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BT Pushing Hyperlink Patent

There's been a lot of new publicity lately about the British Telecom trying to defend a patent that they claim means they invented hyperlinking. Currently they are going after Prodigy for using hyperlinking back in the early eighties. We've mentioned this one before, but it really looks like they are going to push it. Insane.

144 of 452 comments (clear)

  1. Already set to die on arrival by Ars-Fartsica · · Score: 5, Interesting
    The prevailing talk among the oucrts is that BT is going down a dead-end and no court is particularly interested in pursuing an obvious legal morass. Added to which it is widely known that Xerox has a strong case for prior art.

    I wouldn't get too worried about this.

    1. Re:Already set to die on arrival by NumberSyx · · Score: 2

      it is widely known that Xerox has a strong case for prior art.

      Also didn't some guy use the hyperlink idea back in the 60's on a project I think was called Xanadu or similar.

      --

      "Our products just aren't engineered for security,"
      -Brian Valentine,VP in charge of MS Windows Development

    2. Re:Already set to die on arrival by Ars-Fartsica · · Score: 2

      You are thinking of Ted Nelson, the self-described "father of hypertext".

    3. Re:Already set to die on arrival by Flounder · · Score: 4, Funny

      As mentioned in the article, Douglas Englebart demonstrated something that sure looks like a hyperlink. Once again, Xerox PARC saves us all! w00T!

      --

      No boom today. Boom tomorrow. There's always a boom tomorrow. - Cmdr. Susan Ivanova

  2. Harassment as a business model... by Nijika · · Score: 5, Insightful
    I don't see how this makes good business sense, even if there is MONEY to be made. Alienating, well, everyone who ever will and does use the Internet is probably bad for PR.

    In other words, just because you DO have a patent doesn't mean you should always attempt to enforce it.

    --
    Luck favors the prepared, darling.
    1. Re:Harassment as a business model... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Are you from the UK?

      BT started off from a monopoly several years ago, and have maintained this position though bullying and attacking the rest of the marketplace. BT are terribly complacient and it shows though thier buisness stratagy. From their failure to recognise the burden their debts have placed on the company (which worried the city no end) right though to the running battles they've had with other service providers over local loop unbundling (i.e. giving flat rate charges to other competitors to access last mile)

      Oftel (the UK offical telecoms regulator) have been having running battles with them ever since thier creation.

      I don't think BT really give a damn about getting this kind of bad press. Those people that listen already know their aggressive buisness tactics, though that don't care...well, don't care.

    2. Re:Harassment as a business model... by nahdude812 · · Score: 2
      But if they win the case and can ultimately pocket a penny a click (or whatever) the people who are in leadership positions in BT will be able to retire incredibly wealthy long before their patent expires.


      As to the person below who said you shouldn't be able to patent software, well, they're not, they're patenting the idea of computers providing an easy to navigate function to arbitrarily reference, and allow you to go to another machine. Sounds like on-site linking isn't covered by this patent, but any link to another website is. Sucks to be a search engine.

    3. Re:Harassment as a business model... by Suppafly · · Score: 3, Insightful

      This isn't about a patent on software, its about a patent on a technilogical concept commonly known as hyperlinking. Similar to the idea that MS has a patent on OS's which use overlapping windows and a taskbar containing a start button and a clock. The software implementation is not important. If I were to make a windows looking OS using java somehow and tried to call it windows and sell it, I would be violating their patent.

      Granted, I think anyone trying to inforce a patent on hyperlinks, 40 or more years after the concept has been in common use, is rediculous.

    4. Re:Harassment as a business model... by Reckless+Visionary · · Score: 2

      I suppose you mean alienating every slashdot reader, but not anything close to everyone who ever will and does use the Internet. In case you haven't noticed, most people who use the internet couldn't care less about copyright, trademark, patent, or privacy issues. That is a relatively small community of users compared to the behemoth of the uninformed, uninspired, and unmotivated. Thus, I don't think PR is much of an issue.

      --
      I think I'll stop here.
    5. Re:Harassment as a business model... by GreyPoopon · · Score: 4, Interesting
      In case you haven't noticed, most people who use the internet couldn't care less about copyright, trademark, patent, or privacy issues.

      Of course they don't. But suddenly things like this have a MUCH bigger impact when their ISP sends them a bill that looks like something they might receive from the telephone company, listing every link they've clicked on with its itemized cost. When at the end they have to pay $249 for the month instead of $14.99, they'll really start caring. Not to mention the fact that somebody was invading their privacy and actively tracking their links to pr0n. Yeah, I think PR is going to be a big big issue. If BT loses this, I really hope that our courts issue a rather acid remark about frivilous lawsuits. Maybe somebody at BT will be looking for a new job soon, although not likely.

      --

      GreyPoopon
      --
      Why is it I can write insightful comments but can't come up with a clever signature?

    6. Re:Harassment as a business model... by squiggleslash · · Score: 2
      its about a patent on a technilogical concept commonly known as hyperlinking
      Actually, no, it isn't. That's what all the "Well, I'm going to patent the English language!" and "Well, I'm going to patent trademarks!" hilarious witty Slashdot contributors want to believe, but it's rather more complicated.

      This is a patent about hypertext implemented over the phone system. BT are saying that any protocol that sends a message over a phone line to request a particular document, resulting in that document being sent by the other side, with links to other documents, is a specific invention of BT's.

      So, for instance, HTTP over Ethernet, or over wireless IP links, doesn't count. But over simple modem links apparently would, if BT's patent is enforceable.

      --
      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    7. Re:Harassment as a business model... by squiggleslash · · Score: 2
      Erm, your source for this information?

      Apple licenced the Xerox interface, and added heavily to it (the original Xerox interface did not have such basic niceties as self-refreshing overlapping windows, pull down menus, or even the 'finder' style UI.) Their suit against Microsoft was a copyright suit based on the look of the UI, not a patent suit. And the suit was resolved in the mid-nineties by Microsoft "investing" several hundred million in Apple.

      So which Judge threw it out, and who forgot to tell Gates?

      --
      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
  3. Very similar to an Onion article... by twocents · · Score: 4, Funny

    http://www.theonion.com/onion3311/microsoftpatents .html

    Except the for fact that the current article seems to be based in fact.

  4. what do they have to lose? by night_flyer · · Score: 3, Troll

    The telecom industry is on life support at the moment. Stocks are about as low as they can go (WCOM hit $6.00 a share sometime last week, from a high of $85.00).

    they will lose this case and they will probably go bankrupt soon after. Its just a money grab that is doomed to failure.

    --


    Thanks to file sharing, I purchase more CDs
    Thanks to the RIAA, I buy them used...
    1. Re:what do they have to lose? by night_flyer · · Score: 2

      being £8,000,000,000 in dept is not fisically sound...

      --


      Thanks to file sharing, I purchase more CDs
      Thanks to the RIAA, I buy them used...
  5. Patent filed in 1980?... by Dr.Dubious+DDQ · · Score: 2

    The article says "BT is determined to prove that a patent lodged with the US patent office back in 1980". That's 22 years ago. Doesn't that mean it's already expired even if it were valid (which I doubt)?

    Is BT Government-run like the BBC or are they a completely private entity?

    1. Re:Patent filed in 1980?... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      We're not that lucky; the text of the BBC article says in the UK the patent expired, but they're pursuing this in the US, where it doesn't expire for another four years.

    2. Re:Patent filed in 1980?... by iainl · · Score: 4, Interesting

      BT are a privatised corporation - they used to be Government owned and run (actually, while the BBC is paid for by a tax they defend their independance fiercely), but were sold off during the 1980s to pay for tax breaks.

      As for the whole patent thing, I've no idea when the patent runs out, and I'm not even going near the question of if its defendable. Let the lawyers argue that one out.

      --
      "I Know You Are But What Am I?"
    3. Re:Patent filed in 1980?... by NickV · · Score: 5, Informative

      The article says "BT is determined to prove that a patent lodged with the US patent office back in 1980". That's 22 years ago. Doesn't that mean it's already expired even if it were valid (which I doubt)?

      Nothing pisses me off more on /. than people who don't read the article. Hell, I'd expect better from someone with a UID > 20000.


      From the actual article, (you know... what you didn't read)...
      "The UK patent has already expired so ISPs in the UK would escape having to pay anything. But in the US, the patent does not expire until 2006. "

      Also, to answer your second question (which is also IN the article you didn't read,) BT used to be a part of the Post Office, but it no longer is so.

    4. Re:Patent filed in 1980?... by Dr.Dubious+DDQ · · Score: 2
      in the US, where it doesn't expire for another four years.

      That's what I was wondering about - why does it last an extra 6 years in the US? Did they wait 6 years to file the patent in the US? Or is there a special "Intellectual Property" law in the US that gives them extra time? (I wouldn't think so, but knowing what's gone on with IP in the US, I wouldn't be too surprised...)

    5. Re:Patent filed in 1980?... by markmoss · · Score: 5, Informative

      US patents used to run for 17 years from the time a patent was granted, vs. 20 years from the time of application in the rest of the world. So if it expires in 2006, then it must have been granted in 1989 -- that's a rather long delay if the UK application was in 1980. Or, the article seems to say that the suit now is over patent infringement in the 80's -- which makes this a remarkably long time to wait, and isn't there an applicable statute of limitations?

      Also, US courts are just now beginning to consider that failure to enforce a patent for an unreasonably long time (like while the patented technique becomes industry standard practice, with no royalties), may constitute "prosecution laches" and make the patent unenforceable. See this.

    6. Re:Patent filed in 1980?... by Dr.Dubious+DDQ · · Score: 2

      No need for snide remarks - I DID read the article. As I clarified further down, I wanted to know how they got an extra 6 years in the US vs. the UK.

      Incidentally, "Not being part of the post office any more" doesn't automatically make them a private entity, rather than a 'spinoff' government agency.

