Defendant

NCR Corp.

1 case as defendant.

Company profile

NCR Corp. Company Profile

Founded in 1884 as the National Cash Register Company, the company now operates as NCR Voyix Corporation following a major corporate restructuring in 2023. NCR Voyix is a publicly-traded technology company headquartered in Atlanta, Georgia, that provides digital commerce solutions. Prior to its separation, the company was known as NCR Corporation. In October 2023, NCR Corporation separated into two independent, publicly-traded companies: NCR Voyix (NYSE: VYX), which focuses on digital commerce, and NCR Atleos, which handles the ATM business. NCR Voyix, the legal successor to the original company, employs approximately 15,000 people and reported revenue of around $2.87 billion for 2024.

NCR Voyix is an operating company that provides a suite of software, hardware, and services for the retail, restaurant, and digital banking industries. Its core offerings include point-of-sale (POS) software and terminals, self-service kiosks and self-checkout systems, barcode scanners, and payment processing solutions. The company's platform-based technologies are designed to unify digital and physical commerce operations for a customer base ranging from small businesses to large enterprises.

The company’s litigation history shows it as a defendant, which is consistent with the profile of an operating company that is a target for patent infringement claims. The single tracked case, brought by DataTreasury Corporation, was filed in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Texas, a jurisdiction historically favored by patent plaintiffs.

The tracked case, DataTreasury Corporation v. NCR Corp., involved a prominent patent assertion entity. DataTreasury has filed dozens of infringement lawsuits against the banking and financial services industry over patents related to check imaging and processing, securing over $350 million in licensing fees and settlements from various companies. The lawsuit against NCR, which focused on its check imaging technology, was settled in 2006, with NCR agreeing to license the technology.