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Tech

Ocado and Tharsus celebrate initial victory in 'robot wars' court case

American judge has ruled against Norwegian firm AutoStore in case alleging breach of copyright over robots

Ocado's Customer Fulfilment Centre in Hatfield

The first stage in a “robot wars” court case involving rising Northumberland firm Tharsus has seen a ruling in its favour.

Norwegian firm Autostore had taken action against online supermarket firm Ocado and Tharsus, alleging that the robots the Blyth makes for Ocado infringe its copyright.

But a judgment handed down in the US has found that three of the four AutoStore patents are invalid and a fourth is not infringed. It means that 33 claims against Ocado have now been rejected.

Read more: go here for more North East business news

The judgment is unlikely to be the end of the case, however, with AutoStore indicating that it will challenge the US ruling and other court cases in Europe still proceeding.

An Ocado spokesperson said: “We have consistently stated that Ocado does not infringe any valid AutoStore IP, and we are pleased that the judge has now agreed with us. This was a misconceived attempt by AutoStore to interfere with our business in the United States.

“We intend vigorously to continue our infringement claims against AutoStore in the United States and Europe.”

AutoStore said it intends to challenge the decision at a final determination in April next year.