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W3C Requests Eolas Patent Re-Examination

x0n writes "Verbatim from W3: Acting on the advice of the W3C HTML Patent Advisory Group, W3C has presented the United States Patent and Trademark Office with prior art establishing that US Patent No. 5,838,906 (the '906 patent) is invalid. W3C Director Tim Berners-Lee has written an unprecedented request to U.S. Under Secretary of Commerce for Intellectual Property James E. Rogan to take action to remove the patent to allow operation of the Web. Read the briefing." techsoldaten adds a link to this New York Times story on the move, and bgalbs points out the W3C's detailed filing describing prior art provided to the USPTO Director's office, "along with a letter from Tim Berners-Lee asking that the so-called Eolas patent be revoked," writing "Here's hoping it does some good; between this and the Lotus Notes prior art, perhaps there's hope this will all go away."

342 comments

  1. so ? by mirko · · Score: 1, Funny

    2 stories ago, we wished Microsoft would be punished for firing a blogger, no we wish they'd stop being sued by Eolas...
    Thanks Slashdot, but I'm confused, now.

    --
    Trolling using another account since 2005.
    1. Re:so ? by thegrommit · · Score: 4, Insightful

      > 2 stories ago, we wished Microsoft would be punished for firing a blogger, no we wish they'd stop being sued by Eolas...

      Insightful? Another fine example of slashdot moderating...

      The patent has implications for ALL browsers. If Eolas thought they could extract money from the Mozilla foundation, you can be sure their lawyers would advising them to take such action.

    2. Re:so ? by Dun+Malg · · Score: 5, Funny
      2 stories ago, we wished Microsoft would be punished for firing a blogger, no we wish they'd stop being sued by Eolas... Thanks Slashdot, but I'm confused, now.

      It helps if you stop and realize that /. isn't a single, monolithic block of identically programmed robots.

      In reality, it is a collection of pehaps a half-dozen different monolithic blocks of identically programmed robots. The "punish MS" group is Block 1. The "patents bad" group is Block 4.

      --
      If a job's not worth doing, it's not worth doing right.
    3. Re:so ? by tarquin_fim_bim · · Score: 1

      So what are the missing blocks that you do not list, or is this one of those unfathomable myseries of life?

    4. Re:so ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The missing blocks are the people that make good posts, and then get modded down because they're not pro-piracy or anti-"M$".

    5. Re:so ? by YanceyAI · · Score: 1

      would that would make the RIAA/MPAA is EVIL Block 2 ?

      --
      Can I bum a sig?
    6. Re:so ? by Dun+Malg · · Score: 5, Funny
      So what are the missing blocks that you do not list, or is this one of those unfathomable myseries of life?

      I hadn't really thought about it, but off the top of my head:

      Block 1 - "MS bad"
      Block 2 - "Linux/OSS rulez!"
      Block 3 - "Capitalist/government Conspiracy!"
      Block 4 - "Patents/copyrights bad"
      Block 5 - "redundant jokes" (soviet russia, beowulf cluster, etc)
      Block 6 - "contrarians" (they automatically believe the opposite of the other 5 blocks)

      I suppose there are more, but those are the ones the occur to me as I write...

      --
      If a job's not worth doing, it's not worth doing right.
    7. Re:so ? by visgoth · · Score: 0, Offtopic
      Block 2: Linux good

      Block 3: In Soviet Russia Natalie Portman has hot grits for Profit!

      --
      My patience is infinite, my time is not.
    8. Re:so ? by 91degrees · · Score: 1

      So.. They're not being punished for firing a blogger. They would still be being sued had they not done so.

      Secondly, this patent causes problems for others as well. MS can simply exclude what is covered, but the people who actually use their products will be inconvenienced, as will developers of other software.

    9. Re:so ? by Dun+Malg · · Score: 1
      would that would make the RIAA/MPAA is EVIL Block 2 ?

      nah, I think that would also fall under Block 4 - "patents/copyrights bad"

      --
      If a job's not worth doing, it's not worth doing right.
    10. Re:so ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I hate to say it but you can't have both worlds. The precedent that is being set by acknowledging the Eolas patent as a valid one can detrimental to the www community. Sometimes we have to side with our enemies to do what is right.

      Here's something to think about. If you desire to limit or prohibit speech from a racist/Nazi/radical group, are you willing to give up the same fundamental freedom as they are?

    11. Re:so ? by the_mad_poster · · Score: 5, Funny

      Patents and copyrights aren't bad, the abuses of them are.

      Oh, wait. That's Block 0: the rational individual block.

      --
      Alito: A vote for Alito is a punch in the eye to put that bitch back in her place!
    12. Re:so ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the criminal who lives down the street from you gets eaten alive by a flesh-rending bacterium from Mars, you might be happy at first, but then you realize said bacterium is going to eat YOU too, as well as your rare collection of celebrity-chewed bubble gum, your pair of pet ferrets, and your new Craftsman garage door opener.

      Some people on Slashdot can't seem to comprehend the concept of treating different things differently .. I personally really wish Ebolas just "go away" on this issue and never come back.

    13. Re:so ? by Intocabile · · Score: 1

      A beowulf cluster of monolithic blocks of identically programmed robots, if you will.

    14. Re:so ? by tarquin_fim_bim · · Score: 5, Funny

      O.K. but I suggest the use of the word bloc instead, it has a more sinister conspiratorial ring to it.

    15. Re:so ? by Mattcelt · · Score: 3, Funny

      So...

      Block 0 - "Rational Individual"
      Block 1 - "MS bad"
      Block 2 - "Linux/OSS rulez!"
      Block 3 - "Capitalist/government Conspiracy!"
      Block 4 - "Patents/copyrights bad"
      Block 5 - "redundant jokes" (soviet russia, beowulf cluster, etc)
      Block 6 - "contrarians" (they automatically believe the opposite of the other 5 blocks)


      It seems that the blocks are numbered by their exponential order. Block 6 obviously has the highest population on /. And since x^0=1, it follows that there is only one rational individual here.

      Mathematical proof! I knew it!

    16. Re:so ? by SillySlashdotName · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Naw, it is not a 'Microsoft' thing, it is a 'right vs wrong' thing.

      Microsoft is wrong to use its monopoly position in desktop OSs to further its market share in other areas.

      Microsoft is wrong to fire someone for posting an innocent picture on an obscure weblog.

      Eolas is wrong to try to enforce an invalid patent.

      In soviet Russia, Natalie Portman is wrong to have a Beowulf cluster of grits for profit!

      SCO is wrong to keep smoking that stuff and not sharing...

      --
      Acts of massive stupidity are almost never covered by warranty. --me.
    17. Re:so ? by stripe · · Score: 1

      What about the we hate SCO block? Or is that an all encompassing superblock?

    18. Re:so ? by DetrimentalFiend · · Score: 2, Funny

      The only block that doesn't hate SCO is 6. Otherwise, slashdoters have put aside their differences and united to hate SCO.