      People seem so EAGER to be "pissed off" these days....

    7. Re:Patent filed in 1980?... by gosand · · Score: 2
      I didn't read the article, but I'll trust your quotations... :-)

      I am quite certain that US companies could keep this thing alive in court until 2006, if they had to. But I doubt they'll have to worry about it.

      --

      My beliefs do not require that you agree with them.

    8. Re:Patent filed in 1980?... by GSloop · · Score: 2

      Thanks for the info. I don't mod & thus no mod points, or I'd give you some...

      Thanks again!

      Moderators - mod parent up. Excellent info!

    9. Re:Patent filed in 1980?... by alcibiades · · Score: 2, Informative

      The laws have changed since 1980, but the assesment given above -- that the patent must have been issued in 1989 if expires in 2006 -- is correct since the changes were made subsequent to that date (in 1995).

      The long delay could have been caused by the filing of a series of continuation or divisional applications that depend on an original application filed in 1980. In such a situation, the later filed applications are often entitled to the earlier filing date for their shared subject matter.

      You can't do this kind of thing anymore because no patent terms are determined from the date of filing rather than from the date of issue.

    10. Re:Patent filed in 1980?... by dunstan · · Score: 2

      Nine years from the priority filing date to grant is pretty normal. Firstly, the priority date will have been set by the UK filing, and the US filing could have been up to a year later yet have the same priority date (patent treaties and all that).

      Then it takes a period of time for the patent office to perform its first set of searches. Then the applicant gets a period to respond to the prior art cited in these searches. There might then be another stage of dialogue about these responses, again with a response period. Then the patent goes off for examination/review, and another set of actions are generated ... and so on.

      When I was working with UK patents it wasn't at all unusual for the patent to actually be granted nearly half way through its life.

      Dunstan

      --
      The last scintilla of doubt just rode out of town
  6. Might have merit... by gamgee5273 · · Score: 3, Informative
    BT might have an argument with merit, but I'm doubting it.

    HTML's roots are in SGML, the markup language primarily used by tech writers to create modular documents from multiple sources (ie, a car manual and related sales material would pull from the same source). A hyperlink is a logical extension once you place a markup language in a networked environment - by jumping from page to page you're, in essence, creating a modular "book" just as a tech writer could create a car manual.

    Again, there may be some merit, but precious little, IMHO...

  7. Techno/Industrial Wars? by Morphy3 · · Score: 4, Funny


    What beef does BT have with the group Prodigy?

    --
    ------
    I have not yet begun to procrastinate!
    1. Re:Techno/Industrial Wars? by iainl · · Score: 2, Informative

      Liam sampled the engaged tone to use as the backing on the 12" single of Charley all those years ago. Since they have only just realised, they now want royalties for everything, since its that sample-fest that launched his (and his drug dealing mate's) career.

      n.b. Some, all or none of the above is complete bollocks.

      --
      "I Know You Are But What Am I?"
    2. Re:Techno/Industrial Wars? by Morphy3 · · Score: 2, Funny

      Maybe they are thinking that Prodigy won't be able to afford such good legal counsel as BT and may lose the case. Even if BT shouldn't win, they could win, and that would be bad...

      I would have to disagree.. I would imagine that Prodigy's past success outshadows that of BT. For instance, consider the industry-changing success of Prodigy's 1997 CD release of Fat of the Land, which spawned dozens of copycat artists in Europe AND America, to BT's moderate success enjoyed by massive radio play of his y2k single release of Never Gonna Come Back Down, which IMHO was outdated years before its release.

      Personally, I don't think they have a snowballs chance in Hell...

      Well I should think not, considering that snowball IS going after The Firestarter!

      It would bode lots of companies to rally around Prodigy and give them a hand with legal costs.

      Well you have to remember that Prodigy's front man, Keith Flint isn't the most upstanding of a character, and many companies may fear a PR backlash from their supporting him :(

      Even the EFF might be interested in this one.

      I don't think that the Electronica Frontier Foundation will get involved in this. They believe, as do I, that there is equal merit in Industrial and Club variants of techno.

      --
      ------
      I have not yet begun to procrastinate!
  8. Interesting that they don't hit someone big by teambpsi · · Score: 2

    Prodigy?

    Why aren't they taking on someone like Adobe ? Or AOL?

    This seems like a bully on a playground move

    --

    Old age and treachery almost always overcome youth and skill.
    1. Re:Interesting that they don't hit someone big by Lonath · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Also, by picking on someone smaller, they have a better chance of outlasting Prodigy's money. If they can win against a smaller company, then larger companies will be more likely to license instead of go to court...so they spend a little to make a lot.

      You're right, it's kind of like a bully picking on the weakest kid in class to keep all of the other kids in line when it comes time to collect the milk money.

      Not that I would compare this software patent lawsuit to schoolyard bullying and extortion. That would be scandalous wouldn't it? You can take that risk and expose yourself to possible libel suits, but I won't since I know that saying that all of those Important People in Expensive Suits protecting their Valuable Intellectual Property are just like punks who pick on little kids? That would be very rude of me. So I won't say that this lawsuit is like a bully picking on the little kid in class so that the rest of the kids will give up their lunch money without a fight.

      But, even if they do win, the intersection between voters and people who have made webpages is probably pretty high. If you could only get the message out to all of those people that they're Patent Violators for using this patented technology without BT's permissions, perhaps the laws would be changed. After all, patents only exist because laws let them. They could be taken away. Unlikely...but you never know.

    2. Re:Interesting that they don't hit someone big by Jeremy+Erwin · · Score: 2

      Prodigy is owned by SBC Communications. SBC is not cash poor.

  9. Think the RIAA has it tough... by powerlinekid · · Score: 2

    I think they should pay attention to whats going on with the file-sharing apps. They take down one and another pops up. How would they ever suspect to enforce this? Along with that, how can you patent a content delivery method like linking? Thats complete bullshit, this is even worse than that company that patented pausing tv 20 years ago. I'm really starting to get sick of this intellectual warfare. I had it explained to me by a upper-level IBM fellowship that pretty much the whole point of IP is have a weapon against your competitor, why else would they patent so many inane things. *sigh*... fuck...

    --

    can't sleep slashdot will eat me
    1. Re:Think the RIAA has it tough... by powerlinekid · · Score: 2

      http://engr.newpaltz.edu/~keaney70/me1.JPG

      my girlfriend... ;-p

      --

      can't sleep slashdot will eat me
  10. Tagline is hilarious by TheTomcat · · Score: 5, Funny

    The last part of the article:

    'See "internet links" for the text of BT's patent. There is no charge for doing so.'

    *snicker*
    (-:

  11. If they win by wiredog · · Score: 2

    I'm gonna look for a fossil driver for Linux. Is FidoNet still around?

    1. Re:If they win by ncc74656 · · Score: 2
      I'm gonna look for a fossil driver for Linux. Is FidoNet still around?

      Why would you need a FOSSIL driver for Linux? They only provided a standard interface to serial devices, whether it was an ordinary COM? port or one of the intelligent serial cards that a larger multiline BBS might use. Back when I ran a Linux-based BBS that talked to FidoNet, all the software involved talked to ordinary /dev/ttyS? devices, which would've been set up by the kernel and by whatever getty you used (IIRC, I used mgetty).

      Others would be better able to say if FidoNet is still around. I think it is, but I shut down my BBS toward the tail end of '94 and quit calling around to other BBSes sometime in '95 or '96.

      --
      20 January 2017: the End of an Error.
  12. Re:quite within their rights by SirSlud · · Score: 2

    > their lawyers are not afraid to defend their intellectual property

    You ideut. Funny how lawyers are not afraid of making sure they're needed to make large sums for large companies.

    --
    "Old man yells at systemd"
  13. Not an expert in patent law. by Restil · · Score: 5, Interesting

    However, it would appear that BT only discovered this patent in 2000. Therefore, they made absolutely no effort to enforce it over the last 15 or so year that it was being used by countless companies and organizations, not to mention end users. Even if they're able to extract royalties from this day forward, can they go back retroactively and enforce them on older products as well? Even the GIF patent, which I disagree with, only charged royalties from that day forward, not from the date they obtained the patent.

    Can I do this legally? Patent something, hope someone else develops a similar technology, say nothing for 20 years until the patent is about to expire and economies depend on my product, then just raise my hand one day and say, "Excuse me! You have to pay me now".

    I know the patent holder can selectively choose to license that patent for no charge and they coudlnt' come back later and change their minds retroactively. What about in this situation, where they've said nothing. Done nothing to enforce it. Didn't even realize they HAD the patent. Its almost as if they were purchasing patents for the sole purpose of hoping one of them would be a huge breadwinner in the future.

    However, at least they had an actual product tied to the patent. Its not as bad as the idiot who patented "downloading music off the internet" as an idea with no product to back it up and trying to extort money out of companies as a result.

    -Restil

    --
    Play with my webcams and lights here
    1. Re:Not an expert in patent law. by bourne · · Score: 4, Informative

      Can I do this legally? Patent something, hope someone else develops a similar technology, say nothing for 20 years until the patent is about to expire and economies depend on my product, then just raise my hand one day and say, "Excuse me! You have to pay me now".

      Yes, they can do that - trademarks have to be actively defended, patents do not. Consider Unisys and the gif (lzw?) patent.

    2. Re:Not an expert in patent law. by SirSlud · · Score: 5, Insightful

      > Can I do this legally? Patent something, hope someone else develops a similar technology, say nothing for 20 years until the patent is about to expire and economies depend on my product, then just raise my hand one day and say, "Excuse me! You have to pay me now".

