Defunct Quibi Settles Lawsuit Accusing It Of Tech Theft

Defunct streaming service Quibi has settled a lawsuit alleging its signature video-flipping technology was stolen.

Variety reports that per the terms of the settlement, Quibi and the plaintiff, Eko, will dismiss all legal claims against one another. Additionally, Quibi (or, well, QBI Holdings LLC, the company formed to retain assets involved in the lawsuit after Quibi itself shuttered in October 2020) has agreed to hand over the tech and IP related to Turnstyle.

For those who don’t know, Turnstyle was one of Quibi’s biggest selling points. Pretty much every device and platform out there can flip videos from horizontal to vertical, but Quibi’s spin on things didn’t involve just flipping a horizontally oriented video vertical or vice versa.

Subscribe to get the latest creator news

Subscribe

Inste

ad, when a user turned their phone mid-show or mid-movie, Turnstyle instantly reoptimized the content, widening or narrowing to fill up the user’s full screen. The way the video was displayed would change significantly, shifting the camera to keep following the main focus of the shot no matter how many times the user flipped their phone.

The lawsuit alleged that before Quibi was a thing, Eko founder/CEO Yoni Bloch had a 2017 meeting with Quibi founder Jeffrey Katzenberg where Bloch demo’d the video tools Eko was developing, “including details regarding technology that Quibi now uses in its touted Turnstyle feature.”

Eko filed the suit prior to Quibi’s shutdown, and sought an official admission that Quibi stole its trade secrets, plus financial compensation, plus an order to stop Quibi from “selling, offering for sale, marketing, or using the Turnstyle feature.” It also wanted a judge to sign over Quibi’s Turnstyle patent so Eko would fully own the tech.

A source familiar with the matter told Variety that no money is involved in the settlement.

“This result will help ensure that Eko remains the undisputed leader in interactive storytelling technology,” Bloch said in a statement.

In his own statement, Katzenberg said, “We are satisfied with the outcome of this litigation, and proud of the independently created contributions of Quibi and its engineering team to content presentation technology.”

“The parties will have no further comment regarding the lawsuits or their resolution,” the companies said in a joint statement.

Share
Published by
James Hale
Tags: ekoquibi

Recent Posts

Soccer media brand Footballco is coming to America with several key hires

Footballco is betting on the growth of soccer in the United States. Over the past few…

2 days ago

MatPat-founded Theroist reveals new apparel brand at ‘Creator in Fashion’ show

As the co-host of the Creators in Fashion show that took place on April 25, Matthew Patrick (a.k.a. MatPat)…

2 days ago

YouTube salutes its Shorts as ad revenue soars to $8.1 billion in Q1 2024

Alphabet's earnings report for the first quarter of 2024 sent its stock price soaring sky-high.…

2 days ago

Snap stock jumps 25% after Q1 earnings beat projections. Also, 9 million people are now paying for Snapchat+.

Snap has had a rocky couple of years: several quarters of flat growth or declines,…

2 days ago

On the Rise: Rob can heal your workplace wounds

Welcome to On the Rise, where we find and profile breakout creators who are in…

3 days ago

Chad Wild Clay and Vy Qwaint launch Spy Ninjas HQ, the first adventure park built on a YouTube IP

Four years ago, Chad Wild Clay and Vy Qwaint had an idea. They had spent…

3 days ago