    19. Re:so ? by warkda+rrior · · Score: 1

      Block 0 (of rational individuals) is thus numbered based on how many individuals it contains.

      --
      You need to install an RTFM interface.
    20. Re:so ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Block 7 - Mac Zealots
      Block 8 - Newbies

    21. Re:so ? by stonecypher · · Score: 1

      Oh, wait. That's Block 0: the rational individual block.

      Two people do not a block make.

      --
      StoneCypher is Full of BS
    22. Re:so ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is better to help the Europeans to stop the mess. When Europe gets rid of its software patents it will be easier to reverse the Us situation as well.

      FFII UK
      http://www.ffii.org.uk/

    23. Re:so ? by mirko · · Score: 1

      I am afraid they'll rather endorse these. :/

      --
      Trolling using another account since 2005.
    24. Re:so ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, even us Bloc Sixers hate SCO. We just are willing to raise the possiblity that they might win a partial victory, mainly because even the thought that Linux might not be as pure as the driven snow drives the Bloc 2 guys nuts.

    25. Re:so ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let Mr. Doyle know what you think:

      At a shell prompt type 'whois eolas.com'

      send him your thoughts.

    26. Re:so ? by aardvarkjoe · · Score: 1

      And since x^0=1, it follows that there is only one rational individual here.

      Yeah. Unfortunately, OOG_THE_CAVEMAN seems to have stopped posting.

      --

      How can we continue to believe in a just universe and freedom to eat crackers if we have no ale?
    27. Re:so ? by _xeno_ · · Score: 1
      I think you need some super-blocks, too:
      A) Gnome
      B) KDE

      Oh, and:
      I) GPL
      II) BSD

      And, of course:
      *) vi
      #) emacs

      These are important over-all groups that people in any block can belong to. These voices need to be heard! Well, actually, they don't need to be heard, but come hell or high water they will be anyway so you might as well incorporate them somehow.

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little relative jumps, all alike.
    28. Re:so ? by mpsmps · · Score: 1

      This speaks well of /. Microsoft was wrong on the firing but right on this patent. We don't just give a kneejerk reaction that something must be wrong just because Microsoft did it.

    29. Re:so ? by wkitchen · · Score: 2, Funny

      You must be bloc(k) 6.

    30. Re:so ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You forgot something:

      ^) pico

    31. Re:so ? by tarquin_fim_bim · · Score: 2, Funny

      "You must be bloc(k) 6."

      I must disagree.

    32. Re:so ? by EvilTwinSkippy · · Score: 1
      With apologies to Monty Python

      Nobody expects the Spanish Inquisition.

      It's cheif weapon is Surprise. Surprise and Fear. Scratch that lets start again...

      Nobody expects the Spanish Inquisition, its 2 chief weapons are surprise, fear ... and fanatic devotion to the Pope...

      --
      "Learning is not compulsory... neither is survival."
      --Dr.W.Edwards Deming
    33. Re:so ? by _xeno_ · · Score: 1
      I was trying to keep it to two items each, because I also left out things like WindowMaker and other "third party" choices that don't get as much support as "the big two." Besides, that rapidly becomes:

      ^a) pico
      ^b) nano

      Trust me, I've seen a pico vs nano argument before. It's not a pleasant sight. In fact, it's really quite weird...

      Of course, I could have also added in GUI vs CLI, Outlook vs Evolution, Outlook/Evolution/ThunderBird/Mail.app vs Pine, Pine vs Mutt, bash vs csh, csh vs ksh, ksh vs sh, and so on and so forth.

      I was trying to only accent the big Program Holy Wars, not the minor skirmishes. With a name like pico, it can't be too big a deal.

      Besides, someone will eventually pipe up with vi vs vim...

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little relative jumps, all alike.
    34. Re:so ? by ckaminski · · Score: 1

      You forgot Bloc 0, the Trolls.

    35. Re:so ? by ExMember · · Score: 1
      Oh, wait. That's Block 0: the rational individual block.

      Rational individuals do not act in block.

    36. Re:so ? by IM6100 · · Score: 1

      Yea, but elle rulez.

      --
      A Good Intro to NetBS
    37. Re:so ? by fireman+sam · · Score: 1

      Wouldn't that be bloc -1?

      Hmmm, guess we also need a bloc for "Me make funny, me laugh"

      --
      it is only after a long journey that you know the strength of the horse.
    38. Re:so ? by Licensed2Hack · · Score: 1

      Some smaller blocks:

      Block 7 - "BSD is dying."
      Block 8 - "BSD is not dying."

      Or do these fall under Block 5?

      Then there are the large blocks, that encompass many from all the others. I.e., the SCO SUCKS! block.

  2. When You think Microsoft is Evil by nberardi · · Score: 5, Interesting

    When you think Microsoft is evil and there is nobody lower, you look at Eols to find that they even sunk below Microsoft. Can't Microsoft just buy Eols and fire all their employees and have this nightmare be over with.

    1. Re:When You think Microsoft is Evil by bigjocker · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Microsoft has already tried to settle out of court, but Eolas' goal is to destroy IE.

      When you think Microsoft is evil and there is nobody lower, you look at Eols to find that they even sunk below Microsoft. Can't Microsoft just buy Eols and fire all their employees and have this nightmare be over with.

      Also, Eolas has only one employee, the president and CEO who's leading the suit. It's a one man operation.

      Plus: The worst case scenario would be Eolas being bought by Microsoft because the patent would live on in the hands of Microsoft. The best thing can happen is the small fish biting the big one, even if we think is unfair, but for once the big corporations need to be hit by these stupid patents for the system (read: the people that makes the decisions) to move.

      This is a Good Thing, a big player is being threatened by the stupid patent system, so there's hope now for changes to be made.

      The sad part is all those small players that have been fscked by the system; the decision makers only listen to the big fish.

      --
      Life isn't like a box of chocolates. It's more like a jar of jalapenos. What you do today, might burn your ass tomorrow.
    2. Re:When You think Microsoft is Evil by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      HAHAHA "micro$oft" is evil and sink so low, you are teh funnay 1. omg lol!!!1!1!1!!

      in-cr0wd is so cool, let's make fun of everything because everyone says it is teh suck! i am teh sheep! BAAA BAA BAABAAAAAAA

    3. Re:When You think Microsoft is Evil by John+Miles · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Plus: The worst case scenario would be Eolas being bought by Microsoft because the patent would live on in the hands of Microsoft

      How is this a worst-case scenario?

      When's the last time Microsoft proactively enforced a broad-ranging patent to the detriment of an entire industry?

      --
      Dahlmann tightly grips the knife, which he may have no idea how to use, and steps out into the plain.
    4. Re:When You think Microsoft is Evil by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, U sound liek you one of thos |337 Malaysian h@x0rx. Teh |337 Malay h@x0rz 0wnz j00.

      5555555555

      Kekekekekekekeke

    5. Re:When You think Microsoft is Evil by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Good point. Microsoft has lied, stolen, and committed fraud to the detriment of entire industries, but they've never used patents proactively. So let's go ahead and give them the bomb, they're clearly trustworthy.