      Yes. Yes, you can do it, if the 'similar technologies' truely fall under your patent's umbrella and nobody else has prior art (or you ensure that you find the prior art first, and 'bury' it somehow). Shit, companies file multiple patents 'around' existing patents, and then sue the original patent holder (provided they are small fry enough) for infinging on their umbrella. It's common practice. Patent laws are fucked up, but with less stringent patent laws, numerous entrenched patent-oriented industries, legal practices, etc, etc would also be fucked up. Ergo, there is little chance of going backwards. As usual, we've got so many doctors at the bottom of the cliff that we can't afford to teach people how to NOT WALK OFF THE CLIFF anymore. Too many people lose too much money and too many jobs, etc, etc .. but the patent process needs a serious readjustment in my views. Knowing what I know, I would never consider filing a patent for anything I thought was new; although I'd somehow make sure I had evidence of 'prior art' so I could proove at a later date that it was my idea to begin with if some corperation thinks they can claim it as theirs. I'd keep it to myself, unless I was at a big company, and was I indespensible to them (ie, I wouldn't even sell my idea to a large company, because they shaft you.) Currently, patent laws work against small timer innovation (it costs shitloads of money to even file a patent) and encourage this kind of big business petty behaviour; especially when said patent holders need an easy quick injection of cash. I've heard that companies like IBM have inter-department patent races to see who can file the most patents in a year, which is why we've got insanely granular, subjectively valid patents that are really only 'enforcable' by virtue of the amount of lawyers you have on a leash.

      Thats my understanding. IANAL, YMMV, and I'm sure you've all got cousins with personal stories that can debunk my raving lunacies ...

      --
      "Old man yells at systemd"
    3. Re:Not an expert in patent law. by SirSlud · · Score: 4, Informative

      Here's a neat article on this stuff, and the entrenchemnt of the patent enforcement industry (still relatively new 'visible' industry):

      here

      Interesting stuff - kinda shows how the current patent climate actually causes people to focus more on exploiting patents and their lucrative pay-offs rather than focus on actually inventing shit.

      --
      "Old man yells at systemd"
    4. Re:Not an expert in patent law. by King_TJ · · Score: 3, Informative

      Hmm... yeah, I tend to agree with you. As someone who currently has a patentable idea that we (my wife and I) would like to bring to market as a product in the next year or so, the whole issue interests me considerably.

      From the research we did already to see if previous patents existed for our product idea, I could tell that most people filing patents are "fishing for lawsuits", as opposed to having a real interest in selling a product.

      We didn't find anything that was exactly like our idea, but we found close to 10 patents for various methods of accomplishing pieces of what we needed to do in our product. Most made a vague mention of having a possible application in the general area of what we're trying to do. All of these patents were apparently thrown out there by tinkerers who made a single, crude attempt at performing a function with parts taken from the basement or garage - and then nothing more was ever done with them. Considering the cost of filing patents on them, I can only assume that they're hoping someone comes along and builds a successful product using a basic concept similar enough to theirs, so they can come out of the woodwork screaming "I have a lawyer! You owe me!"

      It's depressing, really....

    5. Re:Not an expert in patent law. by SirSlud · · Score: 3, Funny

      > It's depressing, really....

      I couldn't agree more, but try convincing a market (the economic equivilent of the spoiled brat that gets what it wants, no matter how bad it is for itself in the future) of that. Everyone's a little too distracted by the amazing special effects, 500 channels and the 'rewindless VCRs' (DVD players) we've invented! Yay!

      --
      "Old man yells at systemd"
    6. Re:Not an expert in patent law. by LatJoor · · Score: 2

      Too many people lose too much money and too many jobs, etc, etc.

      Yeah, when a company fires all its workers and moves someplace cheaper or decides to outsource, it's tough shit, but if rich people are going to lose their jobs then we can't possibly allow it.

    7. Re:Not an expert in patent law. by SirSlud · · Score: 2

      Careful man, or the market pundits will start looking for the "-1, Communist" moderation point! But yeah, I agree. When entrenched powerful industries have gone to far, it takes real shit to take em down. Today, this is due to the public allowing IP to represent serious amounts of 'value'. The market spoke (or rather we let the market speak), and we ended up ceding control to a few players and a seriously rich-up-the-ass industry. However, when its workers, yep, its just tough shit for them; even tho they're far more likely to suffer from losing their jobs. Thats why the only people you see dissing unions are non-unionized industries and the suits who sometimes have to make less money because the people who actually do the work want a little more, or more security, or more shit that any self-respecting suit would feel they should never deserve. It's pretty interesting .. many of the Adam Smith era writers would even come out and say how fucked they would be if it wern't for the powerless poor.

      It wasn't always like this ..

      --
      "Old man yells at systemd"
    8. Re:Not an expert in patent law. by bourne · · Score: 4, Informative

      I think you should add the IANAL eh?

      Well, sure - IANAL. This isn't a legal forum, either. Deal.

      Trademarks do NOT have to be actively defended. They should be actively defended, especially if you have the resources. However they do NOT have to be actively defended.

      Copyright does not have to be actively defended. Trademark does. Consider:

      - Trademark law requires that the trademark owner police the use of the trademark (unlike, for example, copyright law, where the copyright owner is the copyright owner, always is, and always will be unless he willingly relinquishes ownership, and even THEN he ends up having rights).

      This is nasty, because it means, for example, that a trademark owner has to be shown as caring about even small infringements, because otherwise the really bad guys can use as their defense that "hey, we may have misused it, but look at those other cases that they didn't go after, they obviously don't care.."

      (Linus Explains Linux Trademark Issues)

      Go ask a lawyer, I did. In fact, I asked 3 of them on this exact topic.

      Sorry. You probably asked the wrong question. Among other things, you're probably confusing prior art (a patent issue) with unopposed infringement (a trademark issue).

    9. Re:Not an expert in patent law. by fishbowl · · Score: 2


      >Interesting stuff - kinda shows how the current
      >patent climate actually causes people to focus
      >more on exploiting patents and their lucrative
      >pay-offs rather than focus on actually inventing

      I wonder if this could have a beneficial effect in a decade or so. We're seeing a heyday of fast-and-loose patent grants right now. Maybe a good
      chunk of the low-hanging fruit will be plucked NOW, and when these patents on all these obvious things being patented today expire in 15-20 years
      certain industries (esp. software and genetic research) will experience a renaissance!

      YES! File as many frivolous and obvious patents NOW as you possibly can! A future generation will
      thank you!!!

      --
      -fb Everything not expressly forbidden is now mandatory.
    10. Re:Not an expert in patent law. by dunstan · · Score: 2

      This all sounds very like the case of Lemelson and barcodes. Roughly speaking, Lemelson filed a patent on barcodes long before they became widespread, and kept it quiet. Then once they were in widespread use, his lawyers contacted all manner of organisations which used barcodes and issued "Cease and Desist" notices against them. On receiving the notice, each barcode user had to choose between: a) stop using the technology which infringed the patent, b) agree licensing terms with the patent holder, c) carry on using the technology, and risk punitive damages, d) apply for the patent to be overturned and risk punitive damages if they carried on using the techology and then lost.

      The benefit to BT from this case is not the royalties which may accrue if they win, it's the royalties they'll hope to take while the case is being prosecuted. For if they issue "Cease and Desist" notices to organisations using hyperlinks, those organisations will either have to settle or accept a possible liability for triple damages at some point in the future. Now, any corporate auditor would be expected to highlight this potential liability to stockholder, or during due diligence audits surrounding a takeover (and I somehow think corporate auditors may be on their toes right now).

      No, the benefit to BT won't be royalties if they win, it'll be licensing agreements while the case is in progress, which will be made for the purpose of removing potential liability from balance sheets.

      Dunstan

      PS, Lemelson got very rich.

      BTW, regarding prior art, a recording of a demonstration would almost certainly *not* be admissible as prior art - well not in the UK anyway. A few years ago I was involved in making a decision as to whether to apply for a patent for a bit of technology (a very clever bit of power electronics), and we were looking for ways to protect ourselves *without* filing for a patent. The advice we got was that the only reliable ways of asserting prior art are to either publish your invention, in which case the prior art is deemed to exist from the date of publication, or to file for a patent in which case the prior art exists from the date the patent is filed.

      --
      The last scintilla of doubt just rode out of town
  14. Re:quite within their rights by Rebel+Patriot · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Not only did their visionary engineers invent the concept of hyperlinking

    You didn't read the read article which plainly states that Prodigy has video-evidence of a man demonstrating hyperlinking in 1968.

    their lawyers are not afraid to defend their intellectual property against scoundrels and freeloaders such as Prodigy

    Since when did Prodigy become a freeloader? Perhaps I am mistaken but everything I've seen about them indicates to me that the internet would still be in its infancy if they hadn't struggled to build it.

    --
    Slackware forever. Honestly, what else would you trust when it absolutely positively has to be stable, secure, and easy
  15. God invents hyperlinking by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    Vatican (Feb 11 2002) - After hearing a lot of reports over various parties claiming to have invented the hyperlink. The Holy se, today delcared the issue closed, by stating that hyperlinking was initially implemented by God almighty (See RFC -1).

    God Alimigty, Pope cried, was the definite inventor of what we now regard as the means of travel on the Internet. God, apparently envisoned the need for his slaves to find where they are and where they would go, thus he created what is now known as a pointer (or the index finger).

    Furthermore it was also suggested by the Vatican technical commity that God defined the pointer as a pointer to unsigned long. Where long is defined as the number of days (See day definition on first page of bible) the universe would exist.

    Copies of this declaration has been sent to the USPO and other such offices.

    Please disregard any fake stories of hypertext invention and linking from now on.

    Father Amaa Fui (Phd. CS and Deutology)

  16. Brits... by Knunov · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I once admired the Brits for their loathing of American flakiness. I love America, as a whole, but if I could excise parts, frivolous lawsuits would be first to go.

    Anyway, I was working over in Europe and I happened to catch a British commercial...for a personal injury lawyer.

