Tag Archive for Patent

Rockstars Team Up Against Google

Rockstars Team Up Against GoogleTo usurp Mark Twain, the reports of Nortel‘s demise are greatly exaggerated. GigaOm reports that the defunct Canadian telco giant has found an afterlife as part of a patent trolling operation that struck Android phone makers and is now targeting network and cable operators, including Google, with lawsuits in Texas and Delaware.

afterlife of a patent trolling operationJeff John Roberts writes that Nortel’s second act as the walking dead is taking place thanks to “Rockstar Consortium,” a group formed by Microsoft (MSFT), Apple (AAPL), Blackberry (BBRY), Sony (SNE), Ericsson AB (ERIC)EMC (EMC) and other Google (GOOG) rivals, which bought bankrupt Nortel’s patent portfolio in 2011 for $4.5 billion. (rb- I covered the sale of Nortel’s IP here)

Nortel was the source of many of the most important innovations in history in the field of telecommunications and networking,” says a new Rockstar lawsuit filed in the seemingly pro-troll U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Texas that accuses Time Warner Cable (TWC) of violating six patents, including US Patent 6128649, which was issued in the year 2000 and describes a method to show multiple screens in a video conference the article summarizes.

Rockstar Consortium formed by Microsoft, Apple, Blackberry, Sony, Ericsson, EMC

The complaint doesn’t say how exactly Time Warner Cable is infringing the old Nortel patents, but only notes that “TWC operates, sells and offers to sell video, high-speed data and voice services over its broadband cable systems throughout the United States.” The author says Rockstar, which is suing through a subsidiary called Constellation, also complains that the cable company walked away from its licensing demands in 2012.

GigaOm notes a second lawsuit, filed in Delaware by Rockstar under the alias “Bockstar” makes a series of broad-based allegations against Cisco (CSCO) that claim the company is violating six other old Nortel patents, including this one from 1998, related to routers and switches.

costs are passed on to customersLike all patent trolling, the author says that has nothing to do with innovation, but it certainly will lead to higher cable bills as Time Warner will have to spend millions on lawyers to fight the suit or else pay expensive license fees for old patents from a dead company; either way, the costs are passed on to customers.

Joe Mullin of Ars Technica noted when Rockstar sued the phone companies, “it’s patent trolling gone corporate.” And there’s no sign of where this will stop. Apple and Microsoft are sitting on thousands of patents that date from an era when the Patent Office would grant a patent on nearly anything, and it looks like they’re going to use them to sue every industry they can think of.

dysfunctional US CongressThe totally dysfunctional US Congress tried to take on patent trolling but caved into lobbyists. Microsoft has already succeeded in stripping out a part of the law that would have made it easier to challenge bad patents. This means the best hope for a return to patent sanity may lie with the Supreme Court, which agreed to consider what type of software patents should be granted in the first place.

GigaOm cites CBC reports that Ottawa, Nortel’s hometown has been transformed from a one-time innovation hotbed into a tech necropolis where once-proud engineers are paid to pick apart other people’s inventions in search of new patent violations that they can pass on their American masters.

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I have covered the patent trolling mayhem in the mobile market for a while and this seems to be more of the same. Innovation is dead in the mobile market and the only way these firms can compete is in the courthouse.

In addition to their choice of venue in the pro-troll Texas court, further evidence that Microsoft and Apple have created a patent troll can be found in the fact that Rockstar has filed suit against the leading Android phone producers:

  1. Samsung Electronics Co. (005930) (#1 Android OEM in U.S. sales),
  2. LG Electronics (LGLD) (#2),
  3. ZTE (763) (#4),
  4. Huawei (002502) (#6) and
  5. HTC (2498) (#7).

In addition, DailyTech notes that Rockstar member Sony is a minor Android OEM.  If somehow Microsoft and Apple are able to troll other Android OEMs to death, Sony could see gains in market share, as the only OEM who doesn’t have to pay direct licensing fees to Microsoft/Apple (Sony also notably has preexisting licensing deals with Microsoft and Apple).

