That information was the planned hire of Apotheker, the former CEO of German software giant SAP, as well as Lane as non-executive chairman.
The complaint, which was filed today in San Jose, Calif., asks a Santa Clara County judge to revoke the settlement the two companies made in September of last year, saying Oracle would have never agreed to it if it had known that HP was "actively concealing material information."
In a new court filing, Oracle accused Hewlett-Packard of committing fraud by hiding its plans to hire Leo Apotheker as CEO and Ray Lane as chairman at the time the two companies were working on a settlement agreement to bring former HP CEO Mark Hurd to Oracle.
Former CNET reporter Erica Ogg contributed to this report.
Following an expense account scandal and an investigation into a ######ual harassment claim, Hurd walked away from HP last year with a package reportedly worth up to $40 million. He joined Oracle as co-president in early September of last year and was sued by HP the following day for breach of contract and "threatened misappropriation of trade secrets." In other words, HP contended that by the nature of Hurd's work at Oracle, he would invariably leak the company's trade secrets, which he had promised to protect in a confidentiality agreement with his former employer. Hurd went ahead and took the job anyway.
The filing was reported Bloomberg earlier today.
Today's cross-complaint goes against a suit HP filed against Oracle in June that said Oracle's decision to cease development on Intel Itanium server processors was an attempt to "thwart competition from HP and harm its customers."
相关的主题文章:
-Cisco Systems has acquired Versly
- Sammy Miller
-Selah Hennessy | London
-That will be billions of years before the sun die
- a modern
-The United Nations estimates that more than 2
HTC Sense update captured on video Android Atlas - CNET Reviews
-
Droid Life
Mozilla puts mobile Firefox on the front burner Deep Tech - CNET News
News English
Can any cloud catch Amazon Web Services Part 1 The Wisdom of Clouds - CNET News
-Violence has decreased in Iraq since its peak in 2006 and 2007
- but this was not only quieter
- Acoustic Sounds
- including one New York wedding. A beaming bride
How social media helps us study rare diseases Health Tech - CNET News