    "Did you slip on a tin of Spam at the local market? Was your kid injured during a game of rugby? If so, you may be entitled to damages. For more information, call (whatever)."

    (some guy dressed up in a rugby outfit)

    "I received £10,000 pounds for (whatever)"

    Looked and sounded *exactly* like an American personal injury lawsuit commercial, except the voiceover had a British accent.

    They are getting as ridiculous as we are. It's a shame, really. I always admired their stiff upper lip and total hatred for whining.

    Things they are a-changin'

    Knunov

    --
    Why do users with IDs under 100,000 or over 700,000 usually have the most worthwhile comments?
    1. Re:Brits... by FyRE666 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      As a Brit, I find the "Call 0800-ambulance-chasers now!" adverts repulsive. They air the adverts mostly during the working day, obviously to target the unemployed or unemployable since they're most likely to need some quick and easy money.

      The companies providing these "services" have been the subject of numerous documentaries and consumer affairs programs on UK TV, and regularly exposed for the rogue outfits they so obviously are. Most of the "victims" only recieve a tiny amount of compensation, while the law firms reap the real rewards.

      It is absolutely pathetic; people seem to want to take no responsibility for their own lives any more. I still don't believe the UK has decended to the level of litigeousness of the States as yet, but some of the bottom feeders are slowly but surely crawling their way there...

      I have no other problems with America, by the way, just its legal system, patent system and Bill Gates :-)

    2. Re:Brits... by GSloop · · Score: 2

      I know it's sorta OT...

      Ever notice how the "tort reform" people always point out how some moron who cut his hair with the lawn-mower got 43 gazillion dollars, and thus the system needs reform?

      You never hear about the harrassing lawsuits large corporations bring on each other...and in fact, in all the legislation I've heard about, the changes desired were to limit pain & suffering etc. They never limit the ability for big biz to sue and reap huge rewards against each other.

      Semms fishy to me. Bah - the rascals!

      Cheers!

    3. Re:Brits... by slickwillie · · Score: 2

      I'm not making this up. I heard a story on NPR yesterday about some British company saying they were going to patent potato chips (don't know if they meant American style or fish&chips style French fries).

    4. Re:Brits... by nathanh · · Score: 2
      They are getting as ridiculous as we are. It's a shame, really. I always admired their stiff upper lip and total hatred for whining.

      English? Hatred for whining?!?

      The Australian slang for Englishman is "whinging Pom". There's more whine in England than in all the cellars of France.

  17. With any luck... by ickle_matt · · Score: 2, Funny


    They'll win, then we can all sue them for the time wasted clicking on broken links... :-)

    --
    Mod -1, I shouldn't be allowed to post when I'm bored.

  18. Prior rights to hyperlinks - from old /. articles by jgaynor · · Score: 5, Informative

    1968 - includes MOVIES of working links

    1965

    1940's

    And alot more

    The list goes on and on. Let them squander their money. To quote a recent game - "If theyre deadset on squandering prescious resources sabotaging their own [] efforts, I say we let em do it."

    Along the same vein I cant believe Xerox hasnt made a stink about this. You think they would have learned their lesson after not screaming about the mouse, GUI, etc . . .

  19. Re:quite within their rights by fantastic · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Except when that patent was filed, BT was a government monopoly paid for by the British tax payer.

    Yes there were some smart guys there, but taxpayers subsidized this innovation. BT the company shouldn't reap the rewards

  20. prior art 1968 by martin · · Score: 5, Informative

    Well looks like the US PO wasn't that brilliant even in 1980. This Slashdot article shows MIT demonstrating the idea back on Dec 9 1968.
    Given BT's cash problems I think they are trying it just in case they can get some money.

    1. Re:prior art 1968 by geekoid · · Score: 2

      They only search existing patents.
      they time it would take to search all data in the world would be to long and costly.
      It is up to the individule to fight the patent either by going through the patent office's proceedure, or defeating it in court.
      It seems the BT has forced prodigies hand, and thus forced a court case.
      as a side note, I thought BT had the British patent offices seal of approval, as it were?
      I have never been throught thr British patent process, so I'll reserve comment.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    2. Re:prior art 1968 by Angst+Badger · · Score: 2
      Given BT's cash problems I think they are trying it just in case they can get some money.

      If I had major cash problems, I wouldn't try launching a patent infringement suit on a technology with prior art going back at least 34 years, especially when the defendant is basically everyone with a website. Not even Microsoft is running with the kind of cash you'd need to face that kind of opposition.

      --
      Proud member of the Weirdo-American community.
    3. Re:prior art 1968 by rnturn · · Score: 3, Insightful
      ``They only search existing patents. they [sic] time it would take to search all data in the world would be to long and costly.''

      That's a convenient excuse for the USPTO. ``Gosh... it'd be too hard to really do our job of verifying that this claim is original. So we'll let the courts sort it out.'' Or do they honestly believe that the prior art has to exist in a patent description?

      If there wasn't a good reason for the technical competence of the people doling out patents to be dramatically increased then I don't know what would be. Plus the emphasis on pushing a large number of applications through, and rewarding employees on meeting these numbers, is a major problem. It's better to get a lot of things done poorly than it is to have gotten a fewer amount done well.

      Anyone know of any studies done on the retarding effect of frivolously issued patents on the technology segment of the economy? I'm betting that there is a demonstrable effect.

      --
      CUR ALLOC 20195.....5804M
    4. Re:prior art 1968 by Aztech · · Score: 2
      "It seems the BT has forced prodigies hand, and thus forced a court case. as a side note, I thought BT had the British patent offices seal of approval, as it were?"
      Margaret Thatcher was in the process of severing various companies during 1980's so I'm not sure the relationship would be that great. But the circumstances surrounding the British patent are totally arbitrary anyway, it is the US patent that is being contested in court not the British patent (which has expired anyway).

      It's not a British patent it's a US patent issued by the USPTO for a foreign company, very different thing. If it was falsely issued then it's the responsibility of the USPTO not the UK Patent Office.
    5. Re:prior art 1968 by Zeinfeld · · Score: 2
      That's a convenient excuse for the USPTO. ``Gosh... it'd be too hard to really do our job of verifying that this claim is original. So we'll let the courts sort it out.'' Or do they honestly believe that the prior art has to exist in a patent description?

      The USPTO uses two contradictory arguments acording to need. When the complaint is made that they issue trivial patents they claim that they cannot perform an adequate review. When the point is made that every other country requires publication and a public opposition period prior to issue they claim that their review is more than adequate.

      I doubt that the case will succeed. The patent claims are for a specific type of hypertext linking model which is actually the opposite of the URL method used in the Web. What BT 'invented' was the Prestel database driven hypertext model in which all the links were managed in a central database. The innovation of the Web was to discard the stupid database, and the whining hypertext weenies and embed links directly into the page.

      While the Web approach appears 'obvious' today, back in the early days of the Web the hypertext community wrote long boring articles on why central databases are the only way to go. Tim could not even get published in the hypertext litterature, until the next year when they asked him to be the keynote speaker.

      Prestel served up a group of numbered pages that could reference other pages by the page number. While this was an innovative idea in 1603 when the idea was first proposed the use of page numbers to reference other parts of a text has been standard practice for at least 350 years. It certainly was not the Web and certainly was not hypertext as most people understand it.

      Please note that the folk going on about BT's status as a public/private company are both off base. At the time the innovative Prestel system was invented and the patent filed, BT was a government monopoly and part of the Post Office. BT only began their moneygrubbing patent demands after privatisation.

      --
      Looking for an Information Security student project suggestion?
      Try http://dotcrimeManifesto.com/
    6. Re:prior art 1968 by dunstan · · Score: 2

      The reference to Prestel is irrelevant - what's at issue here is what the patent claims state, not how BT (or at that time the GPO) implemented it.

      And the claims quite clearly state "a second portion containing information not for display but including the complete address for each of plural other blocks of information". The claim doesn't state whether that address is for local blocks or remote ones - the only clue is that throughout the claims section the central computer is only ever mentioned in the singular.

      Dunstan

      --
      The last scintilla of doubt just rode out of town
  21. BT has done it before... by bourne · · Score: 2

    Who here remembers Sun's YP - excuse, me NIS?

    "NIS was formerly known as Sun Yellow Pages (YP) but the name Yellow Pages(tm) is a registered trademark in the United Kingdom of British Telecom plc and may not be used without permission."

    NIS HOWTO
    1. Re:BT has done it before... by geekoid · · Score: 2

      The UK must have some wierd trademark laws. In the US, as long as it is ion a different industry, and can not be reasonably mistaken for earlier trademark (i.e. not a similiar product, service, or device) you can have previously owned trade mark.
      for example, ford could come out with the Ford XP, and Microsoft could not sue for trade mark infringment. hence AMD XP.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  22. The lawyers must be proud by Silas · · Score: 2
    What lawyer goes home at night thinking "wow, I really made a difference today. I'm doing my own little part to end poverty, stop war, and make life for all people everywhere happy and sustainable by... PATENTING HYPERLINKING." ??

    BT needs to hire a Director of Choosing Your Battles.

    1. Re:The lawyers must be proud by Dr.Dubious+DDQ · · Score: 2
      I've always wondered where lawyers find their job satisfaction.

      There are some "good" lawyers. Maybe not many, but a few.

      If you think of the convoluted legal code that lawyers have helped legislatures build up, you can think of it as a really complicated weapon, that requires special training to use.

      There ARE lawyers out there who enjoy using this metaphorical 'weapon' on behalf of actual victims of real crimes. Sometimes this takes creativity (I recall reading of a case where a man abducted a woman and, among other bizarre things, made a small cut in her foot(?) and drank some of her blood...but didn't go far enough to be charged with 'rape'. The lawyers for the prosecution managed to get him charged with "robbery" - he stole some of her blood.)