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Tech Titans Crush Patent Reform

Tech Titans Crush Patent ReformJeff John Roberts at GigaOM reports there is a battle going on in Washington DC over patent reform. Some in DC are attempting to rewrite the broken patent system. Under the current patent laws, what the author calls the struggling old guard firms can exploit the patent system to abuse monopolies over basic software concepts from decades ago. The result has been to smother start-ups and weigh down vibrant parts of the tech economy with frivolous lawsuits; lawyers get fat at the expense of those who are building real businesses.

Microsoft and IBM gutted a key House billThe latest push by Congress to fix the software patent problem suffered a setback after Congress allowed Microsoft and IBM to gut a key House bill that would have made it easier for victims to push back. TechEye explains that the “covered business method” (CBM) program drew the ire of Microsoft (MSFT) and IBM (IBM). The changes proposed would have sped up the method for the Patent Office to get rid of low-quality software patents. Under the reformed program, MSFT and IBM could not sue someone until the Patent Office considered if the patent was viable. TechEye reports that IBM flexed its political muscle (cash?) to stop the effort to expand the CBM program. An IBM spokesperson said that while “we support what Mr. Goodlatte’s trying to do on trolls, if the CBM is included, we’d be forced to oppose the bill.

The upshot according to GigaOM is that for the second time in three years, the U.S. is poised to pass a law that will make cosmetic changes to the patent system without addressing the root cause — garbage software patents — that has made the system a mockery and a byword for legalized extortion.

Patent OfficeThe article claims that reformers shouldn’t despair quite yet. GigaOM cites sources close to the legislative process that think real reform could still happen if powerful senators prevail and if opponents outgun Microsoft and its allies in the grubby money and lobbyist game. GigaOM lays out how the reform was de-railed.

Money Talks in the House

The chair of the House Judiciary Committee, Rep. Bob Goodlatte (R. Va.), was scheduled to bring his much-touted patent bill for a vote. The bill arrived on schedule — but it was a neutered version.

Fat cat, moneyA key provision, which would have provided a way to challenge software patents at the Patent Office, is no longer in the bill, which Fat cat money passed 33-5 vote by the committee. The change is significant, the author says because it means victims of patent bullies must still pay millions to challenge the patents in federal court or, as most do, simply swallow hard and pay a licensing fee.

Mr. Goodlatte’s decision to drop the provision is a victory for IBM and Microsoft, which have stacks of old software patents that provide licensing revenue even as their product lines sputter. It’s also a victory for trolls, which the article says are shell companies backed by private equity firms and lawyers that use patents (often obtained from Microsoft and others under a “privateering” arrangement) to wage ruinous legal war against everyone from Martha Stewart to individual users. (rb- Click here to read about IBM’s efforts to Patent Patent Trolling)

LobbistsAccording to reports, the change to the Goodlatte bill came after intense lobbying from groups linked to Microsoft, IBM, and others. The account was confirmed by a source close to Google (GOOG) and other groups that pushed for the provision to challenge software patents.

They outspent the living shit out of us,” said the source, who did not want to be named. He said that the companies spent heavily to lobby Democrats on the Committee and freshman Republicans, forcing Mr. Goodlatte to remove the provision rather than seeing it voted down at this stage.

A source with a lobbying group allied with Microsoft said the software giant’s role had been overstated, and that the change in the bill was less about money than it was about “shoe leather” lobbying.

Patent reform in the Senate

Electronic Frontier Foundation If we had a quarter of the people who opposed SOPA supporting this anti-patent troll law, we’d win,Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-NY) told the author. Mr. Schumer was joined by the Electronic Frontier Foundation, to talk patent reform and his up his bill to take on trolls, which he said are “preying on New York’s technology industry.”

Mr. Schumer is pushing a bill that includes the key provision about software patents that was stripped from the House bill. Schumer’s support is significant, not only because he carries clout in the Senate, but because he succeeded in including a similar provision aimed at frivolous financial services patents in the America Invents Act of 2011.