    6. Re:When You think Microsoft is Evil by Tjebbe · · Score: 1

      This is a Good Thing, a big player is being threatened by the stupid patent system, so there's hope now for changes to be mad

      Actually, I don't really think it will let the average BigCorp (tm) see the light. They will probably reason like 'well, two can play that game' and see themselves justified in acquiring even more stupid patents.

    7. Re:When You think Microsoft is Evil by jimsum · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Microsoft hasn't needed to use patent law to defend their monopoly, but I bet they will if open source really starts to worry them. They are certainly using IP FUD to scare people away from using open source.

      And before you fault me for suggesting Microsoft would do this without any evidence; I am just using the same type of argument as the Microsoft apologists who say that any company would act like Microsoft, so any legal sanctions against Microsoft just rewards loser companies that couldn't compete. Either all companies are the same, and we can expect Microsoft to do what other companies have attempted with patents; or we can assume that different companies act differently, and maybe Microsoft should be reigned-in a little. I am not willing to give Microsoft any brownie points for not abusing patents.

      --
      -- Pot is safer than Beer
    8. Re:When You think Microsoft is Evil by GreyyGuy · · Score: 1

      If you keep an eye on their patent portfolio, you'll find that while they haven't used it, they have a lot in there. If their market share starts goign down significantly, do you expect them to not use it? A while ago there were articles about how they patented the Windows authentication process pretty much specifically so they could go after Samba if they need/want to.

    9. Re:When You think Microsoft is Evil by Darren+Winsper · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I don't know, why don't you ask the author of Virtualdub?

    10. Re:When You think Microsoft is Evil by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Quoth the NYTimes, "The lawyers representing Eolas and Mr. Doyle could not be reached for comment yesterday evening."

      Actual reporter's scribbles, "The number does ring through to the answering machine but all I get is what sounds like waves crashing and the odd seagull. Point of research: Would they have to give back the $521M."

    11. Re:When You think Microsoft is Evil by Zork+the+Almighty · · Score: 1

      Can't Microsoft just buy Eols and fire all their employees and have this nightmare be over with.

      By absorbing many small, evil companies, Microsoft becomes more evil.

      --

      In Soviet America the banks rob you!
    12. Re:When You think Microsoft is Evil by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Huh? There are Microsoft appologists on Slahsdot? I guess I wouldn't know since I don't read at -1.

    13. Re:When You think Microsoft is Evil by __past__ · · Score: 1
      Not to defend Microsoft or anything, but try finding any huge IT company that doesn't hold any patents. AFAIK, the biggest patent portfolio is that of IBM, who don't seem to get a lot of flak for it, probably only because they realized that using code written by others under the GPL is good for them. Hell, even Donald Knuth held a software patent (which has expired), and he is the first to tell you how ridiculous they are.

      The whole patent system is insane, especially regarding software patents. Companies have to live with that situation, and the only way to survive for them is to grab as many patens as they can, until sanity is restored on a broader scale. This really isn't something to bash Microsoft for.

    14. Re:When You think Microsoft is Evil by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Programming can be fun again. Film at 11. [cliki.net]

      Grow up kid, LISP is not something you want put your reputation on. It is still,
      after all these years, the same crowd of nutcases running around with empty promisses.
      They had *millions* of dollars, and DARPA was all ears for them, but instead of
      coming up with a solution, they ran out and stabbed each other in the back.
      MacLachlan went one way, Pittman to Europe, and Susman and his crew another. The
      crimes commited against the lively community of Interlisp was nothing short of
      ethnic cleansing.

      My road to LISP is paved with bitter disappointments, and I am sure Tilton wont like
      to hear it. Nowadays, Guido's Python is just good enough.

    15. Re:When You think Microsoft is Evil by sharkey · · Score: 1
      When you think Microsoft is evil and there is nobody lower...

      Just visit Slashdot and look for stories about SCO, Rambus, the **AA or DMA.

      --

      --
      "Outlook not so good." That magic 8-ball knows everything! I'll ask about Exchange Server next.
    16. Re:When You think Microsoft is Evil by nberardi · · Score: 1

      So it's sort of like evil through osmosis.

  3. Oh, THAT eolas patent by JUSTONEMORELATTE · · Score: 2, Informative

    In case you're saying "Eolas? Wasn't he in Lord of the Rings or something?"
    Here's a little background reading.

    --

    1. Re:Oh, THAT eolas patent by bcolflesh · · Score: 4, Funny

      One patent to rule them all, one patent to find them, one patent to bring them all and in the darkness bind them.

    2. Re:Oh, THAT eolas patent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nope that was Eomer and Eowyn,

      Eolas was in Hercules the Legendary Journey's. The short blond comedic relief. My guess these are the alternate universe versions :)

    3. Re:Oh, THAT eolas patent by PaschalNee · · Score: 2, Informative

      The head honcho in Eolas is of Irish descent.
      'Eolas' is the Irish word for 'Knowledge'.


      http://www.funet.fi/~magi/opinnot/gaelic/irish-dic .html

    4. Re:Oh, THAT eolas patent by tsetem · · Score: 1

      No no, he was in the Hercules series... Err, that was "Iolaus"... Hmmm.

    5. Re:Oh, THAT eolas patent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      It's clearly a conspiracy. What letters are missing in the company name? Exactly! Now we know who's behind the LG drive malfunctions!

      ...yeah, I _am_ wearing a tinfoil hat, what does that have to do with anything?

    6. Re:Oh, THAT eolas patent by jmason · · Score: 1

      Yeah -- and I, as an Irishman, am well ashamed of that.

    7. Re:Oh, THAT eolas patent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Son of Eorlingas.

  4. This is absurd by Arker · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There should be no need for prior art. The very idea that you can patent the idea of putting something that used to appear in a new window embedded in the original window instead is just absurd beyond belief. A wonderful example of what nonsense the entire idea of 'intellectual property' is.

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    1. Re:This is absurd by RoundSparrow · · Score: 1

      I agree with your basic idea... but...

      Let's say you have a standard screwdriver, wher eyou have to hold the screw with your other hand when you start to screw it into wood.

      Then someone takes this "prior art" and adds a device that holds the screw for you...

      Can't they patent the new device? Doesn't Sears do this all the time with some new variation of an old tool (screwdriver)?

    2. Re:This is absurd by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, that is exactly what patents were for. Improvements to existing products (not simply ideas) that are novel, not obvious, and useful. Most of those terms do not apply to the Eolas patent, which like most bogus US patents, amounts to a government-subsidized land grab on an entire field of research and development.

      Somebody has to stop the assclowns at the USPTO. If it's Microsoft, fine. The enemy of my enemy is my friend.