      Granted that modern law has become so convoluted and lucrative that it attracts far to much of the 'wrong sort of person' to the trade, just to make a pile of money, but there are a few left who actually enjoy getting 'bad people' put away.

    2. Re:The lawyers must be proud by rnturn · · Score: 2
      ``...made a small cut in her foot(?) and drank some of her blood...but didn't go far enough to be charged with 'rape'. The lawyers for the prosecution managed to get him charged with "robbery" - he stole some of her blood.''

      I'm surprised they didn't charge him with practicing medicine without a license. My personal favorite is the case where prison escapees successfully sued a state over the mental anguish they suffered after having been allowed to escape the prison and live on the lam for a number of weeks.

      From my ``favorite quotes'' file:

      ``With the law books filled with a great assortment of crimes, a prosecutor stands a fair chance of finding at least a technical violation of some act on the part of almost anyone. In such a case, it is not a question of discovering the commission of a crime and then looking for the man who has committed it, it is a question of picking the man and then searching the law books, or putting investigators to work, to pin some offense on him.''

      (attributed to Robert Jackson while FDR's attorney general and, later, a Supreme Court Justice.)

      It seems to be getting worse, doesn't it? Now it's not just the law books but patents as well. (BTW, if anyone knows if the above quote is accurate and can point me to the original source, I'd love to read that book.)

      --
      CUR ALLOC 20195.....5804M
    3. Re:The lawyers must be proud by dunstan · · Score: 2

      Was it a good use of the law when Capone was prosecuted for tax evasion?

      D.

      --
      The last scintilla of doubt just rode out of town
  23. BT by CaptainZapp · · Score: 2
    Proabably the marketing drones at BT didn't really think of the fact, that they could use that ridiculous patent (which will never stand up, they are not going against Joe Shmoe, but big money) to polish up the image of one of the worldwide most despised carriers. Just imagine instead of

    WE INVENTED HYPERLINKING, SHOW US THE MONEY...

    Yeah, we found out that we own this patent and we decided to release it for free for the greater good of the community.

    OK, so they pursued option 1. They look like the greatest losers and dickheads. Oh yeah; and they'll never see a cent in the first place. They also wouldn't see a cent with option 2 of course, but would be a really geeky and cool carrier (ok, that's a bit of a stretch for our UK readers) instead of complete jerks, that can't distinguish their arses from a hole in the ground.

    --
    ich bin der musikant

    mit taschenrechner in der hand

    kraftwerk

  24. Hypertext was invented in 1945 by Scaba · · Score: 4, Informative

    I thought everybody knew Vannevar Bush invented the concept of hypertext & hyperlinks with the introduction of Memex in 1945. Read the full article here. Maybe someone should mention this to BT before they waste a lot of time with this nonsense?

    1. Re:Hypertext was invented in 1945 by geekoid · · Score: 2

      invented, an talking about an idea are two different things.
      How ever the 1968 deminstration is still a good example that the idea, concept, and invention, did exist priviouse to 1980.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  25. when did Ted Nelsen think of hyperlinks? by peter303 · · Score: 2

    I remember talking about it the 1980s. His articles could be used as "prior publication".

  26. Those fools. by dmaxwell · · Score: 4, Informative

    The obvious thing for Prodigy to do is to call Douglas Englebart as a star witness. You can watch video of a point and click hypertext system he was demoing back in 1968. One place that can be seen is here:

    http://sloan.stanford.edu/MouseSite/1968Demo.htm l

    He even demoed a shared display system between two geographically separated terminals. If I was BT and saw Englebart on the defence's witness list, I would sue for peace immediately. 1968 for Pete's sake! Those guys need to be slapped upside the head with a wet mackeral.

  27. You, good sir, are a liar! by Hektor_Troy · · Score: 3, Funny

    "I'm not a dork, I'm a geek. Ask my girlfriend."

    Geeks don't have girlfriends. You are at most a technically gifted person, who has a girlfriend.

    --
    We do not live in the 21st century. We live in the 20 second century.
    1. Re:You, good sir, are a liar! by Hektor_Troy · · Score: 2

      Just saw her picture. That's not fair!

      Here I am, in love with my neighbour (but don't have the guts to say anything), and you go marry a beautiful geek. I don't know you, but trust me when I tell you: "I hate you!"

      --
      We do not live in the 21st century. We live in the 20 second century.
  28. these people are desperate. by laserjet · · Score: 3, Informative

    Here are my favorite parts of the article:

    "BT stumbled upon the patent during a routine update of its 15,000 global patents in the summer of 2000."

    They didn't even know they had it, first of all. Their patent expires in the year 2006 in the US. What happens if you don't defend a patent (I am not a lawyer, I am curious if anything changes if you don't defend a patent)

    Plus, this patent is so general. And here is their evidence:

    Prodigy's unlikely saviour comes in the form of a fuzzy black and white video which shows a 1968 demonstration by Stanford computer researcher Douglas Engelbart apparently demonstrating hypertext linking.

    I would like to see this video... Seriously, though, I think this is going to be a huge PR disaster when this blows up in their face. Not only do they look like desperate bastards, but also like idiots trying to claim a patent like "the flying machine" entitles them to the royalties of airplanes, helicopters, gliders, etc. (Ana analogy the article pointed out.

    how low cna you go?

    --
    Moon Macrosystems. Sun's biggest competitor.
    1. Re:these people are desperate. by geekoid · · Score: 2

      From my expaerince with the US patent system:
      You do not have to defend a patent to keep it. If you want to charge people retroactivly, you will have a tough row to hoe.

      British patents can be very vague, compared to US patents.
      here is the link you requested.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    2. Re:these people are desperate. by laserjet · · Score: 2

      Cool. Thanks for the link, this will be fun to watch.

      --
      Moon Macrosystems. Sun's biggest competitor.
    3. Re:these people are desperate. by Aztech · · Score: 2
      "British patents can be very vague, compared to US patents"
      First of all, this is a US patent not a British one, it was patented with the USPTO, it doesn't matter if the company filing the patent is foreign... the patent laws from that foreign country doesn't suddenly transcend into the US law. If the USPTO believed it to be too vague then they simply should have rejected it, the UK patent has expired and is incidental.

      To say US patents are not vague is laughable, in the US you can even patent totally intangible things such as 'business processes', you should check some of those, if they're not vague and over reaching then I don't know what is. Then we have patentable "mathematical algorithms" (even if they're not practically applied), they don't stand for such things in the UK patent office that's why RSA, LZW never received patents in the UK.
  29. wow the British comment... by josepha48 · · Score: 2
    "However, according to the UK Patent Office, patents are, by nature, vague so such an argument might not prove to be sufficient defence."

    In the USPTO they should get rejected as being 'vague and indefinite' if they are to vague. This is a basic patent rejection. So if the language of this patent is to vague to understand today that should be sufficient to invalidate the patent. Boy would that suck for them to be told that the patent is no longer valid and never really was.

    --

    Only 'flamers' flame!

    1. Re:wow the British comment... by Jeremy+Erwin · · Score: 2

      One can argue in court that a patent claim is overbroad or invalid. The process of patents is not an adversarial one--no one in the patent application process is responsible for actively opposing the patent grant. Typically, unless the prior art is itself patented (and thus, easily discoverable), the patent examiner might well ignore it.

    2. Re:wow the British comment... by geekoid · · Score: 2

      with the USPTO, you can loose a patent after you have recieved it. It is not up to the USPTO to search all data that exists everywhere to determine "prior art". they have certian guilinse, and check it against existing patente as best they can, but it is up to the people, or corps, to fight the patents.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    3. Re:wow the British comment... by josepha48 · · Score: 2
      "Can a patent be rejected after it has already been accepted, and been in place for years ? "

      Yes, definately. A patent can be challenged at any time in its life as being invalid for many reasons. The drawback is that once a patent is challenged it can also be determined that it is valid. In this case a company can start going after people.

      --

      Only 'flamers' flame!

    4. Re:wow the British comment... by dunstan · · Score: 2

      Exactly.

      And if you were knowingly infringing a patent which was being challenged would you choose a) to license it *before* the case was determined at an agreed price, or b) wait and license it *after* the case was determined at a price of the patent holder's choosing?

      Dunstan

      --
      The last scintilla of doubt just rode out of town
  30. Over-riding Patents by Alien54 · · Score: 2
    Patents have been over-ridden before in the name of national security, etc. The earliest example I know of is the forced Licensing of the Wright Brothers Aircraft Technology to competitors during WWI. But there are others.

    So I can see a government that would force a takeover of the patent even if they win.

    Or Maybe everyone would force them to sue first.

    I can see the peasants storming the castle now.

    --
    "It is a greater offense to steal men's labor, than their clothes"
  31. Time for another tea party... by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 3, Funny

    If this passes, I guess you'll see plenty of dead URLs floating in Boston Harbor...

  32. What if hyperlinks went away? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Despite the fact that there is both tons of 'prior art' and a very strong case of 'obvious nature' for this particular patent case, I think it would be interesting if BT did manage to win their case. They're hoping to claim massive amounts of royalties from companies who run websites, but I think the real effect would be that the majority of website owners, corporate and private, would simply terminate their websites.

    I think that if you kill hyperlinks, you pretty much kill the whole http-based World Wide Web.

    Where does that leave us? Well, for starters, it gets a whole lot of companies back off the internet, where they don't really belong. I think that the last decade has proven that the e-commerce model doesn't really work when brick-and-mortar sales models are more efficient. There are a few, very specialized business who manage to do business over the internet, but these are almost always in the same area that phone and mail-order business have always dominated. The major auto manufacturers are a good example of companies who don't belong on the internet. The music industry is probably another good case, since they absolutely refuse to embrace the sharing model that the internet and P2P apps have made so popular. They don't want to do business on the internet. They want to use the internet to make their brick-and-mortar businesses more profitable.