Other patent reform bills are circulating in the Senate including similar bills from Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Va.) and Sen. John Cornyn (R-Tx.). According to the source tied to Google, Mr. Leahy has signaled that his bill is a “Christmas tree,” meaning other politicians can hang their preferred provisions atop it; the bill that will ultimately get a vote on the Senate floor will likely contain a provision to challenge software patents.

Washington insiders said patent legislation is one of the few bipartisan initiatives available to members of Congress, who are eager to notch legislative achievements before the mid-term campaign season begins next summer. This means that the bills are expected to go to a full floor vote in the House and Senate by early 2014 and that a markup session on a final bill will take place in the spring — the only question is which version will prevail.

The endgame

There’s months to go till conference committee,” said the source close to the reform lobby, predicting that the balance of power will tilt towards the software patent reform camp, as Google and others ramp up lobbying efforts. The source tied to Microsoft, unsurprisingly, panned this prediction and declared that challenges to software patents are now a “third rail” that most in Congress don’t want to touch.

The outcome will be determined in large part by money, and whether Google and the other companies that recognize the harm caused by software patents (Twitter (TWTR) is another) are willing to seize the chance at reform that is within their grasp.

Today, attitudes have changed after a steady parade of patent horror stories: Boston University using a 1997 patent to sue Apple and seek an iPhone ban; a troll using a 1998 patent from a Holocaust foundation to shake down the New York Times; a troll lawyer who boasts he likes to “go thug,” and is pressing an extortion campaign against hundreds of companies.

the patent system is out of handAll of this has led everyone from small app developers to President Obama to suggest the patent system is out of hand. After years of asking defendants to take it on faith that the system is working, it’s now up to Microsoft and others to justify that their ancient software patents — which award 20-year monopolies in a fast-moving industry — do more good than harm.

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While I’m not a lawyer, this seems pretty messed up to me. But that is the magic of Democracy, we get the leadership we elect.

 

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Son of SOPA

Son of SOPAThere is a secret treaty that has wound its way through global governments. The secret treaty is called TPP. What is TPP? TPP is short for the secret Trans-Pacific Partnership trade agreement, or the evil Son of SOPA. The TPP agreement is between Australia, Brunei, Chile, Canada, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore, Japan, Vietnam, and the United States.

The secret treaty was even kept from the U.S. Congress. However, the Washington Post reports that Verizon (VZ) and Cisco (CSCO) have had access to the secret treaty and they seem to be supporters. Many argue that a number of the terms that the U.S. inserted are unreasonable.

Trans-Pacific Partnership trade agreement

InfoSecurity-Magazine.com explains that a detailed analysis of the intellectual property chapter of the secret Trans-Pacific Partnership trade agreement is similar or worse than SOPA or ACTA. SOPA (Stop Online Piracy Act) and ACTA (Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement) were halted largely by popular activism.

Copyright owners

The author says the common factor in both was the potential for copyright owners to force their will on the internet. Two of the key issues were to make ISPs liable for infringing content, and the ability to suspend the internet accounts of repeat infringers. A further criticism of ACTA is that it was negotiated in secret, and both the public and the national parliaments expected to simply accept the deal.

The article goes on to analyze the TPP IP chapter provided by WikiLeaks. The analysis shows that TPP is following a similar, but potentially more severe, path to that of ACTA or SOPA. Dr. Monica Horten, a visiting fellow at the London School of Economics & Political Science says the secret treaty, is the Holy Grail for big content.

Hoolywood's Holy Grail…the Holy Grail for Hollywood and the Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA).’ “It’s what they tried to do with the EU Telecoms Package, as well as in ACTA and in SOPA. It is Hollywood’s Holy Grail for online copyright enforcement”

Secret proposal

The blog reports that the U.S. and Australian government’s secret proposal supports efforts to make ISPs primarily responsible for removing copyrighted content from the internet. But the secret proposal also includes search engines, linking sites, and possibly even cloud computing services. Dr. Horten says TPP enforcement would be carried out by,

…disconnection of users (termination of Internet accounts), blocking and disabling of content, and even some level of monitoring obligation.