    3. Re:This is absurd by mcmonkey · · Score: 2, Funny
      There should be no need for prior art. The very idea that you can have a site where the same wankers post about how much linux rulez and BSD is dead and l33t k1dd13s sux0rz and then mod themselves 'insightful' or 'funny' and then pat themselves on the back on how great that mod was with a meta-mod is just absurd beyond belief. A wonderful example of what nonsense the entire idea of 'world wide web' is.

      One bad idea doesn't mean all ideas are bad.

    4. Re:This is absurd by arkanes · · Score: 1

      I'd agree that they could. The difference here is that this is a software patent - this isn't an IMPLEMENTATION of embedding a plugin. It's a patent on the concept of embedding a plugin. There's nothing in the patent about the technical details involved in the implementation, which, especially in this case, are much more difficult to solve than coming up with the idea (which, as listed in the patent is basically "instead of launching a helper app for this mime type, select a plugin instead and run that").

    5. Re:This is absurd by saddino · · Score: 2, Informative

      The very idea that you can patent the idea of putting something that used to appear in a new window embedded in the original window instead is just absurd beyond belief.

      You're right -- that notion is absurd -- but if you'd actually bother to read the patent, you'd notice that your gross oversimplification isn't anywhere close to what Eolas actually claims.

      Valid roof of prior art is the only way to defeat this patent.

    6. Re:This is absurd by Arker · · Score: 1

      Can't they patent the new device? Doesn't Sears do this all the time with some new variation of an old tool (screwdriver)?

      Yes, they can. That's stupid too. It's not quite as bad, however, because the patents in those cases are very narrow, covering only a very specific implementation of the idea - someone else can come along and do the same thing in a slightly different way and be legally alright. The equivalent in a software patent might be to allow patenting a particular section of code, but that would be superfluous since copyright has that affect already. Actually, come to think of it, that would be an improvement over current copyright laws, because it would require publication of the code at least. On the other hand, it would still be worse in a different way, because you can infringe a patent through independent invention, but copyright doesn't work that way.

      --
      =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
      Friends don't let friends enable ecmascript.
    7. Re:This is absurd by NullProg · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I don't agree with your analogy.
      This patent is the equivalent of everyone using a device to hold the screw, but up until now it has only been used on wood.
      Now Eolas comes along and patents the idea of using the screw holding device for use on metal materials.

      Same tool, different media, obvious implementation.
      Enjoy,

      --
      It's just the normal noises in here.
    8. Re:This is absurd by kansas1051 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I will certainly not contend that the patent in question should not have been granted, but your argument is equally as absurd as the Eolas patent. I remember (from research) the Examiners to U.S. Patent 821,393 said almost the exact thing in regard to its claims, and the '393 patent is probably the most important US patent ever issued. Not all intellectual property is the Eolas flavor, and only someone who is entirely ignorant on the subject would contend as much. The USPTO examiners do a difficult job and are correct 99% of the time, and the remaining 1% errors are corrected in litigation by competent and educated (in science, engineering, or compsci) lawyers.

    9. Re:This is absurd by Arker · · Score: 1

      Not all intellectual property is the Eolas flavor, and only someone who is entirely ignorant on the subject would contend as much.

      And I didn't say anything of the sort. I said it's a wonderful example. Do you know what an example is? It's a single datapoint that can be used to illustrate a broader point. It's not a syllogism or any other sort of proof, it's an example.

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    10. Re:This is absurd by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > It's a patent on the concept of embedding a plugin.
      True

      > There's nothing in the patent about the technical details involved in the implementation

      Wrong. The patent has a lot of supporting details regarding an implementation using Mosaic and the EMBED tag. This implementation is virtually identical to the one that's currently used in Mozilla.

      While I agree that this patent is bullshit, it's also clear that someone (probably Netscape) copied this guy's idea down to the last detail. I'm not sure if this was done maliciously and/or because the guy also showed his idea to the W3C.

    11. Re:This is absurd by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      we're talking about software, which means the differences are even smalelr tahn you imagine.


      In Windows and XWindows, a widget is a window without the border. So instead of displaying something in a new window with a border, you display it as a borderless subwindow within the main window.


      Certainly a lot less novel than building an attachment to your screwdriver that holds the screw for you.

    12. Re:This is absurd by Arker · · Score: 1

      While I agree that this patent is bullshit, it's also clear that someone (probably Netscape) copied this guy's idea down to the last detail. I'm not sure if this was done maliciously and/or because the guy also showed his idea to the W3C.

      I don't think that's clear at all. It could be that they copied him, it could be that he copied them, it could be that EMBED is a pretty obvious keyword for this sort of thing, and using a tag in that way in the context of HTML to indicate plugin content is a pretty obvious idea that a lot of people were having at that time.

      --
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      Friends don't let friends enable ecmascript.
    13. Re:This is absurd by Dalroth · · Score: 1

      Correct 99% of the time my ass. Nobody is right 99% of the time. Even Einstein was wrong, look at all the flaws found in his theories every day. If they're correct 99% of the time, then I dare you to show us some statistics AND their sources backing this claim up.

    14. Re:This is absurd by Arker · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You're right -- that notion is absurd -- but if you'd actually bother to read the patent, you'd notice that your gross oversimplification isn't anywhere close to what Eolas actually claims.

      I've read it. I stand by my characterisation. I encourage anyone that's wondering to read it themselves, and preserved the link in the quoted text above to encourage just that. It covers what I said, along with a few extremely general and obvious ideas such as letting the client and the server talk to each other as the content is displayed. If you think there is something more there please feel free to quote the part in question.

      --
      =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
      Friends don't let friends enable ecmascript.
    15. Re:This is absurd by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      "There should be no need for prior art. ...

      You miss the whole idea behind a showing of prior art. It is to provide an objective measure of the state of the art at the time the patent application is filed. Such evidence is meant to prevent the patent examiner from rejecting an application (or issuing a patent) on grounds that are purely subjective to the examiner (and hence unreviewable), as well as to provide the public with the yardstick against which the patent claims were measured. In other words, the examiner must evaluate the state of the art at the time in light of the evidence, not some personal "feeling".

    16. Re:This is absurd by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The difference is one is real property, the other, intellectual property. There is a huge difference.

      Intellectual property is only property because copyright law makes it property. Otherwise it's just information, freely in the public domain. Copyright was created to give information value in a way that an author can recoup the cost of creation.

      You spend $50 million dollars to make a movie and in the end all you have is a single, master DVD. What happens if that's spread around kazaa for free? Why would you make the movie in the first place? It's copyright that makes it possible to have pieces of information with high cost of entry. Copyright, in essence, is supposed to give the author a temporary loan from the public domain so that in the end the public domain benefits from high quality works.

      By patenting intellectual property, the original intent of copyright is lost. Copyright was intended to foster great pieces of information for all to benefit from.

      Patenting copyrighted work is the equavalent of making an idea illegal to everyone but the patent holder. How does THAT foster anything? Oh wait, I forget it helps politians and lobbyist groups.

      -------
      My government does not represent me.

    17. Re:This is absurd by Bendebecker · · Score: 1

      Didn't they do that in Unix with virtual terminals? Things that woudl appear on one terminal could be redirected to appear in the current terminal...

