Google Talk Targeted In Patent Lawsuit 229
JamesAlfaro wrote to mention an Ars Technica story, which goes into the recent filing of a suit against Google Talk. A Delaware corporation claims that Talk infringes on two of its patents. From the article: "You've probably never heard of Rates Technology Inc. (RTI), and that wouldn't be surprising since the company has no products and offers no services. By all appearances, RTI is a company that was set up to collect licensing fees and pursue settlements related to the company's patent portfolio. Gerald J. Weinberger, president of Rates technology Inc., once said that the company was 'an enterprise based on patent licensing,' and that much of its business depended on the courts." Certainly seems like there are a lot of those businesses around nowadays, huh?
Yawn... Nothing here, move along please. (Score:5, Informative)
As for prior art, can we cite OSPF? How about using a map to avoid toll roads on a trip? Or choosing from several of those 10-10 long distance services, depending on who's cheaper at the moment? It's all the same process (which is the basis for the claim). Just because the calculation is done with a computer instead of a human brain doesn't make it any different.
Somehow I'm not worried about a legal precedent being set though. Rates Technology Inc. just put a company with a $123 billion market cap in their crosshairs. They might as well be using a slingshot and they know it. This is a blatent effort to extort a settlement out of someone with deep pockets. RTI would never try this crap with my company. I hope that Google viciously spanks them on principle.
Re:Yawn... Nothing here, move along please. (Score:5, Informative)
However, the VoIP service doesn't even seem to infringe upon the patent itself, as if the patent were valid, so the case fails on those grounds too. This looks like a blatant attempt to use a trash patent against a deep-pocketed victim in hopes of getting quick cash, rather than dealing with a lawsuit that might somehow upset investors.
Re:Yawn... Nothing here, move along please. (Score:2)
It's existed on ISDN PABX for *at least* 10 years.
What next, are they going to patent rotary dials for use in VoIP?
Re:Yawn... Nothing here, move along please. (Score:2)
"How about using a map to avoid toll roads on a trip? "
how is that uised to determine cheaper phone rates?
The problem is, of course, patenting 'processes'. They should not be allowed, however they are allowed, so they may have a case.
Or are you saying a companies market cap is what should be used to determine if what they do is legal?
your complaint seems to be that they
Re:Yawn... Nothing here, move along please. (Score:2)
Re:Yawn... Nothing here, move along please. (Score:2)
You don't understand how this scam works: first, get a patent. It should be something broadly written so that everything plausibly infringes it. Then you go to a small company and say "You infringe this patent. We will sue you, or you can settle for $100." Obviously the small company settles; it would be insane to do anything else. You keep going go more and more companies, increasing the settlement offer; but a
Re:Yawn... Nothing here, move along please. (Score:3, Insightful)
Generally though the Attoerney General is a lawyer and has many lawyer friends, probably some of which funded his campaign.
Beacuse the US has such an open system of corruption (which country doesn't though?), it's unlikely you'll ever see this business model done away with any time soon.
Re:Yawn... Nothing here, move along please. (Score:2)
Who does the law protect? (Score:5, Insightful)
Do you expect another result? Do you expect patents to make people innovate? We've been human for thousands of years, we've innovated for thousands of years. New products hit the market every day that were designed by some mom or some kid in a garage -- they didn't think of patents when they started designing.
The force of the law can not truly protect inventions, which is based on thought. Intellectual property is another word for "we want to control how you think and how you process a thought into an action." It seems criminal to me that I can't take a person's creation, make it better and sell the better version myself. This is how our lives get better -- innovating, modifying, perfecting, debugging. No idea is truly revolutionary, we just take little bits and pieces from what isn't working perfectly, and we find ways to make things better.
We elect lawyers to make laws, and in the end, the laws only protect the lawyers. We have accountants write tax code and in the end, the tax code only protects the accountants. This is what comes from excessive government force.
There are many people here who want patent laws to work -- I commend you for continuing to try to find a way to force other people to be good to one another. I have yet to hear HOW we can make patent protections work. We're humans, we're out for our own interests, and that will never change. Why would I want to give certain elected greedy humans this power?