The US proposals also include a demand, that upon request, (rb- not surprisingly) any ISP would be obligated to provide details on their customers. Michael Geist, a Canadian law professor at the University of Ottawa told the author, “would require an overhaul of Canadian copyright law and potential changes to privacy law.”

Extending corporate copyrights

120 years oldThe U.S. is also planning to change copyright laws to benefit big pharma. TPP would extend corporate copyrights up to 120 years. Through manipulation of the process, big pharma could prevent affordable medications from ever being available to treat cancer, AIDS/HIV, or the common cold.

Opposition to TPP

Thankfully InfoSecurity Magazine says the secret TPP is not yet a done deal. Dr. Horton points out a brewing Internet cold war between the US and Canada. “The Canadians oppose it,” she added. “… Canada seems to be joined at least partially by an assortment that includes Mexico and Malaysia.

Canadian flagMeanwhile, 80 U.S. law professors sent a letter to President Obama, Congress, and Ambassador Michael Froman to object to the secrecy of the TPP. The lawyers warn that the “TPP is following a process even more secretive than ACTA, which is amplifying public distrust and creating an environment conducive to an unbalanced and indefensible final product.

Internet freedom advocacy group The EFF analyzed the TPP also. The EFF’s review of the “temporary copies” language found the U.S. proposal would make anyone who ever views content on their device could potentially be found liable of infringement. The TPP language follows:

EFFEach Party shall provide that authors, performers, and producers of phonograms have the right to authorize or prohibit all reproductions of their works, performances, and phonograms, in any manner or form, permanent or temporary (including temporary storage in electronic form).

The Free Press said, The chief negotiators are congregating in Utah on Nov. 19–24 to hammer out key details — and President Obama has signaled his intention to move the treaty forward.

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Click here to tell Congress and the White House to reject the TPP.

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

POTUS Declares War on Patent Trolls

POTUS Declares War on Patent TrollsPresident Barack Obama has declared that it is time to get tough on “patent trolling.” Paul Marks at New Scientist writes that when ordinary activities like using Wi-Fi in a coffee shop or updating smartphone apps provoke lawsuits you know something is seriously amiss with the legal system. Firms that buy up obvious patents that the US Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) should never have granted in the first place are called patent trolls according to the author.

US Patent and Trademark OfficeThe troll then “asserts” these patents by threatening to sue businesses that infringe them. Many will then settle out of court and pay an often business-crippling license fee.

As followers of Bach Seat know, there are a number of patent troll lawsuits related to wireless.  In 2011, Boston University’s law school estimated that dealing with patent trolling cost businesses in the US $29 billion (rb- which I originally covered here).

Seal of the President of the United StatesPresident Obama says the cash should have been spent on generating products, services, and jobs. So the White House is asking Congress to force the USPTO to narrow the scope of patents within the next six months so that whole fields cannot be trolled. Mr. Obama also wants to prevent patents from being asserted against the users of technologies, like coffee shops, rather than manufacturers. The White House says trolls will have to come clean about their identity, and not hide their “abusive litigation and settlement extraction” behind a thicket of shell companies.

This is a bold step forward by President Obama, and if these legislative proposals are enacted the playing field will be leveled,” Alan Schoenbaum, general counsel for the troll-fighting web hosting firm Rackspace told New Scientist. What’s crucial, Mr. Schoenbaum says, is that the President’s changes make sure trolls have something to lose when they fail in court. In essence, the U.S. legal system is unbalanced. In the UK, for instance, the loser pays. “That keeps frivolous lawsuits down to a minimum,” he says. “But ‘loser pays’ is rare in the U.S.

Rackspace logoThe author asks how can patent trolls be identified? Rackspace’s Schoenbaum says there are plenty of ways, “Trolls don’t invent, make or develop anything. Between 70 and 90% of their patents are software or business-method patents, and in virtually all cases the patent is invalid.

