESQ.
Nevada Bar No. 08384
SEAN E. STORY, ESQ. (NBN 13968)
400 South Fourth Street, Third Floor
Las Vegas, Nevada 89101
Admitted Pro Hac Vice
PILLSBURY WINTHROP SHAW
PITTMAN LLP
12
13
14
15
16
17
BORGHESE LEGAL, LTD.
MARK BORGHESE, ESQ.
Nevada Bar No. 06231
10161 Park Run Drive, Suite 150
Las Vegas, Nevada 89145
Attorneys for Plaintiff 2-Way Computing
Inc.
BRYAN P. COLLINS, ESQ.
ROBERT M. FUHRER, ESQ.
1650 Tysons Boulevard, Suite 1400
McLean, Virginia 22102-4856
Pro Hac Vice Applications Forthcoming
Attorneys for Defendant Unify Inc.
18
19
20
IT IS SO ORDERED.
21
22
UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE/
UNITED STATES MAGISTRATE JUDGE
23
24
July 5, 2016
Dated:
25
26
27
28
33
Case 2:16-cv-00423-GMN-CWH Document 27 Filed 07/05/16 Page 34 of 34
1
EXHIBIT A
2
ACKNOWLEDGMENT AND AGREEMENT TO BE BOUND
3
I,
_____________________________
[print
or
type
full
name],
of
4
____________________________________________________ [print or type full address],
5
declare under penalty of perjury that I have received a copy of and read in its entirety and
6
understand the Protective Order that was issued by the United States District Court for the District
7
of Nevada on ________________ [date] in the case of 2-Way Computing, Inc. v. Unify Inc, f/k/a
8
Siemens Enterprise Communications, Case No. 2:16-cv-00423-GMN-CWH. I agree to comply
9
with and to be bound by all the terms of this Protective Order, and I understand and acknowledge
10
that failure to so comply could expose me to sanctions and punishment in the nature of contempt.
11
I solemnly promise that I will not disclose in any manner any information or item that is subject
12
to this Protective Order to any person or entity except in strict compliance with the provisions of
13
this Order.
14
I further agree to submit to the jurisdiction of the United States District Court for
15
the District of Nevada for the purpose of enforcing the terms of this Protective Order, even if such
16
enforcement proceedings occur after termination of this action.
17
18
Date: _________________________________
19
City and State where sworn and signed: _________________________________
20
21
Printed name: ______________________________
22
Present occupation/job description: ______________________________
23
Name of Company or Firm: ______________________________
24
25
Signature: __________________________________
26
27
28
34
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