Re:Who does the law protect? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Who does the law protect? (Score:5, Insightful)
Most inventions are performed by hired staff in the research and development wing. There is nothing preventing companies from creating a "protect our inventions" wing, or figuring out how much the initial product must sell for to recoup the costs before competitors knock it off.
Define "whole brand new, reworked, better system" as I can't think of any, other than canning it entirely and replacing it with nothing.
I have an idea for that... (Score:5, Interesting)
Under such a system, patents could only be sold ONCE. After that, the idea would fall into the public domain. That way inventors and companies could make a reasonable return on their innovations, but there'd be no incentive to buy up "used" patents, as they'd have no value.
This might have a further effect in that it would no longer be profitable to buy another company SOLELY to acquire their intellectual property assets, since as of the 2nd sale, they'd no longer have any protected value. This would probably incline the market toward more smallish companies that competed more directly, and a great many more small-scale patent-licensing deals among related companies, which ought to ultimately be all to the good (smaller companies generally being more customer-centric, and less beholden to stockholders).
And it would cut the lawyers, who had nothing to do with the invention itself, out of the profit chain.
Oh yeah... I'm gonna patent this as my business model.
Re:I have an idea for that... (Score:2)
Loophole: create skeleton corporations for a patent/pool of patents. Said company would buy the patent from the original inventor(s) and from there on, instead of selling patents, sell corporations.
"Paper corporations" are extremely easy to buy. There are firms that have a bunch of assetless corporations just for selling. They'll even provide the necesary board members from among their employees if you so desire.
Re:Who does the law protect? (Score:2)
Why? When I can just quote your other post...
New products hit the market every day that were designed by some mom or some kid in a garage
I will, however, name one person that immediately pops into my mind as an individual patent holder who's made quit a bit of money off his invention. He is Tom Jolly [jollygames.com], and has a patent or two on gameplay mechanics for games like Diskwars.
Patents are here to help
Re:Who does the law protect? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Who does the law protect? (Score:2)
Re:Who does the law protect? (Score:2)
reform the incorporation laws as well (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:reform the incorporation laws as well (Score:2)
All your ideas would lead to more corporate corruption, not less.
Re:Who does the law protect? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Who does the law protect? (Score:3, Insightful)
Some other factors that come to mind: greater population, stable governments, stable economies, safety, rising standards of living, rapid communication, rapid travel, etc. A few inventions enabled us to produce many many other inventions.
You also forget that inventions before used to be huge things, too. The wheel, fire starters, crop technique, medical basics, optics (glasses, microscope, teles
Re:Who does the law protect? (Score:2)
Re:Who does the law protect? (Score:2)
1) yes, i believe absolutely that at least 1% of the US population is as intelligent as gallileo, and probably more so. the scientific training the top 1% gets yields intelligence well beyond what gallileo had.
2) even if you deny 1, it takes more knowledge than intelligence to innovate anyway.
Finally, could your or I figure out that the earth orbits the sun? Sure
Re:Who does the law protect? (Score:2)
no, but if they don't pantent they have no recourse when smoeone with money makes a killing off someone elses idea.
"The force of the law can not truly protect inventions, which is based on thought. "
of course they can, it's called patent law.
"Intellectual property is another word for "we want to control how you think and how you process a thought into an action." "
no, it is not. IP is a way of sayniog, this is my idea and I want to own it. It
Re:Who does the law protect? (Score:2)
This whole "my idea" crap is really the source of the problem. Face it, knowing something is not owning it, and making laws based around that only compounds the problems. When law does not reflect reality, everyone loses. THAT is not paranoid delu
Re:Who does the law protect? (Score:2)
Re:Who does the law protect? (Score:2)
I'm a law student, but because I don't have a science degree, I cant sit for the patent bar (unless I pass a ridiculous test that requires a lot of knowledge I would've learned had I done engineering in college). If you have a certain number of hours in the sciences and a JD, you CAN sit for the patent bar.