But San Francisco-based, “patent buster” Gregory Aharonian, who invalidates patents by finding previous inventions using the same ideas, told New Scientist he thinks it will be trickier to identify patent trolls. He told the author, “It is going to be hard for Obama to deal with the troll definition problem … Anyone who asserts an invalid patent, under any conditions, is a troll.” Mr. Aharonian says that some large technology firms behave like trolls when they assert overly broad or obvious patents they never exploit.

The only move that will crush the troll phenomenon is vastly improved patent quality, Mr. Aharonian says. “What upsets people Stack of moneymore is not the assertion tactics, but the crap being asserted.”

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This story barely had a full news cycle. The opportunity is dead and lost as the White House spin machine deals with the PRISM spying scandal.

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  • Stop Patent Trolls (sweenylegal.com)

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Patent Trolls Going After Users

Patent Trolls Going After UsersPatent trolls have changed their tactics by going after users according to TechEye. Patent trolls have realized that taking on big companies with large legal teams is a risky prospect so they have started looking for softer targets. Ars Technica is reporting the case of Steven Vicinanza and BlueWave, who received a letter ordering him to pay $1,000 per employee for a license for some “distributed computer architecture” patents.

demanding money with legal menacesThe blog says the troll in question, “Project Paperless LLC.” claims to have a patent covering the ability to scan documents to e-mail and was demanding money with legal menaces. If BlueWave paid, the troll would have collected $130,000. BlueWave was not the only company the troll went after. Lots of other small and medium companies were being hit.

Steven Hill, a partner at Hill, Kertscher & Wharton, an Atlanta law firm represented Project Paperless. The attorney told Mr. Vicinanza that if you hook up a scanner and e-mail a PDF document the company’s patent covers that process. In other words, any company that used office equipment would have to pay up.

fight and beat the troll in courtIn this case, Mr. Vicinanza decided to fight and beat the troll in court. Despite the victory, TechEye says Project Paperless patents claims are continuing to appear. The troll claims were passed to a network of shell companies. Ars found that the patent threats are going out under at least ten differently named LLCs.

These outfits are sending out hundreds of copies of the same demand letter to small businesses from New Hampshire to Minnesota. The article says the troll’s royalty demands range from $900 to $1,200 per employee.

Ars Technica reports that Project Paperless has four patents and one patent application it asserts, all linked to an inventor named Laurence C. Klein. “It was a lot of what I’d call gobbledygook,” said BlueWave’s Vicinanza. “Just jargon and terms strung together—it’s really literally nonsensical.

t was a lot of what I’d call gobbledygookArs provides links to the asserted patents, numbers 6,185,590, 6,771,381, 7,477,410 and 7,986,426. AdzPro also notes it has an additional patent application filed in July 2011 that hasn’t yet resulted in a patent. Ars states that the patents may have been useless from a technologist’s perspective, but fighting them off in court would be no small matter. The problem is that it often costs more in legal costs for small businesses to fight the trolls than it does to pay up and make them go away.

Mr. Vicinanza spent $5,000 on a prior art search and sent the results to the Project Paperless lawyers. He filed a third-party complaint against four of the companies that actually made the scanners, Xerox (XRX) Canon (CAJ), HP (HPQ), and Brother (6448). That could have compelled the manufacturers to get involved in the case.

In the end, Hill dropped its lawsuit against BlueWave and went away and the case never came to court. However, Ars points out a detailed website called “Stop Project Paperless,” with information about the patents and links to the Hill, Kertscher, and Wharton law firm.

case never came to courtTechEye concludes that if a firm wants to make a lot of money from a dubious patent, it is better to sue users than the companies which make products that use it. If Apple wanted to kill off Samsung’s business all it would have to do is sue every Android user. Most of them would never go to court and pay whatever Apple demands. That particular scenario is unlikely, but it does show where the antics of patent trolls are headed.

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The politicians tried to work on the problem with the SHIELD Act which I covered here, but that apparently went nowhere. After all, they are too busy driving us all off the fiscal cliff.

Maybe it was top troll Apple that stopped the law from getting a full House vote, Apple is now the biggest patent troll of them all.

So more proof that Patent Trolls Cost the US $29 Billion which I covered earlier.

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.