Akamai Technologies v. MediaPointe & AMHC — Defendant Win on CDN Patents After 526 Days
Akamai Technologies secured final judgment against MediaPointe, Inc. and AMHC, Inc. in the Central District of California, defeating infringement claims over two adaptive media delivery patents — US8559426 and US9426195. All claims were either invalidated as indefinite or dismissed as moot, and MediaPointe received no monetary or injunctive relief.
Akamai defeats CDN patent assertions via summary judgment and indefiniteness
Akamai Technologies, Inc. filed this declaratory judgment action on September 1, 2022 in the Central District of California against MediaPointe, Inc. and AMHC, Inc., seeking a finding of non-infringement and invalidity with respect to US Patent No. 8,559,426 and US Patent No. 9,426,195 — both relating to adaptive media delivery, streaming, and content delivery network technology. MediaPointe counterclaimed, alleging that Akamai’s Intelligent Edge Platform, Adaptive Media Delivery, Aura Managed CDN, Licensed CDN, and Video On Demand services infringed both patents.
The case concluded on February 9, 2024, when the court entered final judgment in favor of Akamai following two pivotal January 3, 2024 orders: one striking undisclosed infringement theories from MediaPointe’s expert report, and one granting Akamai’s motion for summary judgment of non-infringement. For the ‘426 patent, all claims 1–17 were adjudged invalid as indefinite. For the ‘195 patent, Akamai was found not to infringe any asserted claim, and claims 2 and 13–19 were separately invalidated as indefinite. MediaPointe received no monetary or injunctive relief.
Resolution within 526 days is relatively efficient for a multi-patent technology dispute of this complexity, suggesting that the expert-report strike order was decisive in collapsing MediaPointe’s infringement case before trial. The court’s willingness to strike undisclosed theories upstream effectively mooted much of the litigation. A motion for costs and attorneys’ fees by Akamai remained pending at closing, leaving open the question of whether MediaPointe will face further financial exposure.
Filing to settlement in 526 days
526 days — closed in under 18 months, relatively swift for a multi-patent CDN dispute at district court level
Final judgment for Akamai: patents invalid, infringement claims dismissed
Summary judgment of non-infringement ended the ‘195 patent claims
After the court struck MediaPointe’s expert infringement theories as undisclosed, Akamai moved for summary judgment on the ‘195 patent. With no admissible expert opinion supporting infringement, the court found no genuine dispute of material fact and entered judgment for Akamai. This sequence — expert strike followed by summary judgment — is a high-leverage litigation strategy that Akamai’s counsel executed effectively, foreclosing a jury trial entirely.
Summary judgment of non-infringementClaims 1–17 of the ‘426 patent invalidated as indefinite
The court held that all 17 claims of US8559426 are invalid for indefiniteness under 35 U.S.C. § 112, meaning the claim language failed to define the scope of the invention with reasonable certainty. Separately, claims 2 and 13–19 of the ‘195 patent were also invalidated on the same basis. Indefiniteness findings at district court level are consequential: they travel with the patent and can inform future assertion attempts, even if appealed.
Indefiniteness — 35 U.S.C. § 112Infringement counts dismissed as moot — not on the merits
Akamai’s declaratory judgment claim and MediaPointe’s direct, induced, and willful infringement claims relating to the ‘426 patent were dismissed as moot without prejudice, contingent on any remand. This is a procedural outcome, not a merits ruling on ‘426 infringement. It means those specific infringement issues were not litigated to conclusion — though the invalidity finding effectively renders them academic unless overturned on appeal.
Dismissed as moot — without prejudiceNo damages awarded; attorneys’ fees motion pending at closing
The judgment expressly states MediaPointe shall receive no monetary or injunctive relief. Akamai’s motion for costs and attorneys’ fees was explicitly reserved for a separate ruling under Fed. R. Civ. P. 54(d). This creates residual financial risk for MediaPointe: in cases where the court has struck expert reports and entered summary judgment, fee motions under 35 U.S.C. § 285 for exceptional cases are not uncommon, though success is not guaranteed.