Instead of complaining about a b
Re:Who does the law protect? (Score:2)
Re:Who does the law protect? (Score:2)
Re:Who does the law protect? (Score:2)
Actually this is what came of insufficient government force. That is, if you define government as being 'by the people for the people'. What we have now is that a government is so spineless and unwilling to oppose corporate and private power, that it is no government at all. Merely a system for transferring more and more wealth and power from the masses into opulence for the wealthy elite.
By trying to tear down government (rather than the elite who exploit
Re:Who does the law protect? (Score:2)
ratify kyoto
scrap the missile defense program
don't invade Iraq looking for WMD you KNOW aren't there.
O Canada! Our home and native land!
True patriot love in all thy sons command.
With glowing hearts we see thee rise,
The True North strong and free!
From far and wide, O Canada,
We stand on guard for thee.
God keep our land glorious and free!
O Canada, we stand on guard for thee.
O Canada, we stand on guard for thee.
Tell your boss he has no right to dictate to you what politica
Re:Who does the law protect? (Score:5, Insightful)
Those countries which have time to invent in the first place also happen to have time to dick around with IP laws, and generally they aren't helpful to the little guy if the court case to protect his IP is going to end up costing him more than he'd get from licensing.
I'm not going to go so far as to say that all patents should be eliminated, cause that's no better than the above, but I also think that unless a company is actually producing (or trying to produce) a product with it's patent, they shouldn't get to sue someone. That would at least eliminate patent leeches on some level.
Patent != Invention (Score:5, Insightful)
By counting "inventions" of a country with a patent system like the US, you're counting patented inventions, which isn't the same as useful inventions coming out of a system without the same patent protection. And in many cases, what's invented elsewhere is patented in the US -- that doesn't make it a US invention.
By presupposing that the number of patents reflects the number of inventions, and thus can be used as evidence that patents increase invention, you're begging the question. All you're proving is that availability of a patent system will increase the number of patents.
Regards,
--
*Art
Re:Who does the law protect? (Score:5, Insightful)
Um, explain then how the majority of innovations come from countries with high protection for IP (including patents) and countries with poor protection produce virtually none?
Standard, bogus argument from the PTO.
You're confusing correlation with causation. It could equally be that high innovation countries attract a patent mafia wanting to profit off of inventor's work. You have no evidence either way.
It could also be that patent laws and innovations develop independently but at the same time as a consequence of some other factor involving normal social progression. Again, you have no evidence.
---
Scientific, evidence based IP law. Now there's a thought.
The New New Thing (Score:5, Insightful)
Let's hope that the big companies calling for patent reform [com.com] manage to effect some positive change. Microsoft and Oracle in that article, I'm pretty sure IBM has sounded the call, too.
Re:The New New Thing (Score:2)
Yes, because we all know that big companies like Microsoft always do what's best for consumers, innovation, and the market as a whole.
I am sure that Microsoft would be very happy to screw over legitimate small inventors while cloaking itself in the crusade against spurious patents.
I agree that the patent system needs to be refo
Re:The New New Thing (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:The New New Thing (Score:3, Interesting)
IP holding companies do nothing to advance the state of the art. They are parasites leeching off of the efforts of the actual inventors and using extortion (threat of law suits) to make a buck, and so they shou
slashvertorial content is off (Score:4, Insightful)
And with good reason. An independent inventor has virtually no way to pursue such claims himself, the cost is far too expensive. Instead, patent holding companies allow an inventor to sell his invention to a holding company, and have the company pursue claims. He may sell outright or receive a portion of the profits.
There are many things wrong with the patent system. Patent holding companies are not among them. If you accept patents at all, licensing companies are vital to the success, fairness, and effectiveness of the system.
Re:slashvertorial content is off (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:slashvertorial content is off (Score:3, Insightful)
a) can easily be invented by someone else
b) can't be produced by the inventor
then something is wrong. That's why there's an obviousness clause, and there used to be a requirement to actually deliver an implementation.