      --
      There's a growing sense that even if The Future comes,
      most of us won't be able to afford it.
      -- Lemmy
    18. Re:This is absurd by kansas1051 · · Score: 1

      As of yesterday, the USPTO has issued 6,637,033 patents. In the last five years, it has issued one million patents. AIPLA statistics , see http://www.aipla.org, indicate that in this time period, less that one thousand cases have been initiated (filed in federal court) regarding patent infringement. Thats under 1%. Of course there are some patents that issue that never get litigated, but then they dont have any effect on anyone.

    19. Re:This is absurd by SillySlashdotName · · Score: 1

      One of the links showing (perporting to show?) prior art from as much as 18 months before the filing of the patent application shows the being used.

      [embed type="application/eqn"]2 pi int sin (omega t)dt [/embed] (original used the angle brackets instead of [] correctly, /. won't allow the original example to print - the browser interprets it.)

      Looks to me like BOTH Nescape AND Eolas copied from that earlier source - gee where have we heard that *cough*SCO,Linux*cough* before?

      --
      Acts of massive stupidity are almost never covered by warranty. --me.
    20. Re:This is absurd by agallagh42 · · Score: 1

      In case anyone out there doesn't know what patent 821,393 is for, it was filed March 23, 1903, and it was granted on May 22, 1906 to O. & W. Wright. I'm sure you can figure out now what the device in question is...

      --
      Carpe Cerevisi - Seize the Beer
    21. Re:This is absurd by cduffy · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Of course there are some patents that issue that never get litigated, but then they dont have any effect on anyone.

      Bullshit.

      Someone tells me I'm infringing patent $FOO in a piece of Free Software I'm writing -- even if I think the patent was improperly granted, I don't have the money to litigate, so I remove the infringing functionality -- or, if that functionality is core, withdraw my program.

      (Actually, that applies not just to Free Software -- most of the proprietary software development I'm involved in also has no budget allowance for litigation).

      I'd call that a pretty damned chilling effect. Even worse is the threat of unintentional infringement -- that a solution I just happened to come up with for some problem just happens to be the same solution someone else came up with. That's something the standard of "obvious to someone trained in the art" is supposed to prevent, but the vast number of visibly obvious software patents out there puts the lie to that claim. As a small software developer, therefore, someone with a huge patent portfolio (and there are plenty of such entities) could almost certainly find some patent of theirs I've unknowingly infringed on.

      My best defense for this, of course, would be to patent my own ideas that I recognize as non-obvious and innovative (see the cscvs changeset algamation algorithm), but that's simply too expensive -- the process of doing the relevant research and paying the costs involved in filing for patents could easily double or triple my development costs, and still leaves me vulnerable to patents on ideas I've incorporated by organizations which have no interest in cross-licensing from my far smaller portfolio.

    22. Re:This is absurd by cpt+kangarooski · · Score: 1

      Well, there are only so many ways you can not grant a patent.

      What's alleged seems to be that it is not novel, i.e. someone already did it.

      You seem to be saying that it is not obvious, i.e. someone skilled in the art would've known that it was possible, might be desirable, and that there might be some existing but not perfectly on-point prior art that could be combined (and which would be likely to be combined) to result in the claimed invention. This does have to all be proven, you know.

      I doubt you claim that it's not useful, or that this isn't patentable subject matter at all.

      The way the patent statute works is that patents ARE granted, unless one of a host of narrow exceptions to that rule is satisfied. Something being absurd doesn't work at present.

      Perhaps there's a good reason to change the law, but for the moment I think we're stuck with having to make better arguments than mere absurdity.

      --
      -- This and all my posts are in the public domain. I am a lawyer. I am not your lawyer, and this is not legal advice.
    23. Re:This is absurd by cpt+kangarooski · · Score: 1

      Congratulations!

      For throwing around terminology in such an odd manner, you have successfully posted one of the most bizarre things I've ever seen on Slashdot.

      Don't take this as indicating that I'm necessarily hostile to your position -- whatever the hell it is, I don't know -- just that you're communicating it _really_ badly, and that you often make no sense in your post.

      Rephrase it, and I might agree.

      --
      -- This and all my posts are in the public domain. I am a lawyer. I am not your lawyer, and this is not legal advice.
    24. Re:This is absurd by Dalroth · · Score: 1

      That still fails to prove that these patents were genuine and the patent office isn't making mistakes. Just because they aren't challenged doesn't mean they aren't wrong, just like having a patent also doesn't mean that you must enforce it!

      All this says is that less than 1% are worth the hassle of challenging in court. It doesn't say that >99% are truly legitimate.

      Bryan

    25. Re:This is absurd by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If parent is insightful, I'm the latest winner of the Powerball lottery. And since I don't work in a school cafeteria.... One bad patent (and it's bad for reasons other than the ones parent comment is claiming) does not mean that IP as a whole is bad. Without IP, there would be no GPL. Without IP, I can change my handle to Arker, copy all of his postings, and tell all of his jokes. IP is a necessity. But we need to 1. come up with new categories of IP that are better designed for the kind of software market we want, one where innovation is protected on both sides of the equation, and get patent examiners who are capable of understanding what is and is not an innovation worthy of protection.

    26. Re:This is absurd by Arker · · Score: 1

      It's funny you read so much into what I said.

      I said this thing is absurd, and a good example to show people what nonsense 'IP' is. I also said that there should be no need to show prior art to try stop this. I didn't say any of the things you seem to have read into it.

      As a matter of fact, now that you 'asked', I'm extremely skeptical of the notion that anything should be 'patentable subject matter', and even moreso of the notion that software in particular should be such.

      --
      =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
      Friends don't let friends enable ecmascript.
    27. Re:This is absurd by Alsee · · Score: 1

      Valid roof of prior art is the only way to defeat this patent.

      I certainly agree that in the short term the easiest way to defeat it is through prior art, but that is not the only way.

      We can also defeat it by returning to the original patent system. Under US law not-so-long-ago you could not legally get a patent on math, algorithms, and software. That rule should never have been circumvented. Software patents should never have been granted, and those that have been granted need to be voided. At least the EU has refused to remove their rule against patents on math, algorithms, and software.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    28. Re:This is absurd by cpt+kangarooski · · Score: 1

      Well, I apologize if I read something into your argument that wasn't present.

      Would it be correct to say then, that you seem to feel that we just shouldn't have patents at all, or at least have leanings in that direction?

      --
      -- This and all my posts are in the public domain. I am a lawyer. I am not your lawyer, and this is not legal advice.
    29. Re:This is absurd by HiThere · · Score: 1

      Prior art is a safer defense than "obvious to those skilled in the art", because those making the judgements aren't "skilled in the art".

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
  5. Hmm. by DrEldarion · · Score: 1

    Didn't Microsoft already pay Eolas "damages"? What would happen if the patent did get revoked? Would MS get their money back?