Fees motion reserved — § 285 exposure possibleFull party and counsel information
| Role | Name | Typ | Detail |
|---|---|---|---|
| Kläger | Akamai Technologies, Inc. | Unternehmen | Global CDN and cloud services leader — holder of US8559426 and US9426195 declaratory judgment claimsSearch in Eureka ↗ |
| Beklagter | MediaPointe, Inc. | Unternehmen | MediaPointe, Inc. and AMHC, Inc. — adaptive media delivery patent assertersSearch in Eureka ↗ |
| Plaintiff counsel | Alicia M. Coneys | Attorney | Counsel for Akamai Technologies, Inc.Search in Eureka ↗ |
| Plaintiff counsel | Arthur W. Coviello | Attorney | Counsel for Akamai Technologies, Inc.Search in Eureka ↗ |
| Plaintiff counsel | Asher S. Mcguffin | Attorney | Counsel for Akamai Technologies, Inc.Search in Eureka ↗ |
| Plaintiff counsel | Benjamin N. Ernst | Attorney | Counsel for Akamai Technologies, Inc.Search in Eureka ↗ |
| Plaintiff counsel | Grant K. Rowan | Attorney | Counsel for Akamai Technologies, Inc.Search in Eureka ↗ |
| Plaintiff counsel | Jason Francis Choy | Attorney | Counsel for Akamai Technologies, Inc.Search in Eureka ↗ |
| Plaintiff counsel | Jordan L. Hirsch | Attorney | Counsel for Akamai Technologies, Inc.Search in Eureka ↗ |
| Plaintiff counsel | Kelly A. Todd | Attorney | Counsel for Akamai Technologies, Inc.Search in Eureka ↗ |
| Plaintiff counsel | Michael J. Summersgill | Attorney | Counsel for Akamai Technologies, Inc.Search in Eureka ↗ |
| Plaintiff counsel | Sofia C. Brooks | Attorney | Counsel for Akamai Technologies, Inc.Search in Eureka ↗ |
| Defendant counsel | Ellie Rae Dupler | Attorney | Counsel for MediaPointe, Inc.Search in Eureka ↗ |
| Defendant counsel | Justin C. Kenney | Attorney | Counsel for MediaPointe, Inc.Search in Eureka ↗ |
| Defendant counsel | Kalpana Srinivasan | Attorney | Counsel for MediaPointe, Inc.Search in Eureka ↗ |
| Defendant counsel | Larry Y. Liu | Attorney | Counsel for MediaPointe, Inc.Search in Eureka ↗ |
| Defendant counsel | Meng Xi | Attorney | Counsel for MediaPointe, Inc.Search in Eureka ↗ |
| Defendant counsel | Nicholas Nathan Spear | Attorney | Counsel for MediaPointe, Inc.Search in Eureka ↗ |
| Presiding judge | Judge / | Oberster Richter | California Central District Court — Chief JudgeSearch in Eureka ↗ |
Stipulation of dismissal — official text
The final judgment is comprehensive and structured: Akamai prevailed on two distinct legal grounds — invalidity (indefiniteness) and non-infringement — applied across two separate patents. The moot dismissal of ‘426 infringement claims without prejudice is a procedural carve-out, not an Akamai concession; the underlying invalidity of all 17 claims renders those infringement questions practically academic. The judgment’s explicit denial of all monetary and injunctive relief to MediaPointe, combined with the reserved fees motion, leaves Akamai in a strong post-litigation position. MediaPointe retains no enforceable claims against Akamai’s CDN product suite as the case stands.
US8559426 & US9426195 — Adaptive Media Delivery and CDN Streaming Patents
US Patent No. 8,559,426 (application no. US09/936624) covers technology in the adaptive media delivery space, addressing how content is streamed and managed across content delivery network infrastructure. US Patent No. 9,426,195 (application no. US14/023435) similarly targets adaptive media player products and CDN-based streaming services. Both patents were asserted against a broad swath of Akamai’s commercial offerings, including its Intelligent Edge Platform, Adaptive Media Delivery, Aura Managed CDN, Licensed CDN, and Video On Demand services — indicating wide-ranging claim scope that MediaPointe believed mapped across Akamai’s core delivery stack.
