By Greg Bensinger
SAN FRANCISCO -- A federal trial featuring two heavyweight
technology companies is intriguing on its own. Toss in an
unpredictable judge, A-list witnesses and some warlike rhetoric,
and the legal battle between Alphabet Inc.'s Waymo and Uber
Technologies Inc. turns into a spectacle that offers a revealing
look into Silicon Valley culture and personalities.
On Thursday, as the fourth day began in a trial expected to last
at least two weeks, neither party has notched any obvious big wins,
but the proceedings have produced moments of levity and theatrics
amid the serious allegations and rebuttals. Waymo, the self-driving
offshoot of Google, claims Uber conspired to steal trade secrets to
jump-start its own driverless-car program. Uber denies the
allegations.
U.S. District Judge William Alsup set a tone for the case on
Monday by admonishing attorneys for rearranging his courtroom. The
lawyers took over the first few rows of pews and created tripping
hazards with a tangle of wires for their laptops. Dollies full of
legal documents were wheeled in; one sagged under the weight of 16
boxes.
The first star witness, former Uber Chief Executive Travis
Kalanick, took the stand on Tuesday and Wednesday. He gulped down
four mini bottles of water on his first day of testimony, despite
mostly monosyllabic answers. One reporter later joked to Mr.
Kalanick's spokesman that the courtroom gallery had been impressed
with the former CEO's bladder control.
Mr. Kalanick, 41 years old, reminded observers of his Silicon
Valley roots with the vernacular he used in testimony and evidence,
referring to an Uber project as "super duper," describing Alphabet
CEO Larry Page as "unpumped" about the competition, and talking
about "jam seshes" with his colleagues. Attorneys presented a photo
of a whiteboard he had prepared including the cryptic phrases
"Pittsburgh -- I know some shit," "yin yang," "west coast rap" and
"disruptive attack vectors."
Waymo attorneys sought to portray Mr. Kalanick as the
protagonist who schemed with a former Google engineer, Anthony
Levandowski, to steal trade secrets from Waymo and then cover their
tracks to avoid legal repercussions. Mr. Kalanick has denied any
theft in depositions and testimony, and Mr. Levandowski has
previously indicated he will invoke his Fifth Amendment right
against any possible self-incrimination.
Waymo attorneys showed emails, texts and notes with seemingly
aggressive phrases attributed to Mr. Kalanick, such as "losing is
not an option," "it is war time," "burn the village" and "pound of
flesh." One curious phrase went viral on Twitter: "laser is the
sauce," which Waymo attorneys said showed how highly Mr. Kalanick
valued Google's technology involving lasers.
The attorneys squabbled with Uber's lawyers over whether they
could show jurors a clip from the movie "Wall Street," featuring
Gordon Gekko's famous "greed is good" speech that was texted by Mr.
Levandowski to Mr. Kalanick. The texts included a winking emoji,
the meaning of which the lawyers also debated. Judge Alsup
ultimately allowed the clip, drawing a retort from Mr. Kalanick
Wednesday that "it's a movie, it's fake."
Mr. Kalanick, who limited his water intake on Wednesday to less
than two bottles, appeared relaxed, even flashing smiles during a
break in a hallway alongside his father.
The biggest witness this week, literally, was Bill Gurley, a
former Uber board member. "You get the record for being the tallest
person," Judge Alsup said to the 6-foot-9-inch venture capitalist.
Mr. Gurley testified that he believed in the summer of 2016 that a
due-diligence report regarding Uber's acquisition of self-driving
truck company Otto, which is at the center of the case, contained
nothing alarming.
Judge Alsup, who made headlines earlier this year for blocking
the Trump administration's effort to end the Dreamers program, is
known for his blunt style and at-time brusque declarations. "Mr.
Verhoeven, what is the problem? Let's move this along," the
72-year-old judge said Wednesday when an attorney for Waymo,
Charles Verhoeven, momentarily consulted with a colleague.
The judge earlier noted he had inspired an ersatz Twitter
account, but said it couldn't be his because he doesn't engage in
social media. One tweet from the parody account read: "Get some
sleep attorneys, 'cause I'm going to decimate the first one of you
morons to forget to turn off your ringer tomorrow."
Judge Alsup lightened the courtroom mood at times, even during
technical testimony centered around self-driving laser technology,
known as lidar, used to pilot robot cars.
When a Waymo attorney asked a forensics expert hired by Uber to
examine a controversial acquisition whether he had believed he had
"way more work to do," the judge interrupted and said, "Is that a
pun? Way-mo work?," to guffaws from the gallery.
On Thursday, during a dispute about evidence, an Uber attorney
griped that a Waymo lawyer's "outrage is inversely proportional to
merits of his argument." Judge Alsup quipped: "That should be a
principle, like Bernoulli's principle," which addresses fluid
dynamics.
In a case pitting two of the world's best-known technology
companies against each other, technical snafus abounded. An
attorney for Uber had to place a folder in front of a projector at
one point to ensure sensitive documents weren't shown to the
public. Another time, phone numbers from Mr. Kalanick's
text-message history were momentarily displayed to the courtroom
gallery.
The companies were plagued by awkward lags in the video
testimony or documents being displayed, which Judge Alsup warned
could hurt their arguments.
He said Tuesday he would only allow a one- to two-second delay
in the future.
Write to Greg Bensinger at greg.bensinger@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
February 08, 2018 16:57 ET (21:57 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2018 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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