XR Communications v. ASUS: Wi-Fi Patent Dispute Ends in Dismissal

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📋 Case Summary

Case NameXR Communications, LLC v. Asustek Computer, Inc. et al.
Case Number6:23-cv-00651 (W.D. Tex.)
CourtWestern District of Texas
DurationSep 2023 – Apr 2024 7 months
OutcomeDefendant Win — Dismissal with Prejudice
Patents at Issue
Accused ProductsOver 200 ASUS Routers, Laptops, Motherboards, Smartphones, Gaming Peripherals

In a case that underscores the high-stakes nature of wireless technology patent assertions, XR Communications, LLC’s infringement action against ASUS entities concluded with a joint stipulated dismissal with prejudice on April 16, 2024. Filed September 6, 2023, in the Western District of Texas — one of the nation’s most active patent litigation venues — the case targeted over 200 ASUS products spanning routers, laptops, motherboards, smartphones, and gaming peripherals, all allegedly infringing wireless communication patents.

The dismissal, entered just 223 days after filing under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 41(a)(1)(A)(ii), signals a resolution reached between the parties before any substantive court rulings on validity or infringement. For patent attorneys and IP professionals tracking Wi-Fi patent infringement litigation, this case (Case No. 6:23-cv-00651) offers meaningful strategic intelligence — both about XR Communications’ broader assertion campaign and ASUS’s defensive posture across its sprawling product ecosystem.

Case Overview

The Parties

⚖️ Plaintiff

A non-practicing entity (NPE) with an established history of asserting wireless communication patents across the consumer electronics and networking industries.

🛡️ Defendant

One of the world’s largest manufacturers of computing hardware, networking equipment, and consumer electronics, with extensive Wi-Fi-enabled product lines.

The Patents at Issue

Two United States patents formed the basis of XR Communications’ infringement claims. Both relate to advanced wireless communication techniques, likely encompassing beamforming, signal transmission optimization, or related IEEE 802.11 Wi-Fi standard implementations.

  • US10715235B2 (Application No. 15/495,539) — Covering wireless communication technology
  • US10594376B2 (Application No. 15/486,245) — Covering related wireless transmission methods

The Accused Products

Over 200 distinct ASUS SKUs were named, including ROG gaming laptops and smartphones, ZenWiFi mesh routers, PCIe Wi-Fi adapters (PCE-AX series), USB Wi-Fi adapters, TUF Gaming motherboards with integrated Wi-Fi, ExpertBook business laptops, Vivobook and Zenbook consumer laptops, Chromebooks, and desktop systems.

Legal Representation

Plaintiff: Russ August & Kabat LLP, represented by Reza Mirzaie, Christian W. Conkle, James N. Pickens, Minna Y. Chan, Paul A. Kroeger, and Philip X. Wang.

Defendants: Gillam & Smith LLP (Melissa Richards Smith, James Travis Underwood) and Turner Boyd Seraphine, LLP (Karen I. Boyd, Robert Kent).

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Litigation Timeline & Procedural History

Complaint FiledSeptember 6, 2023
Joint Stipulation of Dismissal FiledApril 15, 2024
Order of Dismissal EnteredApril 16, 2024
Total Duration223 days

The Western District of Texas was selected deliberately. Despite Chief Judge changes following the Waco Division spotlight, WDTX remains plaintiff-favorable due to predictable scheduling orders and patent-experienced judges. Filing in this jurisdiction signals XR Communications’ intent to apply maximum early pressure.

The case resolved in approximately seven months — well before claim construction hearings, which in WDTX typically occur six to nine months post-filing. The pre-Markman resolution strongly suggests the parties reached a negotiated outcome, most likely a licensing agreement or covenant not to sue, though specific financial terms were not disclosed in court records.

The Verdict & Legal Analysis

Outcome

The Court granted the parties’ Joint Stipulation of Dismissal with prejudice on April 16, 2024, pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 41(a)(1)(A)(ii). Critically, the order specifies that each party shall bear its own attorney fees and costs — a standard term in negotiated resolutions that avoids any fee-shifting determination under 35 U.S.C. § 285 (exceptional case doctrine).

No damages award, injunctive relief, or validity ruling was entered. The dismissal with prejudice bars XR Communications from re-filing the same claims against ASUS on these patents.

