With a similar legal battle playing out in the U.K., a company owned by Skype’s founders has reportedly filed suit against Skype in the U.S.
Joltid, the company owned by Skype founders Janus Friis and Niklas Zennstrom, filed a copyright infringement suit against Skype, eBay, Silver Lake Partners and others. That confirms a Wall Street Journal report Wednesday.
The dispute concerns an agreement that eBay made when it bought Skype in 2005. The acquisition did not include Skype’s peer-to-peer networking technology, which is owned by Joltid and was licensed to Skype.
Earlier this year Joltid terminated the license agreement. Joltid and Skype have since argued over the validity of the termination in courts in England. Further arguments are scheduled there in the middle of next year.
“Joltid terminated its license agreement with Skype as a result of breaches by Skype. Skype has infringed Joltid’s copyrights,” Joltid said in a statement. “Joltid will vigorously enforce its copyrights and other intellectual property rights in all of the technologies it has innovated.”
In the meantime, eBay has said it’s developing an alternative technology to get around the licensing issue.
The U.S. lawsuit seeks an injunction against Skype and statutory damages for copyright infringement, the Journal reported. Representatives for eBay and Joltid did not respond to requests for comment.
Earlier this month, eBay agreed to sell a 65 percent stake in Skype for $1.9 billion to a group of investors. The deal, expected to close in the fourth quarter, values Skype at $2.75 billion, just over the $2.6 billion that eBay paid for it in 2005.
Updated on September 17 to include a comment from Joltid.