    1. Re:Hmm. by Zathrus · · Score: 2, Insightful

      What would happen if the patent did get revoked? Would MS get their money back?

      What, you think that MS just wrote out a check for half a billion dollars as they walked out of the court room?

      The ruling has been appealed. If the patent was revoked then the appellate court would simply reverse the ruling on the basis of the patent being invalid and MS wouldn't have to cough up a nickel (except to their lawyers).

    2. Re:Hmm. by DrEldarion · · Score: 1

      For some reason I thought I had read that the ruling couldn't be appealed. I guess not, I must be on crack. Thanks.

    3. Re:Hmm. by simcop2387 · · Score: 0

      (except to their lawyers).

      I always thought large corporations paid a mainly flat fee to a firm so that there wouldn't be as many unexpected legal fee's to deal with

    4. Re:Hmm. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Lawyers at large firms almost NEVER work for flat fees, except in a dew cases where they can easily estimate the amount of work required for a particular matter (like filing securities reports or trademark/copyright applications). No lawyer I know would ever work on a flat fee on a litigation because they don't want to eat the unexpected fees/time that might occur.

    5. Re:Hmm. by bluGill · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Most large firms have a few lawyers on staff that are paid a flat amount in exactly the same way as a staff programmer or assembly line worker is paid. When legal matters get too complex for staff lawyers, the amount of work is greater than they can handle, or additional expertise is needed outside lawyers will be obtained.

      Each company is different. In general [large enough] a company can expect at any given time to have several lawsuits underway, as such it is to their advantage to have a few laywers on staff to handle those cases, in addition to those providing legal advice for other matters (contract review, policy, tax issues, copyrights, patent filing, and so on). However since each lawsuit is different, and the company will often pick up extra lawyers who know one particular area of law that is unneeded for most cases, to handle specific cases.

    6. Re:Hmm. by TexVex · · Score: 1
      ...outside lawyers will be obtained
      Man, I wish lawyers were a commodity that could be obtained. Unfortunately right now we have to retain them, often at ridiculously high hourly rates.

      That nitpick aside, good post. :)
      --
      Fun with Anagarams! LADS HOST, SHALT DOS. HAS DOLTS. AD SLOTHS, HATS SOLD. ASS HO, LTD.
    7. Re:Hmm. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      we should outsource those fuckers (lawyers) to india. just think the indian lawyers could argue about it in india while we actually get shit done. this we way we all make out. whiel we're at, we could outsource the patent office too. speaking of patents, I'm applying for a patent on the process of applying for a patent.

    8. Re:Hmm. by Bendebecker · · Score: 1

      My understanding is the ruling couldn't be appealed by M$ but it can be rendered null and void by a ruling in another case that affects the patent itself. In other words, if the patent is revoked, all the cases that dealt with the upholding of that patent must be re-examined (read 'undone'). In computer science terms we would say that even if the outcome resolution of the interaction between two processes is terminated, the effects of that resoution would have to be re-examined if one of those processes(the patent) was suddenly discovered to have been executing incorrectly.

      --
      There's a growing sense that even if The Future comes,
      most of us won't be able to afford it.
      -- Lemmy
    9. Re:Hmm. by DrEldarion · · Score: 1

      Got it, thanks. Compsci talk is so much easier to understand than legalspeak.

  6. they claim prior art from MS! by an_mo · · Score: 5, Interesting
    from the nyt:
    In the trial, Microsoft did claim that there was prior art that undermined the claims of the Eolas patent. But in its filing, the Web consortium offers different examples including pre-Internet era software like Write, a word-processing program included with the Windows 3.1 operating system, which included software for summoning and displaying other programs. That, the standards group said, is the same basic function and idea described in the Eolas patent.


    It is incredible that MS would forget to use prior art of their own in their own lawsuit!
    1. Re:they claim prior art from MS! by thenextpresident · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Warning: Conspiracy Theory Below

      That is assuming MS wanted to win the case. They could have easily won the case if they wanted. However, by loosing the case, they simply pave the way for more MS insurance on the browser market. Suddenly, commercial vendors releasing browsers must comply. This means that when a user switches, they will blame the browser rather than MS, which will provide a MS-only solution to the problem.

      The other issue is that the next iteration of Windows wouldn't use plugins but would rather embed the browser with the OS (even more so) and so Windows Media player isn't a plugin as much as IE and MP are practically the same.

      Of course, these are all the conspiracy theories (and there are many more...), and I don't necessarily believe it.

      --
      Jason Lotito
    2. Re:they claim prior art from MS! by davmct · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Actually, the judge prevented Microsoft from presenting evidence of the prior-art, judging that it wasn't "relevent". Microsoft is appealing the ruling based on this information.

    3. Re:they claim prior art from MS! by zurab · · Score: 1
      That is assuming MS wanted to win the case. They could have easily won the case if they wanted.


      Yeah, it's a conspiracy theory, but I'm not sure what you mean by they could have easily won. If you read the details of the case, they - Microsoft - were not allowed to present any prior art evidence in front of the jury (the judge determined it would be too "prejudicial"). That's why they lost. But then Microsoft didn't just hand over cash, they appealed to be able to present prior art evidence that they were denied in the original trial.

      Unless you claim that there's some grand conspiracy going on that Microsoft actually appealed to have the ruling certified by a higher court, while deliberately presenting evidence in a "bad" manner, while (again) pushing underground negotiations to acquire Eolas after the lawsuit has ended, while (again) secretly funding Eolas or paying for its lawyers to prolong and iron out the outcome.

      But all this is up there with landing on the moon conspiracy thing. It's just too unrealistic.
  7. Prior art by Sir+Haxa1ot · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Some sources tell me that Microsoft will appeal Eolas case by bringing up Perry Pei-Yuan Wei, a Berkeley student that in 1991 created a browser called Viola capable of rendering the built-in plugged-in applications, later to be knows as applets.

    Here's an example of the chess app being used in Viola in 1991, which questions Eolas patent.

    1. Re:Prior art by batura · · Score: 1

      Great, just wait for Perry Pei-Yuan Wei to nail MS!

    2. Re:Prior art by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      YHBT. YHL. HAND.

  8. Re:Eolas doesn't mind other software by the+man+with+the+pla · · Score: 2, Insightful

    >Eolas have no problems with open source and W3C compliant commercial browsers.

    For now... What happens when a few years down the road, the guy running Eolas decides he wants a new jet or yacht? Maybe he just wants to see how much he can get his net worth up to. Who knows what he's planning or thinking.

    He's already shown his stance on IP patents, I have no doubts that suing other browser companies is not that far off, regardless of what he says.

    --
    The linux hacker
  9. Lets show our support for this by arvindn · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Is there an official forum through which we can show our support for W3C's action? Just like "if you don't believe in free speech for you enemies, you don't believe in it at all", the real test of whether we believe that software patents shouldn't exist is when it affects not us but those whom we despise (in this case MS).