    So, let's say that all these companies get off the internet. What's left of the internet?

    E-Mail, for one. Despite the popularity of the web, E-Mail still accounts for the vast majority of internet traffic. FTP is another. Just because graphical websites go away doesn't mean that we can expect FTP sties to go away as well. FTP sites after websites, however, can be expected to have much, much more in the way of content. We can expect 'pub' directories to have much, much more in the way of specialization and indexing. Personal FTP sites would have vast amounts of things the site's owners would like or find interesting. MP3's, images both conventional and pornographic, movies, text files like e-books and fan-works, applications... The list goes on and on.

    This model for MP3 sites was almost the way things worked. In 1993, there were about an equal number of FTP- and Web-sites. HTML was so much more versatile than an FTP site, so it dominated.

    I think we'll also see a resurgance in the use of Usenet, which has been supplanted in many ways by weblogs and online message boards for BBS-type use. We may even see a resurgance in telnet-based BBS's. That would be cool.

    The thing I think we'll see the most of if the web magically went away, would be the proliferation of internet sites that use Post-http era technology. This includes any of the P2P protcols like Gnutella or FastTrack, CVS, Freenet, streaming music and video, distributed problem solving like Seti@home and Folding@home, and many, many more.

    The web is stagnant already, so this process is already beginning. Just look at the statistic figures for Gnutella or FastTrack to get an idea. I don't think BT will win their lawsuit, and I don't think that the web is going away anytime soon.

    I don't think it would necessarily be a bad thing if it did.

  33. Re:quite within their rights by jmccay · · Score: 2

    One slightly large problem with your arguement. They haven't defended this patent in the almost 22 years since they filed for the patent. If I remember correctly, if you don't defend it, you lose the right to defend it in the future. We've seen some case on Salshdot in which this was proven. It is the companies responsibility to keep track of the patents they own and defend them. I don't see how they can selectively defend a patent 21+ years after they file for it. They not sueing AOL Time Warner. They are not sueing Microsoft. It is took little too late. BT should chalk this up to experience and pay better attention to the patents.
    I know they have 15000+ plus, but again it is there responcibility. If they have to create a department to do this, then it is time they do so.

    --
    At the next eco-hypocrisy-meeting, count the private jets used to get to the meeting. Should be interesting to see that
  34. I guess I just didn't understand patents... by paulbd · · Score: 2

    From Stephen Probert, deputy director of the UK patent office: "It seems ludicrous that a patent for one technology can cover another but patents are anything but precise and are meant to cover things that aren't yet invented," he says.

  35. Extortion and Precedent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful
    You know, how often do you read about some case that is settled, but the exact terms of the settlement were not disclosed?

    I'm cynical enough to think that maybe BT gets Prodigy to settle this for some ridiculously small amount of money ($10, or even $100,000) to make it go away, and both parties aggree, as part of the settlement, to keep the details of the settlement private.

    Now BT goes to work for Prodigy trying to go after their competitors. Just like the RAMbus nonsense, the first few get to settle on generous terms. But after that it starts to get expensive even to just settle. Because now BT has precedent on their side. "well look, all these other companies have settled to license our innovative hyperlink technology."

    The benefit to Prodigy is: A cheap settlement. The lawsuit goes away. BT goes after their competitors.

    The benefit to BT: They establish precedent. They might even get a little trickle of money ($100,000 to settle?). They get really big settlements later from the others who didn't settle early.

    If Prodigy settles, what do you want to bet that they keep the terms of the settlement a secret? Now why would they keep something a secret? What possible motivation? Obviously, it must be hugely in their interest to keep it a secret -- because it would be embarrasing to settle for such a small amount, because that would make most people realize the true evil movies of both parties. Gee, could they even agree to this under the table in advance? Okay, I'll agree to let you sue me and settle for cheap with an unlimited nonexclusive license in return. Okay, maybe now I'm being too cynical.

    1. Re:Extortion and Precedent by markmoss · · Score: 2

      Interesting theory. A settlement will not establish the court precedent BT needs, but it might be used to convince investors that BT owns a valuable patent. It would seem, though, that this would work much better if the $ amount was public and large, and it would also seem that any significant amount would eventually show up in the public profit-and-loss statements of each company. But perhaps BT's hope is to bring in the suckers before the actual details are revealed. It would have worked a year ago, but after the dot.com meltdown and then Enron, how many suckers still have that much money?

      Another way to inflate the value of a patent: find someone else with a patent that won't hold up in court either, agree to cross-license them, and announce the deal with the highest possible evaluation placed on the patents involved. (That is, assume the patents hold up in court, that you are actually able to collect large royalties on everything the patents claim to cover, and that the businesses you are taking these royalties out of don't shrink as a result...)

  36. that may not be prior art by markj02 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Those are probably hyperlinks to resources within the same computer. BT may be claiming hyperlinks among resources distributed across a network. That should be an obvious extension, but "obviousness" is a much harder defense against patent infringement than prior art.

    1. Re:that may not be prior art by crisco · · Score: 5, Interesting
      Your comment should be modded up a bit.

      I, probably like many /.'ers, watched a few of those videos and thought something along the lines of "man, those guys were so far ahead of their time, they had everything already done back then! Screw BT and their specious patents!". But go back and watch the demo again. Then scan the patent again. Doublas Engelbart's demo kept referencing hypertext within the same information store (computer). I couldn't find a reference to a local reference to remote information. Networking and even remote sessions are mentioned but never the context of a local link to a remote chunk of data. BT's patent appears to focus on hyperlinking menus being included with each chunk of data to allow easy access to further information.

      Now, having said that, there are some key differences between the hyperlinks we know and love today and the system described in BT's patent. Links in the form of http://, ftp://, etc are known as URLs because they abstract away the differences in local and network locations and various protocols used for transmitting the data. It may be argued that hyperlinks are abstractions of a local data store, not a remote menuing system. Also of interest in BT's patent is the reference to the VIEWDATA system, some quick internet searching reveals systems that used color coded links that may qualify as prior art. Another major factor is the use of a mouse. BT's patent doesn't seem to mention anything besides keypad input methods while today's interaction with hypertext is primarily with some sort of pointing device.

      Another thing to consider is BT's first major target in this. While other reports mention up to 17 ISPs being asked to pay royalties, Prodigy has gotten the majority of the attention. Wasn't Prodigy one of the larger online services back in the '80s? Might they have had an early interface system that consisted of numeric menus linking to additional information? Is BT going after one of the only true violators of the patent, hoping to scare the rest of the world into paying royalties? Are they deliberately setting up smokescreens, hoping to distract from the real issues in the case?

      So, after a closer look, I still think that Mr. Englebart and his peers were way ahead of their time and I still say "Screw BT and their specious patents!", just for slightly different reasons.

      --

      Bleh!

    2. Re:that may not be prior art by crisco · · Score: 2
      Gopher came about in '91 or '92.

      Of more interest are the early BBS systems. Wonder when the first menus came along to make things easier. Another poster also mentioned something called NOTES that would be nice to take a look at.

      --

      Bleh!

  37. CompuServe to the rescue ? by eludom · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I worked at CompuServe in the mid 80's
    (for the guy that invented .GIF, using
    a "free" algorithm found in an ACM journal
    that later turned out to be patented) and
    keep in touch with people over there (CompuServe/AOL) from time to time.
    At one point, AOL had retained the ex-Compuserve CTO to do historical research into patentable
    things that the company had done. I would lay money that CompuServe/AOL will challenge this
    if it goes very far.

  38. I'm Confused... by milesbparty · · Score: 2, Funny

    I thought Al Gore invented hyperlinking...or was that Microsoft. Now I'm all confused.

    --
    eMelody Web Directory add your site today!
  39. The password is... PRECEDENT by TheConfusedOne · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Legally it's quite a shrewd manuever to launch the offensive against a smaller target. BT can bully Prodigy and get a settlement, or, if they go to court, they won't be fighting the endless hoardes of lawyers that a company like AOL would throw at it.

    Either way, if they win they establish a precedent that will simplify the process as they go after the bigger fish.

    BTW - I hear a bunch of lawyers for Rambus are looking for a new "righteous IP cause" to sign on for...

    --
    --- I wish I could hear the soundtrack to my life. That way I'd know when to duck.
    1. Re:The password is... PRECEDENT by Amazing+Quantum+Man · · Score: 2

      Legally it's quite a shrewd manuever to launch the offensive against a smaller target. BT can bully Prodigy and get a settlement, or, if they go to court, they won't be fighting the endless hoardes of lawyers that a company like AOL would throw at it.

      Except that Prodigy is owned by SBC, one of the Baby Bells. They've got tons of bucks and lawyers.

      --
      Fascism starts when the efficiency of the government becomes more important than the rights of the people.
  40. specific to keyboards? by kisrael · · Score: 5, Interesting

    If you read the patent itself (patent office link from the article), or at least the abstract, it specifically mentions "operation of a selected key of the keyboard". (Later on it says "The terminal apparatus may include data entry means, such as a manual keyboard"). Funny if they somehow win, maybe browsers will have to remove keyboard shortcuts, but mouse and trackpad clicking is still A-OK. (And then Amercians with Disabilities Act crew will jump on it...)

    But yeah, this is really insane. Also, so many patents like this seem like they don't pass the "not obvious to a practitioner of the field" test.

    --
    SO YOU'RE GOING TO DIE: The Comic for Dealing with Death
  41. *sigh* by connorbd · · Score: 2

    Says a lot about our patent system. Unfortunately, it's all been said many times before.

    /Brian

  42. Re:quite within their rights by drzhivago · · Score: 2, Informative

    You are thinking of trademarks. With trademarks, if you do not vigorously pursue infringing marks, then your trademark is no longer valid.