Suppose we give credit to von neumann for inventing the computer, and grant him a patent on it. Suppose, further, for a moment that we feel he deserves the patent, and that the
Re:slashvertorial content is off (Score:2)
Re:slashvertorial content is off (Score:2)
Re:slashvertorial content is off (Score:2)
And again, number 2 is fairly uncommon to nonexistant. Every patent holding company i've ever seen actively works on marketing their patents. That's their business! The notion t
Re:slashvertorial content is off (Score:2)
Which is why we need more holding companies, not less. The barrier to getting a good idea from your head to a workable product is still very high so countless people have good ideas that never see the light of day. The more avenues we have for allowing people to air those ideas the better. In addition, holding companies serve another purpose - they allow people to manage risk. Different people are happy with different levels of risk. If you don't mind high risk you may be pre
Re:slashvertorial content is off (Score:2)
Re:slashvertorial content is off (Score:4, Insightful)
So you are suggesting it is in the natural order of things for an inventor to invent something, patent it, then sell the patent to a company that has no intention of ever producing or using the patent for anything other than extortion? I know of no inventor who would like that idea. Every independent inventor I know would rather have no patent system than invent something and sell the rights to someone else knowing it would never be produced. Inventors are like artists. They don't do it because they want to, they do it because they have to. If you gave an artist the choice of putting up one of their best paintings in the Louvre or selling it to a private collector to be in storage forever, I think more would choose to get no income from giving it to the Louvre. The recognition and use of the art/invention is more important and greater incentive to create more than pure profit. Profit might motivate corporations to hire more people for the R&D department, but it doesn't seem to be the motivation for the independent artists and inventors I know.
If you are just talking about an inventor defending his patent, there are plenty of laywers out there willing to take the case, and they won't demand rights to the patent to do so. That is the recourse that inventors use, rather than just selling off their patents.
He may sell outright or receive a portion of the profits.
What profits? They would be selling to a company guaranteed to not produce it. You'd have to be pretty stupid to make a deal based on profits when selling something to a company you know won't produce anything.
Re:slashvertorial content is off (Score:2)
As to the profits, I of course mean the sub-licensing or lawsuit profits. (And again: where you read lawsuit here, you must read legitimate, patented invention stealing lawsuit).
Re:slashvertorial content is off (Score:2)
Then you don't know many intelligent people, capable of inventing something, that are strapped for cash and a little lacking in the moral fortitude column.
Re:slashvertorial content is off (Score:2)
Then you don't know many intelligent people, capable of inventing something, that are strapped for cash and a little lacking in the moral fortitude column.
You are right. Most of the intelligent people I know that invent are
Re:slashvertorial content is off (Score:2)
Software patents, anyway. I don't think any should be valid. I think you should be able to copyright code, but I don't think you should be able to patent the "concept". What if, say, vBulletin had, back in the day, patented the bulletin board? I seriously doubt you would have seen as much innovation in it as we have now.
Re:slashvertorial content is off (Score:2)
Re:slashvertorial content is off (Score:2)
Re:slashvertorial content is off (Score:2)
The patent is bad. Not the patent holding company. Suppose, for a moment, that you believed, completely, that the patent in question was utterly utterly valid, a useful, unique invention. And that in fact, google had stolen this thing of value to make a product and make money off of this invention. Now assuming you believe that patents, in general, encourage inventors to invent, and that this is a good thing for society. Which outcome do you prefer:
a) huge company
Re:slashvertorial content is off (Score:2)
To your other point, the more they scoop up to find one that is suit worthy the better: they've paid out money to more inventors, and helped to spread the wealth around, encouraging many even if only one's invention winds up being a big winner.
Crazy folk... (Score:2, Interesting)
Following this logic, ancient manufacturers of coaches could sue modern car manufacturers just because they use wheels too.
Different times, different technology.
