SAN FRANCISCO – A San Jose company claims two Georgia businesses used its software for a derivative product without authorization.
Adobe Systems Inc. filed a complaint on Oct. 14 in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California against MedAssets Inc. and nThrive Inc. alleging copyright infringement and breach of contract.
According to the complaint, the plaintiff alleges that the defendants had a limited license to use its ColdFusion software. The plaintiff holds MedAssets Inc. and nThrive Inc. responsible because the defendants allegedly used ColdFusion in its infringing CodeCorrect product.
The plaintiff requests a trial by jury and seeks to enjoin the defendants from further infringing plaintiff's copyrights, award actual damages to plaintiff plus interest, statutory damages, all legal fees and any other relief the court deems just. It is represented by Douglas A. Winthrop, Michael A. Berta and Sean M. Callagy of Arnold & Porter LLP in San Francisco.
U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California Case number 3:16-cv-05962