Michael Jacobs is the co-founder of the firm's Intellectual Property Practice Group. Mr. Jacobs concentrates his practice on litigation of high-technology and intellectual property matters. He has represented information technology and life sciences companies in over 35 patent lawsuits, often prevailing at early stages of the dispute. He has also handled numerous high-profile arbitrations, several of which involved the interplay between arbitration and court proceedings.
Mr. Jacobs' work in several landmark cases has helped to shape the laws governing emerging technologies. Early in his career, he led the technical team that represented Fujitsu in its landmark operating system software arbitration with IBM. He represented Novell in the widely-reported SCO v. Novell litigation. After a three-week trial in the case in March 2010, the jury affirmed Novell's ownership of the UNIX software code and rejected SCO's claim for damages of hundreds of millions of dollars. The 10th Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed the district court’s judgment. He currently represents Oracle in its intellectual property dispute with Google over the Android operating system.
Mr. Jacobs has twice won the California Lawyer Attorneys of the Year (CLAY) award, one for his advocacy on behalf of Intel in the Intel v. Hamidi "trespass to chattels" case and this year for his defense of Novell in SCO v. Novell.