Forgot the plan... (Score:2)
Re:Crazy folk... (Score:2)
Taste of their own medicine (Score:3, Interesting)
See US Patent 6,839,702 on the following server which clearly doesn't use mod_alias.
http://patft.uspto.gov/netacgi/nph-Parser?Sect1=P
A system highlights search terms in documents distributed over a network. The system generates a search query that includes a search term and, in response to the search query, receives a list of one or more references to documents in the network. The system receives selection of one of the references and retrieves a document that corresponds to the selected reference. The system then highlights the search term in the retrieved document.
Re:Taste of their own medicine (Score:5, Insightful)
There are plenty of people/companies with "defensive patents" simply to prevent a jackass from claiming it as their own.
Remember that Mercedes-Benz commercial re: airbags? "We've never enforced that patent." Like that.
usage and abusage (Score:2, Interesting)
If Google had let some jackass patent highlighting, and then when taken to the court used their power and influence to win the case, setting a precedent that "you c
Re:Taste of their own medicine (Score:2)
Reminds me.. (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Reminds me.. (Score:2)
Open API moves infringing to clients? (Score:2)
E.g. Google builds a system that works to move data -- and end users make their own voice/text/video adapters?
It would seem that that would be better, all-around, and would move all infringing behavior -- if it happened -- to the clients.
You can construct such a system so that Google doesn't know what is being transferred, and hence isn't liable for the infringement.
Then the company with the patents can
Already done! (Score:2)
-Rick
sure, if by nowadays, you mean (Score:2, Informative)
Patent holding companies are just a way for in inventor to leverage his work to make money.
NBD
Re:sure, if by nowadays, you mean (Score:2)
-russ
Re:sure, if by nowadays, you mean (Score:2)
Wait just a second, your honor! (Score:3, Funny)
I'll take that gavel, if you please.
Unless you'd maybe like to negotiate a nominal license fee...
Re:Wait just a second, your honor! (Score:3, Funny)
The Patent Claims (Score:5, Insightful)
"The two patents in question are not for inventions, but processes relating to using a regular telephone to make long distance calls. The patents focus on the use of a centralized database with pricing information for the purposes of determining the cheapest phone call carrier on the fly. The patents do not deal explicitly with the Internet, however, and do not even appear to have VoIP ventures in mind. (I thank my lucky stars every day that I'm not a patent lawyer, however, so my initial reading of the complaint could be incorrect.)"
In this case, Google may not be the best company to use. If the claims cover routing, then that is handled by a thing called the "internet", which uses some clever algorithms to dynamically route "packets" at the "lowest cost" (in a small-scale fashion). This "internet" doens't use a centralized database for this though, as their claim mentions.
too many lawyers, too much greed (Score:3, Insightful)
They have also been to court some 25 times, and in once instance Weinberger warned that a defendant had better be ready to spend at least US$1,000,000 on legal fees, because that's how they roll (paraphrased, of course).
This is what happens when you have too many lawyers, not enough clients, and an excessive amount of greed. People will find a way to sue for anything. It is not a question of who is right or wrong, it is more a question is who can quickly profit in this complex legal game. The US has more lawyers per capita than any other country in the world, and you can see the result. The lawyers win in the end since they will make huge fees and suffer little or no consequences from their actions.
Oh, yes... (Score:5, Funny)
Away with the Patent Squatters! (Score:2, Insightful)
Patent lawyers are parasites (Score:5, Insightful)
These people are too lazy and too immoral to earn an HONEST living so they leach off of the hard work of others. They are thieves and scum. Whale shit is a higher life form than these filthy parasites.
While I'm no fan of Google or it's mega-corporate adventures, I'm less of a fan of parasitical lawyers. Patent lawyers are bottom feeders and this guy is just one of many.
Patent lawyers should be classified as enemy combatants and hustled off to Gitmo in the middle of the night.