    Patents do not work like this. They do not have to be actively defended to be kept valid. In this case, though, Prodigy has an even earlier prior art video which shows the technology BT is suing Prodigy for using. If the patent system were more effective in finding prior art, this hyperlinking technology patent would've never been awarded to BT in the first place.

    Greg

  43. Re:My patent by pubjames · · Score: 2

    On the crud, or on the process of de-crudding?

    Oh, only the process. I'm not sure if bodily excretions are patentable. But the way things are going, perhaps they will be one day...

    Is it possible to have, like, a holding patent, for something that isn't currently patentable but will be once the megacorps finally decide all laws in America? I guess if there is then the Megacorps will have already done it. They'll have like a Meta-patent that covers everything.

    Way too much coffee.

  44. I approve of THIS patent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Why?
    • It's so ridiculous that it should make people think
    • It's owned by a non-U.S. corporation. This should make the traditional patent-mongering U.S. corporations think
    • It shows exactly why the whole idea of software patents hurts society instead of helping it
    So, I wish BT the best in their pursuit of royalties for this one - it can only hasten the end of this whole embarrassingly silly fiasco.
  45. Sounds like an interesting article by craigeyb · · Score: 2, Funny

    Sounds like an interesting article, but I didn't click on the link to read it for fear than I was infringing on somebody's hard earned patent.

    First I had use lynx so that I wouldn't inadvertantly see any GIFS, but I suppose now I'll have to find a text-based browser that doesn't show any hyperlinks as well.

    --

    Social Contract? I don't remember signing any Social Contract!

  46. Patent Death Pool (Mutually Assured Destruction) by Lonath · · Score: 3, Insightful

    On the bright side, if things ever do get too bad for programmers...I am sure that it would be possible to get 20000 people to donate a few thousand each to start a patent pool. Not a patent pool for allowing OS/FS software, but a patent death pool to kill off all software development in the entire nation. Just look at the patents being awarded today and patent around them with as much generality and depth as possible, and in a few years noone will be able to move.

    The nice thing about patents is that it works both ways. Yes the trolls and extortionists can stop the little guy, but if enough little guys get together, we CAN get enough patents to stop everyone else. No cross-licensing, no licensing period. Just stopping progress. But wait, there's more. Since patents can only be used to stop someone from doing something, and since this plan wouldn't need to be implemented unless software development is impossible, they can't sue you for patent infringement because you already aren't doing anything! (Because as we all know, writing software and getting software patents are two activities with "softare" in their descriptions, but are totally separate things!)

    Sure, the courts might throw these patents out, but since patents are given to individual inventors, how can the courts just arbitrarily decide to say that these certain people cannot enforce their patents? Would they say that anyone who got a patent using PDP (Patent Death Pool) money cannot enforce their patent? That wouldn't be very nice. Also, you can stop someone else from using your patented idea, even if you have no intention of using it yourself! :)

    Hopefully, the rest of the world would then ignore software patents and charge ahead as we in the US just stagnate. Then people in the US might wake the fuck up and force Congress to get rid of patents on uses of machines.

    But, then again maybe not...but at least the rest of the world would be going on ok. :)

  47. UID Discrimination? by Royster · · Score: 2

    Hell, I'd expect better from someone with a UID > 20000.

    What do you have against low UIDs?

    --
    I have discovered a truly marvelous sig, unfortunately the sig limit is too small to contain i
    1. Re:UID Discrimination? by FFFish · · Score: 2

      20000 is a low UID? Pshaw!

      --

      --
      Don't like it? Respond with words, not karma.
    2. Re:UID Discrimination? by ZxCv · · Score: 2

      Yah, I'd say it's gotta be <7000. ;-)

      --

      Perl - $Just @when->$you ${thought} s/yn/tax/ &couldn\'t %get $worse;
    3. Re:UID Discrimination? by troc · · Score: 2

      Low UIDs are overrated

      Troc

      --
      Troc's dubious podcast and blog: http://www.trocnet.net
  48. Re:My patent by Lonath · · Score: 2

    There are a lot of patents on manure (which is useful). Go to the USPTO and search for the word "manure". I am sure they DO something with the manure, but it's still damn funny. Unless you're in the manure industry. that is.

  49. A "flying machine"? by LatJoor · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "If I patented a flying machine the patent could equally apply to helicopters and aeroplanes even though they are completely different," explains Stephen Probert deputy director of the Patent Office.

    Except that if the patent were for "a flying machine," every court in the world would see through it and realize what a farce it was. In the realm of computers, unfortunately, even such broad idea proposals are taken as some kind of intellectual accomplishment.

  50. Who will they sue... by rnturn · · Score: 2

    ...after they're done with Prodigy? Individuals who have web sites or the ISPs that host them?

    Since the US patent expires in 2006 and it'll probably be some time after that broadband becomes widely available in the U.S., I guess that most of us that have ever thought about hosting their own web sites will be safe, eh?

    BT has been a pain in the keister for a long time. I had the unfortunate experience of having to deal with them about ten years ago when my employer was setting up EDI. They were a pain then and, apparently, haven't gotten any better. Geez, the arrogant comments made by the BT CEO would make me want to switch from them as a supplier even if their service didn't rank near dead last.

    Let's hope that what ever judge hears this case, is astute enough to recognize prior art when s/he sees the Englebart tape. And if s/he does, I'd just love to hear the exchange between the judge and the BT lawyers as they try to wangle a case for the originality of their patent claim. Can Prodigy load the gallery with people to snicker and roll their eyes when BT laywers present their arguments?

    --
    CUR ALLOC 20195.....5804M
  51. BT are in MAJOR debt! (Some interesting info) by SomethingOrOther · · Score: 2

    BT are in a shitload of debt and the managers have been told to screw every last penny out of the consumers.
    How do I know?
    Because BT made a major cock up with its internet billing over a year ago and gave some customers free internet access.
    BT are now trying to claim back money from users who surfed for free, even though BT legaly havent got a leg to stand on.

    They are hopeing that customers will just give in and pay money they dont legally have to by being heavy handed. Have a look at this BBC news article for details.

    --
    Anyone quoted by a reporter knows how little they understand
    Don't believe what you read is the truth.
  52. I'd love to see them win by Phil+Hands · · Score: 2, Funny

    OK, so the patent looks like total nonsense, and they're probably hoping to bully people into settling, but just think what would happen if the won.

    It could pretty much shut down the Web in the USA, or at least severely disrupt it, by forcing people to pay BT tax, or come up with some disgusting work-around.

    Of course, this would not apply to most of the rest of the world, because we still haven't quite given into the lobbying of the WTO and USPO types that want the rest of the world to adopt US patent silliness.

    So briefly we'd have BT holding the USA to ransom.

    Pretty soon after that the public outcry against the USPO might finally reach the ears of enough US politicians, to result in the USPO being beaten up in the manner that they've clearly deserved for years.

    The final result being that people would have their eyes opened to the stupidity of allowing patents on software and business methods.

    So, join the "BT for Web supremacy" campaign today!

    --

    Debian: GNU/Linux done the Linux way
  53. Stupid, stupid... by Amazing+Quantum+Man · · Score: 4, Insightful

    BT doesn't even know how to do it right...

    You're supposed to go after a small fry evil hacker first, so as to set a precedent.

    Instead, BT is going after Prodigy, who is owned by SBC, one of the three remaining "Baby Bells", who certainly has enough ca$h to defend themselves properly.

    P.S. No offense to Mr. Corley or 2600 with the "small fry" remark. It referred strictly to company size/resources.

    --
    Fascism starts when the efficiency of the government becomes more important than the rights of the people.
  54. Re: If they win... by rnturn · · Score: 3, Funny

    Why mess around with around with FidoNet? Why not just go back to using uucp and start an underground Usenet. Might be fun.

    --
    CUR ALLOC 20195.....5804M
  55. Quite frankly... by kindbud · · Score: 3

    I'd love to see BT prevail, if only for the sheer entertainment value of it. Can you imagine? Maybe this is just the sort of thing that is needed to give patent reform a kick start. But it'd be great fun to see Jeff Bezos have to pay royalties on his one-click hyperlinks. Snicker.

    --
    Edith Keeler Must Die
  56. "the Sky's the limit" by nhavar · · Score: 2

    "Newsflash: British Telecom to patent 'Electronic' Dewey Decimal system. When asked how this would differ from currently used technology BT's chief technologist said 'It won't'. When asked why this shift in development strategies BT responded: 'After the success we had patenting the hyperlink(tm) we, with advice from our counsel, decided it would be best for our shareholders and consumers alike to agressively pursue similar strategies. We have a whole host of products in development right now taking old world technology and bringing them into the future. These products include the modernization of the book 'index', 'footnotes', and 'bibliography' which will be retroactive to existing products of course. We also have a little known project concerning printed money and how to modernize it. Of course once all the research is done we will agressively pursue anyone using our technology unlicensed. We stand to make billions from the thousands of pounds worth of research we are doing. Even if the courts say we can't 'legally' keep the money from companies we negotiate with, just temporarily having it is enough to boost our stock price to the point where our executive board can sell and retire in luxury.'"

    --
    "Do not be swept up in the momentum of mediocrity." - anon
  57. Re:Take a look at the patent by arkanes · · Score: 2

    One reason they're hitting prodigy. Back in the 80's, it was all over telephone lines.

  58. Prior Art - Ted Nelson/Xanadu Vannevar Bush/Memex by ngr8 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Played with hypertext for laboratory information systems in the mid-1980s, and for prior art, *I* leaned upon Ted Nelson's ComputerLib/Dream Machines http://www.xanadu.com as well as earlier cites for the mechanical Memex system proposed by Vannevar Bush (not dubya) in work cited in "As We May Think" in the Atlantic Monthly http://www.theatlantic.com/unbound/flashbks/comput er/bushf.htm

    Althought it may be an urban legend, there's supposed to be a patent for playing with a cat with a laser - all things are possible. The patent office hasn't *exactly* had enough cycles to deal with the issue of bona-fide new inventions versus poorly researched claims.