    For example, the mozilla foundation in its official statement on the issue says nothing to condemn the Eolas patent, but instead has some content free statements like "The Eolas matter highlights the degree to which web browser software is critical to the user experience of the web.". I don't think this is the right thing to do. Getting all up in arms about say the gif patent and pretending you didn't notice when MS is hit is not good. So let us speak with one voice, and show our support for W3C.

    1. Re:Lets show our support for this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Software patents should exist though. Not for an algorithm or anything, but if I write a completely new program the likes of which has never been seen before, why shouldn't it be patentable???

    2. Re:Lets show our support for this by Quintin+Stone · · Score: 2, Informative

      Because it's already protected by copyright. If you're not patenting the algorithm, then what the hell are you patenting?

      --

      "Prejudice is wrong; you should hate everyone the same."

  10. How is Eolas evil? by TheConfusedOne · · Score: 4, Insightful

    While the patent in question is questionable at best, how is Eolas evil? They filed for and were given a patent. They have now successfully defended that patent against an infringer.

    The fact that said infringer is huge and has decided to unilaterally shaft the Web in order to avoid paying licensing fees has nothing to do with the inherent goodness or evilness of Eolas.

    BTW, Eolas is privately owned with only one employee. MS can't buy it unless Eolas agrees to being bought. Also, if MS were to buy Eolas you think they'd just suddenly go and license that patent to everyone out of the goodness of their heart?

    --
    --- I wish I could hear the soundtrack to my life. That way I'd know when to duck.
    1. Re:How is Eolas evil? by ScottKin · · Score: 0, Troll
      BTW, Eolas is privately owned with only one employee. MS can't buy it unless Eolas agrees to being bought. Also, if MS were to buy Eolas you think they'd just suddenly go and license that patent to everyone out of the goodness of their heart?

      Isn't IE free (not as in "beer" but as in "money")?

      Does Microsoft charge for including IE-specific objects in your HTML code?

      You truely are Confused.

      ScottKin

      --
      I don't give a rat's behind about "karma" here or anywhere else. Don't like what I have to say here? Deal with it!
    2. Re:How is Eolas evil? by YanceyAI · · Score: 1

      Not sure, but I thought the point was that then we would all be forced to use IE to view the Web.

      --
      Can I bum a sig?
    3. Re:How is Eolas evil? by mark_lybarger · · Score: 1

      free as in money? that's debatable. using ie specific objects in an application isn't illegal, but neither is using any other ms specific objects that i know of. what is illegal, from my impression, is when a software developer distributes the needed ie controls w/o consent of microsoft. that's not free as in money to me. you have to spend time and money to get approval for your distribution.

      i guess it's exactly the same as with sun's jdk. they just don't let anyone distribute their jdk, you have to go to java.sun.com and click through some silly agreement, or be a partner of theirs.

    4. Re:How is Eolas evil? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Man, you hit the nail on the head.

      What? a patent is valid unless it's claimed technology experiences widespread adoption?

      That patent is ok because no-one infringes it but this patent is evil because every one uses it so that they might have to readjust or pay licenses.

      This other patent was good until everyone implemented the technology, now its bad.

      You would think that anyone with two last names would be smart enough to realize this simple concept:

      The PTO by law is not supposed to give rats deewiddle about the commercial impact in judging a patent's validity.

      1. The patent could very well be trash.

      2. I applaud this organization for bringing forth the issue under section 301.

      3. The only thing in this letter that the PTO will consider relevant (and rightly so) are the two paragraphs describing the potential invalidity of the patent.

      The rest is just filler for the great unwashed /. lefties to whine on about.

    5. Re:How is Eolas evil? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "free as in beer" (as if there was free beer) means free as in 0 cost.
      "free as in speech" means telemarketers, nazis, child pornography and GPL.

    6. Re:How is Eolas evil? by corbettw · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Actually, IE is free as in lunch. As in, there ain't no such thing as a free lunch.

      To use IE, you have to use Windows. Windows costs money. Ergo, IE costs money (since it's part of the OS, and you cannot get the two seperately). The cost of it is hidden, just like the cost of the free lunch is hidden within the cost of the beers you buy to assuage your sudden thirst, brought on by the extra salt in your free sandwiche and free chips.

      --
      God invented whiskey so the Irish would not rule the world.
    7. Re:How is Eolas evil? by ynohoo · · Score: 1

      "free as in beer" is the same as "free as in money", silly.

      It is not the same as "free as in not a slave". Where IE falls in all this I leave as an excercise for the reader...

    8. Re:How is Eolas evil? by RocketSHE · · Score: 2, Informative

      >not as in "beer" but as in "money"

      As I see it, "as in beer" and "as in money" are the same thing. After all, money can be exchanged for beer, so "as in beer, but not as in money" doesn't make sense to me.

      The two types of "free" are generally refered to as 1) free as in beer (gratis - free of charge, freebie) and 2) free as in speech (libre - liberty, freedom). As far as software goes, free-as-in-beer refers to the purchase price and free-as-in-speech refers to what you can (legally) do with it after you own it - for example, read its source, copy it, change it, give it away, sell it, and so on.

      --
      ~==>RocketSHE
    9. Re:How is Eolas evil? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      From the simpsons:

      Homer: Awww ... 20 dollars!? I wanted a peanut.
      Homer's brain: 20 dollars can buy many peanuts!
      Homer: Explain how.
      Homer's brain: Money can be exchanged for goods and services.
      Homer: Woo hoo!

    10. Re:How is Eolas evil? by Feztaa · · Score: 1

      While the patent in question is questionable at best, how is Eolas evil? They filed for and were given a patent. They have now successfully defended that patent against an infringer.

      The patent is obvious, and it's only being selectively enforced. What happens when Eolas goes after Mozilla, or Apple (Safari), or Opera, etc?

      Also, if MS were to buy Eolas you think they'd just suddenly go and license that patent to everyone out of the goodness of their heart?

      I agree with you on that one. The only thing worse than Eolas owning this patent would be Microsoft owning this patent. They'd use it, like they use their marketing clout, to destroy the competition without actually bothering to develop a technically superior product.

    11. Re:How is Eolas evil? by sean.peters · · Score: 1
      To use IE, you have to use Windows.

      Unless, of course, you use a Mac.

      Sean

    12. Re:How is Eolas evil? by Snowdrake · · Score: 1

      Actually, if you read the section 301 filing, there is very little discussion of the commercial impact and lots on the prior art (the Mosaic browser and two publications on HTML+), all of which appeared well before (>1 year) the filing date of Eolas' patent. Sure, there's little question that the reason W3C is fighting is because Eolas v. Microsoft stands to throw the Web back by ten years, but it doesn't change the fact that they seem to have valid prior art. Since the vast majority of really harmful software patent issues lately seem to be over chicken/egg issues like this, it strikes me as all to the good to fight this one in order to set a precedent that might help in cleaning up some of the other really ugly software patents and either shoring up the rules or tightening the review process.

    13. Re:How is Eolas evil? by IM6100 · · Score: 1

      Microsoft has a long history of 'defensive' patents. They patent things and then don't 'enforce' the patents against other entities. They've done this a lot, so your suppostion just makes you look like a zealot without a basis for your comment.

