Ellen Pao, the woman at the center of a high-profile gender bias lawsuit against Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, the elite Silicon Valley venture capital firm, filed an appeal on Monday of a jury verdict against her.

Alan Exelrod, an attorney for plaintiff Pao, filed the two-page notice of appeal in San Francisco Superior Court.

There were no accompanying documents explaining grounds for the appeal, and Heather Wilson, a spokeswoman for Pao, said neither Pao nor Axelrod would have additional comment.

Pao appealed before the June 8 deadline, and her filing gives her at least 40 days to establish what her complaint will be, according to re/code, which live blogged the trial.

In a recent court filing, Kleiner Perkins said it offered Pao $964,000 before the trial to settle the case, but she did not respond. The firm sought more than $970,000 in legal costs from Pao but said it would waive all costs if Pao did not pursue an appeal.

Pao’s lawyers called the legal fee “excessive.”

A jury in March found that defendant Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers did not discriminate or retaliate against Pao in the case that became a flashpoint in an ongoing discussion about gender inequity at elite technology and venture capital firms, where women are grossly underrepresented.

As she left California Superior Court on March 27, Pao said "I have told my story and thousands of people have heard it. If I helped to level the playing field for women and minorities in venture capital, then the battle was worth it."

“Ellen Pao is a Rosa Parks,” Shirley Hines, a longtime public affairs professional in the industry, told Al Jazeera shortly after the trial’s end. “She is the one who basically said, ‘No, enough.’ To her credit, she’s very brave. I admire her for just taking it on, and saying ‘no.’”

During the trial that laid bare the personnel matters of the firm that backed Google Inc and Amazon.com Inc, Pao's attorneys said she was an accomplished junior partner who was passed over for a promotion because the firm used different standards to judge men and women, and that she was fired when she complained about discrimination.

The lawyers claimed Pao was subjected to a number of indignities, including being given a book of erotic poetry by a partner at the company and being cut out of emails and meetings by a male colleague with whom she broke off an affair.

Kleiner Perkins' attorney Lynne Hermle countered during the trial that Pao failed as an investor at the company and sued to get a big payout as she was being shown the door. Pao is now interim CEO of the Internet discussion forum Reddit.

Kleiner Perkins' spokeswoman Christina Lee said in a statement Monday that a 12-member jury found decisively in favor of Kleiner Perkins.

The company is committed to gender diversity in the workplace and believes that women in technology would be best served by focusing on the issue outside of continued litigation, she said.

Al Jazeera with wire services