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Sony Corp said on Monday it was ordered by a US court to halt sales of its blockbuster PlayStation consoles in the key US market and pay $90 million in damages to a small US tech company, Immersion Corp Sony Computer Entertainment (SCE), Sony's gaming unit, said it would appeal the decision by a California federal court in the patent infringement case. For the time being, Sony will keep selling PlayStations as the order - which covers the PlayStation and PlayStation 2, two game controllers and 47 software titles - will not go into effect before the appeal, an SCE spokeswoman said.
Sony will be paying compulsory licence fees to Immersion, she added.
Games have been Sony's profit driver in recent years, accounting for 44 percent of the company's group operating profit in October-December, as it struggles with price declines at its electronics division.
Sony in January cut its operating profit estimate for this business year by 31 percent, citing sharply falling prices of televisions, DVD recorders and other key products and weak demand for chips.
Immersion, a California-based developer of digital touch technologies, claimed Sony Computer Entertainment infringed on its technology that makes a game controller vibrate in sync with actions in games, the Japanese game maker said.
The $90 million awarded by the court is more than triple Immersion's total revenues of $23.8 million in 2004 and represents two-thirds of the company's current market value of around $135 million.
The court's decision confirmed a ruling by a California jury last year that ordered Sony to pay $82 million in the case. The amount was raised to slightly over $90 million due to interest. Shares in Sony were down 0.91 percent at 4,360 yen in afternoon trade, underperforming the Tokyo stock market's electric machinery index, which rose 0.35 percent. Immersion's stock last traded on Thursday at $5.75, down 11 cents.
In another intellectual property-related lawsuit between Japanese and US technology companies, Toshiba Corp was ordered by a California jury last week to pay a total of $465 million in punitive and other damages to Lexar Media Inc for stealing trade secrets.

Copyright Reuters, 2005

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