A US
court has ordered Facebook and other defendants to pay $500m (£395m) after
finding they unlawfully used a firm's virtual reality technology.
The
jury found Oculus, which Facebook bought in 2014, used computer code belonging
to video game developer Zenimax to launch its own VR headset.
Oculus
said it was "disappointed" and would appeal against the ruling.
The
case threatened to overshadow Facebook's latest results, which showed it enjoyed
a strong end to the year.
Facebook's
net profit more than doubled to $3.6bn in the fourth quarter.
The
social network was helped by 53% growth in advertising revenues, and said it
was on course to hit two billion users in the first half of 2017.
'Trade secrets'
Shortly
before the results came out, the court awarded Zenimax damages from Facebook,
Oculus and Oculus executives following a three-week trial.
Zenimax
argued that its early innovations in virtual reality were unlawfully copied
when Oculus built its own headset, the Rift.
"We
are pleased that the jury in our case in the US District Court in Dallas has
awarded Zenimax $500m for defendants' unlawful infringement of our copyrights
and trademarks," said Zenimax chief executive Robert Altman.
The
co-founder of Oculus, Palmer Luckey, was also found to have broken a
non-disclosure agreement with the firm.
However,
the jury ruled that none of the defendants misappropriated Zenimax's trade
secrets.
Few
people will have given Mark Zuckerberg as many headaches as Palmer Luckey.
The
24-year-old founded Oculus VR, and when Facebook stepped in to buy the firm for
$2bn, he was rewarded very handsomely indeed. Then it went a bit downhill.
First,
it was revealed he was using some of that money to fund a pro-Donald Trump
trolling campaign, which led to Facebook removing him from public view. He
didn't even turn up to his own company's developer's conference last year.
And
now, a jury has ruled that he broke a non-disclosure agreement that'll mean
$500m in damages (unless Facebook wins on appeal).
Mark
Zuckerberg doesn't display many emotions - but you wonder what he'll be like behind
closed doors on this one.
As
it stands, Palmer Luckey is still a Facebook employee, but what he's doing
there is anyone's guess - the company won't even tell me his job title.
An
Oculus spokesperson said: "The heart of this case was about whether Oculus
stole Zenimax's trade secrets, and the jury found decisively in our
favour."
The
firm did not comment on the $500m damages.
Facebook
chief executive Mark Zuckerberg testified last month that "the idea that
Oculus products are based on someone else's technology is just wrong".
Zenimax,
which owns id Software, a video games developer, was suing Facebook for $2bn.
Along
with the claims against Palmer Luckey, it alleged that John Carmack, co-founder
of id, took intellectual property belonging to Zenimax when he left the firm to
join Oculus as its full-time chief technology officer.
'Stellar
quarter'
Virtual
reality is only a small part of Facebook's current business, but is seen as
important to the firm's strategy over the next 10 years.
Most
of Facebook's fourth-quarter revenue - which jumped 54% to $27.6bn - came from
adverts on its social network.
"Facebook
had another stellar quarter, delivering record revenue, user growth and
profitability, as it rides the shift of advertising to online," said
Martin Garner, a senior analyst at CCS Insight.
"However
it expects advertising growth to slow in 2017, so it expects to be less
profitable this year."
Fake news
Other
challenges that Facebook face this year include a changing approach to privacy
in Europe, an uncertain business landscape in the US and challenges in China,
Mr Garner said.
The
social network has also been widely criticised after some users complained that
fake news on its platform had influenced the US presidential election.
In a
call with analysts on Wednesday, Facebook executives signalled it would tackle
the problem through the use of more artificial intelligence.
They
also said many of Facebook's new users were in India, where telecoms operators
had offered free data packages for Facebook traffic.
For
the full year, Facebook grew its net profit by 177% to $10.2bn.
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