Verdict Cause Analysis

Because dismissal preceded any substantive judicial rulings, there are no claim construction orders, invalidity findings, or infringement analyses to report. The case’s trajectory — filed by an experienced NPE firm against a high-profile defendant, with rapid resolution before costly Markman proceedings — is consistent with a licensing resolution pattern common in NPE assertion campaigns.

The mutual fee-bearing provision is legally significant: had ASUS achieved dismissal through litigation victory, it might have pursued attorney fees under § 285. The symmetric fee arrangement suggests a consensual, negotiated exit rather than a capitulation by either side.

Legal Significance

While this case produced no precedential rulings, it contributes to the observable litigation profile of US10715235B2 and US10594376B2. Patent professionals should monitor whether XR Communications has asserted these patents against other defendants, as parallel or sequential assertion campaigns by NPEs often yield claim construction orders or IPR decisions in related proceedings that directly affect patent scope and validity.

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Freedom to Operate (FTO) Analysis

This case highlights critical IP risks in Wi-Fi and wireless communication technologies. Choose your next step:

📋 Understand This Case’s Impact

Learn about the specific risks and implications from this litigation.

  • View all related wireless communication patents
  • See which companies are most active in Wi-Fi patents
  • Understand claim construction patterns for similar patents
📊 View Patent Landscape
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High Risk Area

IEEE 802.11 (Wi-Fi) standard implementations

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Active NPE

XR Communications continues assertions

Proactive FTO

Key to mitigating wireless patent risk

Industry & Competitive Implications

XR Communications’ assertion against ASUS reflects a broader pattern of Wi-Fi patent monetization targeting consumer electronics manufacturers. As Wi-Fi 6 (802.11ax) and Wi-Fi 7 (802.11be) implementations proliferate across laptops, routers, smartphones, and IoT devices, NPEs holding wireless transmission patents have identified an expansive and commercially lucrative assertion landscape.

The scale of ASUS’s accused product list — encompassing gaming, commercial, consumer, and networking categories — highlights how deeply wireless connectivity has become a litigation surface area for hardware manufacturers. Companies whose product lines are similarly Wi-Fi-intensive (Intel, Qualcomm partners, router OEMs) should treat this case as a competitive intelligence signal.

The choice of Western District of Texas, the speed of resolution, and the mutual fee-bearing outcome collectively suggest this matter concluded through private licensing. This aligns with XR Communications’ documented approach of building recurring licensing revenue through targeted enforcement rather than jury verdicts.

For ASUS, resolving the case before claim construction avoids creating adverse public claim interpretations that could complicate future defense of these or related patents — a strategically sound outcome regardless of terms.

✅ Key Takeaways

For Patent Attorneys & Litigators

Dismissal with prejudice under Rule 41(a)(1)(A)(ii) requires no court approval and is effective upon filing — useful for rapid, clean case closure.

Search related case law →

Mutual fee-bearing provisions signal negotiated resolution and preclude § 285 exceptional case arguments.

Explore precedents →

Monitor XR Communications’ parallel litigation campaigns for claim construction orders affecting US10715235B2 and US10594376B2.

Track patent family litigation →
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PatSnap IP Intelligence Team

Patent Research & Competitive Intelligence · PatSnap

This analysis was produced by the PatSnap IP Intelligence Team — a group of patent analysts, IP strategists, and data scientists who work daily with PatSnap’s global patent database of over 2 billion structured data points across patents, litigation records, scientific literature, and regulatory filings.

The team specialises in tracking landmark litigation outcomes, translating complex court rulings into actionable IP strategy, and identifying the competitive intelligence implications for R&D and legal teams. All case analysis is grounded in primary sources: official court records, USPTO filings, and Federal Circuit opinions.

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References

  1. USPTO Patent Center – US10715235B2
  2. USPTO Patent Center – US10594376B2
  3. PACER Case Lookup – 6:23-cv-00651 (W.D. Tex.)
  4. Cornell Legal Information Institute – Fed. R. Civ. P. 41(a)(1)(A)(ii)
  5. Cornell Legal Information Institute – 35 U.S.C. § 285

This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. All case information is drawn from publicly available court records. For platform capabilities, visit PatSnap.

⚖️ Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. The analysis presented reflects publicly available case information and general legal principles. For specific advice regarding patent litigation, FTO analysis, or IP strategy, please consult a qualified patent attorney.