Re:Patent lawyers are parasites (Score:3, Insightful)
defensive patenting (Score:5, Insightful)
With the US patent law and office deliberately (this was/is lobbied for) weakened to the point where basically any brain fart may be patent pending, people are patenting everything they can think of with absolute disrespect to such outdated things as prior art, originality or even cleverness. It doesn't matter if an idea is stupid, based on existing ideas and stolen: a patent gives you the right to sue. The legal process is guaranteed to be lengthy, complicated and above all very expensive. The patent office rubberstamping anything they stumble upon ensures a steady stream of revenue for a growing group of companies who, in all honestly, have never lifted a finger to do anything remotely resembling research. Their revenues are based on bullshit portfolios of patents. Google is just the latest victim. Luckily they have the muscle to fight back. Many truely innovative companies don't.
The rats of the IPR industry are becoming an obstacle for innovation. Large corporations are now starting to feel this pain (e.g. Google, IBM, Nokia and Microsoft have all recently had to deal with lawsuits from insignificant IPR only corporations). The problem with IPR only companies is that you can't countersue. In other words, your patent portfolio is worthless if you are sued by one of those companies. It is my hope that these companies will get smart and start lobbying against software patents instead of in favour like they have done in the past. Just today I joked to a colleague that Nokia should quit selling phones and focus on the Nokia Research Center I work for
it's not defensive, it's collusive (Score:2)
No, it's not. Your own patent portfolio makes very little difference when you are being sued by an IP holding company--they aren't interested in cross-licensing, and they aren't infringing any of your patents.
Companies like google and microsoft don't draw significant revenue from patents and actually invest heavily in research. But having patents guarantees that they won't end up sueing each other.
That is true, and it's what ma
Seems like a difficult case for them... (Score:5, Informative)
There are two patents. The first is 5,425,085 and is clearly for a "device" contained "in a housing" that people plug in their phone and it automatically chooses the cheapest rates to route the calls. Think of this as something that would automatically prefix your calls with a 10-10 code for least cost routing at your house.
The second is 5,519,769 appears to be for a method of updating the routing database of the device in the previous patent. It is also directed towards a device connected to the calling station.
The key to these patents and why standard carrier based least cost routing do not apply, is that the routing decisions appear to be made at the end points and not by the carrier switches themselves.
Now, if you make "device" to mean your computer, and make the "calling station" also mean your computer; make telephone network mean the internet; and, squint your eyes just so - then these could be seen to be relevant to Google Talk.
Re:Seems like a difficult case for them... (Score:5, Insightful)
The first patent appears to have been filed in 1995, and reexamined and confirmed in 2001 with no updates. The second patent appears to have been filed in 1996, and reexamined and confirmed in 2002 with a few more claims added.
Short of an in depth review of both patents, there are three areas where I think Google will be able to defend. First, the patents are clearly for a dedicated device plugged into the calling station. The device is self-contained, and does all the decision making, ultimately dialing the routing codes for the desired carrier. The patent is for the use of a telephone calling station. And, the patent is for devices that use the telephone network.
While a computer can be argued to equal the "device" in the patent -- how the computer is used for Google Talk does not match how the device makes its decision for routing calls. And, a sound card with headset does not a calling station make. The computer would have to be considered both the device and the calling station for these to hold up. Finally, the internet would have to be considered "the" telephone network.
The language in these patents are targetted specifically, and narrowly, to the application of their end-point call routing device. It will be interesting to see if anything comes from these, or if Google will settle quietly.
Here's hoping Google fights.
Re:Seems like a difficult case for them... (Score:2)
Weinberger just patented something that already existed, omitting prior art from the application. Purely fraudulent.
Edsger W. Dijkstra would sue Rates Technology (Score:2, Interesting)
Why only Google Talk? (Score:5, Interesting)
Don't Yahoo, AIM and MSN, Netmeeting, Skype also allow voice communication as well as dozens other apps out there? Why are they only suing Google Talk?
Go figure...
Re:Why only Google Talk? (Score:3, Informative)
So there is nothing to figure about. It is all old style game.
Re:Why only Google Talk? (Score:2)
google's got money... (Score:2)
Delaware?? (Score:2)
Re:Delaware?? (Score:2, Informative)
A lot of people choose Delaware because it has the Chancery Court, which is a court designed just for business legal issues. This helps resolve business problems and legalities quickly.