The court’s indefiniteness rulings on both patents suggest the claim drafting failed to meet the reasonable certainty standard required under Nautilus v. Biosig. For competitors and prospective licensees in the CDN and adaptive streaming sector, these invalidated claims no longer pose an assertion risk from MediaPointe in the form adjudicated here. However, any continuation patents or related family members not at issue in this litigation should be independently evaluated, as they may carry similar or re-drafted claim language that survives indefiniteness scrutiny.
Should you run an FTO against US8559426 and US9426195?
Any company offering adaptive media delivery, CDN video streaming, managed CDN services, or adaptive media player technology should be aware of these patents and their current legal status. While the claims adjudicated in this case have been invalidated or found non-infringed as against Akamai’s specific product architecture, the patent families may include related applications. If your product overlaps with Akamai’s Intelligent Edge Platform, Aura Managed CDN, or Video On Demand infrastructure, a targeted FTO analysis is warranted to confirm exposure.
PatSnap Eureka’s FTO Search Agent can map your product’s technical features against the claim language of US8559426 and US9426195, identify surviving claims in related family members, and flag any continuation applications still in prosecution. Eureka’s claim monitoring alerts you if new related applications publish or if claim scope is amended — critical for teams building adaptive media or CDN products who need continuous clearance confidence, not just a one-time snapshot.
Run a freedom-to-operate analysis on US8559426B2 to assess your product’s exposure
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What this case signals for CDN and adaptive streaming IP enforcement
Akamai’s win offers a tactical blueprint for defending against patent assertions in the CDN and adaptive media delivery space.
Expert disclosure discipline is now a front-line CDN patent defense strategy
The decisive moment in this case was the strike of MediaPointe’s expert report for relying on undisclosed infringement theories. Defendants in CDN and streaming patent cases should scrutinize opposing expert reports aggressively at the disclosure stage — failure to disclose theories is a vulnerability that can collapse an infringement case before trial, as it did here.
Indefiniteness remains a powerful weapon against legacy media delivery patents
Both patents-in-suit saw significant claims invalidated as indefinite — a finding that does not require invalidity over prior art. For companies operating in the adaptive media delivery and CDN space, commissioning indefiniteness analyses of asserted patents early in litigation can surface this defense quickly and reduce the cost of protracted discovery.
Akamai v MediaPointe — key questions answered
Final judgment was entered in favor of Akamai on February 9, 2024. All claims of US8559426 were invalidated as indefinite; Akamai was found not to infringe the ‘195 patent, with additional claims invalidated as indefinite. MediaPointe received no monetary or injunctive relief.
The court held that the relevant claims failed to define the scope of the invention with reasonable certainty as required by 35 U.S.C. § 112, consistent with the Nautilus standard. All 17 claims of US8559426 and claims 2 and 13–19 of US9426195 were invalidated on this basis. The specific claim language issues are not detailed in the public record available here.
Akamai’s DJ claim and MediaPointe’s direct, induced, and willful infringement claims for the ‘426 patent were dismissed as moot without prejudice because the invalidity ruling on all 17 claims effectively rendered the infringement question academic. A court need not resolve infringement when the patent is invalid — though the without-prejudice qualifier preserves the issue on remand if invalidity is later reversed.
The court’s January 3, 2024 order striking undisclosed infringement theories from MediaPointe’s expert Dr. Aviel Rubin’s opening report was decisive. Without admissible expert opinion supporting infringement of the ‘195 patent, Akamai successfully moved for summary judgment of non-infringement. The strike-then-summary-judgment sequence collapsed MediaPointe’s case before trial.
The February 9, 2024 final judgment expressly reserved the question of costs and attorneys’ fees for a separate order, as permitted under Fed. R. Civ. P. 54(d) and L.R. 54-7. As of the case closing date, no fee award had been entered in the public record. Akamai retained the right to file a motion, potentially including a § 285 exceptional-case argument.
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