    But given a lot of other history, BT is probably safe from worstening its public relations image with this boner ;-)

    --
    Verizon: Latin for "poor rural service".
  59. Depressing quote from UK patent office: by tempshill · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The deputy director of the UK patent office is quoted in the article as saying, "It seems ludicrous that a patent for one technology can cover another but patents are anything but precise and are meant to cover things that aren't yet invented."

    Patents are meant to protect useful inventions! Which HAVE been invented! What a sad commentary that this guy has lost sight of the whole idea and has caved, and simply accepts the current state of what patents have *become*.

  60. OT but Related: Patenting Salted Fries by TheMatt · · Score: 3, Interesting

    As I said, offtopic but not quite. A British company is trying to patent salted chips, or fries, as we USAns know it. The group, ActionAid, is trying to point out the stupidity of modern foods patent laws. Their announcement is here.

    --

    Fortran programmer...oh yeah. Array math for life!

  61. So what by t_allardyce · · Score: 2

    who cares if they patent links? i will carry on clicking links, you will carry on clicking links. People will still make browsers, people will still make web-sites with links. Who is going to enforce royalty payment on hyper-linking? I copy CDs, pirate everything in site and click links all day long. No-one is going to arrest me.

    Just like the stupid _American_ companies that patent 'rice' or 'breathing air as a hemoglobin transfer function' what do i care? And those farmers who are being sued because patented GM seeds blew onto their land and they didn't kill them in time. Screw patents, screw capitalist pigs who make billions on a couple of ideas. IMHO everyone should get credit for their work, but they shouldn't be able to restrict what other people do with the same ideas.

    --
    This comment does not represent the views or opinions of the user.
  62. What about Gopher? by farrellj · · Score: 2

    I guess you don't remember gopher? Although, in a lot of ways, Gopher + graphics ~= WWW.

    ttyl
    Farrell

    --
    CAN-CON 2019 - Ottawa's only book oriented Science Fiction Convention! October 18-20, Sheraton Hotel, Ottawa, Canada h
  63. Alienation is a personal, not business, value by swb · · Score: 2

    Alienation is a personal value, not a business value, and typically doesn't matter in most business situations. There *may* be a place for it in personal relationships tangental to business (ie, salesman/customer).

    But I don't think that Microsoft the company is ever alienated. Certain people within Microsoft may allow themselves to be manipulated into feeling this way, but the smart ones remember that the goal is making a profit, and as long as you do well at that personal emotions don't count for much.

  64. Not Insane by rjamestaylor · · Score: 2
    • Insane.
    No, just a long-shot bet. Look, they already employ the lawyers so it's not a big expense to push this and all they need is ONE out-of-court settlement to set the precedent (think about Toshiba and the faulty floppy drive fiasco or Texas Instruments, I believe, and RSI). And, when one considers the pervasiveness and commercial reliance on hyperlinking today...the financial payoff would be HUGE.

    Opportunistic? Yes. Repugnant? To the high heavens. Insane -- hey, can't blame them for trying.

    --
    -- @rjamestaylor on Ello
  65. Different Industry by virg_mattes · · Score: 2

    > In the US, as long as it is ion a different industry, and can not be reasonably mistaken for earlier trademark (i.e. not a similiar product, service, or device) you can have previously owned trade mark.

    BT considered this, and it was addressed in the argument of fact in the case. Their claim was that since Sun's YP was an online search process (albeit not for phone numbers and such), that it would be confusing if BT ever wanted to put "the Yellow Pages" online.

    Virg

  66. And in related news... by A+Masquerade · · Score: 2

    our chips (what the americans call fries, but different) are being patented and chip shops will be charged a per-chip royalty.

    Ain't it great the way we get all the good ideas from the colonies...

  67. Hmm... vague patent descriptions... by DiamondWing · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Doing a quick search, doesn't the concept of a HyperCard system with key words/phrases linking to other cards/pages predate the link patent in question?

    Looking at the text of the Patent itself... for item #5, where they describe terminals as apparatuses for providing access via telephone lines. Doesn't that then negate the "terminals" which don't use telephone lines?

    So my PC which uses EtherNet via wireless networking or via Cat-5 cabling which I wired myself is then not inclusive in the patent's description of a "Terminal" and can thus use hyper text linking without stepping on the patent in question.

    Or line-of-sight from building to building IR/Laser data transmission which is not provided for or maintained by a Telco and so is not a "telephone line".

    As the patent doesn't go into details of what they mean by "telephone line", I think that provides a pretty big hole in their coverage. I can see how it might cover dial-up users, but for other line/wireless/etc users, it becomes exceedingly grey/black.

    I do find one interesting thing about the description of the invention in the Abstract:

    "The invention is particularly useful in reducing the complexity of the operating protocol of the computer." (From Abstract of Patent #4,873,662 of te US Patents Office)

    If anything, I would say that implementing the click-links/HTML/etc protocols has made the operating protocols of the computer even more complex, not any easier.

    Pot-Shot-Summary:

    What I got out of the patent text was that:

    Any terminal/computer/etc connected not through telephony lines is exempt from the Patents.

    Any terminal system which does not show the various charges and/or accumulation of charges is exempt from this patent as the patent covers systems which primarily deals with listing charges for services and the accumulation of them.

    Guess another question would be: How would BT enforce this? The technology is so prevelant on the web that to remove it all, would not be financially sound to BT itself.

    But then again, it doesn't seem like they really care about what people think about them or who they shove out of the way or trample on so long as they get their money.

    Though I do wonder... some more text taken from the patents text:

    "This is a continuation of application Ser. No. 814,922, filed 7/12/77, now abandoned." (US Patents Office excerpt from Patent #4,873,662)

    What does it mean that this is a continuation application? And what does it mean when for the child patent when the parent patent has been abandoned?

    Hmm...

  68. You all seem to be missing the point by Galvatron · · Score: 2
    Does anyone remember what Prodigy used to be like before they were an ISP? It was a totally different service, and may be infringing on BT's patent. It seems that the patent has something to do with keyed in hyperlinks, rather than clicked, exactly as Prodigy used to work.


    While BT may be trying to set up a precedent to collect from other ISPs, this case is NOT about web links.

    --
    "The question of whether a computer can think is no more interesting than that of whether a submarine can swim" -EWD
  69. Time to fight back! by Shoten · · Score: 2

    Let's all come up with all sorts of interesting information to submit to Slashdot about their websites...the resulting DoS of all those sites getting slashdotted will bring them to their knees!

    --

    For your security, this post has been encrypted with ROT-13, twice.
  70. shorter patent expirations by sunhou · · Score: 2

    The UK patent has already expired so ISPs in the UK would escape having to pay anything. But in the US, the patent does not expire until 2006.

    Just another example of why patents shouldn't have such long expiration times in the US.

    ... and it's reputation across the pond could be equally damaged by this court claim.

    Damn, I pretty much accept that no one knows the difference between "its" and "it's" on slashdot. But even the BBC is screwing it up now? Aren't the Brits supposed to be good with the language? :-) (Or was that BBC article written by an American?) I swear, I'm getting worn down; if I see this mistake another 50,000 times or so, I'm going to start getting them mixed up myself.

  71. Re:Gotta make money somehow by fishbowl · · Score: 2

    >.. why not tax everyone on the net instead of
    >actually finding a business plan that works.

    Isn't the UKoGBaNI one of those countries where
    a defendent can seek damages against a plaintiff
    for bringing a frivolous suit?

    --
    -fb Everything not expressly forbidden is now mandatory.
  72. Actually we invented the internet... by Yaruar · · Score: 2

    Well, made pr0n searches on google possible.

    Working for the company that invented real time indexing of information I wonder if this means that we should be suing all the search engines out there.....

    http://www.dialog.com/

    for those bored enough.

    It's stuff like this that makes me wonder why companies bother.

    I think I'm going to go out and patent triple clicking on a mouse as a process just in case....

    --
    Working for the (other) man
  73. Re:Lose by -douggy · · Score: 2

    Well I thought what you said was funny

  74. Off-topic stuff by Peter+Harris · · Score: 2
    Call me a crackhead whore, but who would want such an anarchaic filesystem?
    I'll call you a poet. "anarchaic" is an excellent neologism. It appears to either mean "not archaic" (good?) or a mix of anarchic and archaic (bad?).
    Give me a formatting of XFS or Reiser anyday. (Or even better; BFS :D)
    Yeah. Oh alright then, you might be a crackhead whore for all I know.
    --

    -- What do you need?
    -- Gnus. Lots of Gnus.
  75. Re:Prior Art - Ted Nelson/Xanadu Vannevar Bush/Mem by Tet · · Score: 2
    Althought it may be an urban legend, there's supposed to be a patent for playing with a cat with a laser

    No, it's not an urban legend. It's US patent 5443036.

    --
    "The invisible and the non-existent look very much alike." -- Delos B. McKown
  76. VIEWDATA is a red herring by dunstan · · Score: 2

    The enforceable part of a patent is the claims, and the rest of the text is there only to help explain the claims. That's why most patents have quite specific details in the narrative text, but the claims are couched in very general terms.

    The claims make no reference to VIEWDATA.

    Dunstan

    --
    The last scintilla of doubt just rode out of town
    1. Re:VIEWDATA is a red herring by crisco · · Score: 2

      Agreed, in fact, the little information I had time to dig up left me with the impression that VIEWDATA was by BT and may have implemented the items in the patent. The link I posted hinted at another system that was similar, however, I couldn't find any other details on it in the quick searching I did at the time.

      --

      Bleh!