Also, there's no sales or personal property tax, and no income tax for companies that don't do business in Delaware. This is especially good for small companies to avoid double taxation. Double taxation occurs when your company is taxed for income, and then you as an individual are taxed when you pay yourself a salary.
Addit
An American problem (Score:2)
In the U.S., at least, which is bad for our whole economy -- companies in other countries don't have to screw around with this sort of crap. And just so you don't forget: SCO is still in court, claiming they own Linux or something like that. IBM is still spending millions on them.
Europeans and Asians just love the American patent and legal systems, mainly because they don't have to live with them.
Is this proof that there are no New technologies? (Score:2)
Patent Trolls / Accelerando (Score:4, Interesting)
These patent troll companies remind me a lot of what LLCs and other corporations evolved into in Charles Stross's Accelerando [accelerando.org]. You can read it for free, but I encourage you to buy a copy.
It's a very good read. Easily his best work yet. I got quite a kick out of the infovore idea from his "The Atrocity Archives".
I would like to patent... (Score:3, Funny)
Automatically updating security software over the internet
Use of graphics and text to sell products over the internet... Darn too late again (see Pangea Intellectual Properties) http://www.chillingeffects.org/ecom/ [chillingeffects.org]
Tabbed browsing... You might be thinking Mozilla or Opera... Nope Microsoft http://www.internetnews.com/ent-news/article.php/
Maybe "techniques for cleaning one's anus using rolls of soft paper"... I have not checked but I am sure that one's covered too.
Contact number and better article...631-360-0157 (Score:3, Informative)
This article, http://voip-blog.tmcnet.com/blog/rich-tehrani/voi
Shouldn't this be illegal (Score:3, Insightful)
You've probably never heard of Rates Technology Inc. (RTI), and that wouldn't be surprising since the company has no products and offers no services. By all appearances, RTI is a company that was set up to collect licensing fees and pursue settlements related to the company's patent portfolio.
I personally think this should be illegal. These companies are preventing innovation becase they don't even have any real patents. There's a bunch of bullshit patents built on flimsy pretexes and containing mostly prior art.
Then they go around litigating to make their money. It's really tantamount to extortion/blackmail. They are trying to scare companies into paying them.
The companies that do innovate get dragged through the courts, which is a costly exercise (Microsoft and Google can really afford it). The smaller companies just say "fuck it" because they know they can't afford to be dragged through the legal system over something so pathetic. How can a system that was designed to encourage innovation and the free sharing of information be so perverse that it is now used to discourage innovation and extort money?
Of course, in the mean time the court system is tied up with companies defending against these bullshit claims. This costs Joe Taxpayer, when the money spent on the court could be better spent providing better health and education.
I say that if you own a patent and are not leveraging its claims in a product or service that you ACTUALLY SELL AS PART OF YOUR CORE BUSINESS OPRATION then your claim to enforce the patent should be invalid; that would stop pricks like these cunts from doing this shit.
What... The... Fsck??? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:From the Article (Score:2, Interesting)
Sounds more like they want their 15 minutes of lame!
I am standing behind Google.
Over 700 patents and you don't make anything? The best thing I can relate that to are the domain snatching companies that sit on domains and wait for people to want them. Only this company just sits and waits for others to come close to it's technology and prey on them. Since Google is a large company of course they saw $$$$
Re:From the Article (Score:2, Informative)
According to the London Times Online [timesonline.co.uk] Rates Technologies, Inc. just got done suing Nortel Networks, a voice/video/data communications company, presumably for the same thing RTI is suing Google for: VOIP technology, or some parts thereof. The US Court of Appeals confirmed an earlier decision dismissing the patent infringement case this past February.
If RTI actually won a case, what would they do with the
Re:From the Article (Score:2)
They sued Nortel Networks. They lost. The Court of Appeals for the DC Circuit affirmed that decision.
Re:Same thing is happening with RIM (Score:3, Insightful)
Funny - they brought a lot of this on themselves, and I wouldn't be a bit surprised if they had a bi