      --
      A Good Intro to NetBS
    14. Re:How is Eolas evil? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, something has to be done. . .if this patent is removed because of so called "prior art" what will happen to the Amazon one-click patent and (gasp) that Australian wheel patent. Something must surely be done to protect the universal human right to bogus patents.

    15. Re:How is Eolas evil? by Precipitous · · Score: 1

      Reading the article will show you that if not evil, they are at least unscrupulously and avaricious:
      1. W3C roundly trounces their patent claim. Mozaic had most of the claims of their patent. Proposed internet specifications described the rest.
      2. Eola thus claimed a patent for technology already widely in use, and nearly standardized.
      It appears unlikely that web developers of the day would be unaware of the technology and standards - which leads to the conclusion that they did so knowingly. If so, unscrupulous and greedy.
      I found the prior art filing most entertaining: http://www.w3.org/2003/10/301-filing.html
      If you are in a hurry, scan down to "Table I", which compares patent claims to to acknowledged and newly cited prior art.

      --
      My motto: "A cat is no trade for integrity."
    16. Re:How is Eolas evil? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This pretty much shows how questionable Michael Doyle's integrity really is and goes towards his evilness when he knew of the prior art and still filed for the patent.

  11. Yes, they did. by AlgoRhythm · · Score: 1

    From the second paragraph of the filing to the USPTO director's office:

    "While we understand that the submitted prior art was introduced during the course of the recent trial proceedings, the issue of whether it renders the '906 patent invalid was never considered."

    Um, RTFF?

  12. It's funny how... by mengel · · Score: 2, Insightful
    The readership is confused.
    Microsoft bad.
    Software patents bad.
    Poetic Justice?!?

    Remember, it could just as easily have been the Mozilla or Konquerer developers being sued, (legally speaking), in which case the folks in this forum would be all up in arms about it and supporting the W3C.

    --
    - "History shows again and again how nature points out the folly of men" -- Blue Oyster Cult, 'Godzilla'
    1. Re:It's funny how... by edwdig · · Score: 1

      Microsoft bad - probably almost everyone on Slashdot will agree to that.

      Software patents bad - that's a mixed bag, but yes, the people who think they're bad speak up much more. Pretty much everyone agrees that the US Patent Office issues way too many software patents that it shouldn't - either because they're obvious, or because there's prior art. A lot of people here seem to think that automatically makes all patents bad. There's also the crowd that thinks that because something is obvious now, of course it had to be 10 years ago when the patent was originally filed. That's often not the case.

      Considering how many companies MS has driven out of business over the years due to either illegal or dirty tactics, I'm all for any means of hurting them.

    2. Re:It's funny how... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Legally speaking yes, but practically speaking no. The
      point of the lawsuit was to extract large amounts of
      money. Neither Mozilla nor Konqueror are really sensible
      targets for that purpose.

    3. Re:It's funny how... by Bendebecker · · Score: 1

      I think it can be understood this way: just because I don't we don't liek north korea doesn't mean we will nuke the whole owrld just to get rid of them. Same here. Just becuase IE is bad doesn't mean we will nuke the whole web to get rid of it.

      --
      There's a growing sense that even if The Future comes,
      most of us won't be able to afford it.
      -- Lemmy
    4. Re:It's funny how... by mengel · · Score: 1
      I'm all for any means of hurting them.
      I'd much prefer means that are reasonable, and don't hurt everyone else, as well. For example, nuking Redmond to get rid of Microsoft is a bad way to solve the problem. Similarly a patent that makes every web browser much less useful just to hurt Microsoft loses.

      Personally, I think having handed out patents for arbitrarily programmable computing devices, handing out more patents for using those devices with a particular set of programming is silly. It's just like letting someone patent setting their washing machine on "Cold Cold" to save hot water bills.

      --
      - "History shows again and again how nature points out the folly of men" -- Blue Oyster Cult, 'Godzilla'
    5. Re:It's funny how... by glwtta · · Score: 1
      in which case the folks in this forum would be all up in arms about it and supporting the W3C.

      Um, we are - seems to me like the postership is confused, in this case.

      --
      sic transit gloria mundi
    6. Re:It's funny how... by ls+-lR · · Score: 1

      The only ones confused are those operating at the mindset of a 6-year old.

      Microsoft has done some bad things WRT to its Windows monopoly. That doesn't mean that they should automatically lose this case, which has nothing to do with their prior questionable acts and everything to do with ANOTHER sleazy company trying to bend them over a chair. Those of us that have a mindset more sophisticated than the linux fanboy "MS bad! snort!" have no problems at all with this supposed conflict of interests.

  13. Ridiculous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Without "intellectual property," friend, you'd be reading this article on a soot-darkened cave wall.

    Stupid patents are not arguments against IP in general. They are arguments against stupid patents. The USPTO is an institution that has repeatedly proven itself incompatible with the notion of common sense. No one -- except lawyers -- would miss the US patent system if it were abolished overnight. But you're throwing out the baby, bathtub, and plumbing with the bathwater.

    1. Re:Ridiculous by Arker · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Without "intellectual property," friend, you'd be reading this article on a soot-darkened cave wall.

      Nonsense. 'Intellectual property' is a very, very recent invention. It was a radical new idea in the 1700s, ignored by most nations, including many of the more prosperous ones, and where it did exist it had a much milder form than today. What we call 'IP' today really hasn't existed until just a few years ago. I suppose we were all cave dwellers before that? Bull.

      --
      =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
      Friends don't let friends enable ecmascript.
    2. Re:Ridiculous by IWannaBeAnAC · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Without "intellectual property," friend, you'd be reading this article on a soot-darkened cave wall.

      Really? I think the term "intellectual property" was not even coined until looong after humans left the caves. Unless you mean, not the term itself but the concept of "intellectual property"? On that too I would dispute you; even in modern law there is no such overall concept, and in my experience (I am a postdoctorial research fellow in theoretical physics) the whole notion of "intellectual property" is anti-intellectual and only slows down progress.

    3. Re:Ridiculous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      you said:
      "intellectual property" is anti-intellectual and only slows down progress

      Exactly! wish I could have said it as succintly.

      If science was still being run like the software industry is today, *every* scientist would be working on their own little secret recipies on how to turn lead into gold - and they'd all be trying to do it chemically (possibly with the help of rituals and a four element system) instead of with a particle accelerator - no-one would have figured that it's economicaly unviable.

      What brough science out of the dark ages was the idea that everyone should share the knowledge around. This is why open source software has to succeed - not just so everyone can have good cheap software. Otherwise we will stay stuck in a "programming dark age" for another couple of centuries. The hardware has improved many orders of magnitude since the early electronic computers were developed - but programming languages, techniques and algorighms have not enjoyed anything like the same growth.

      Unfortunately if anything, science and software both seem to be sliding further back in to the pit. It used to be that the greatest personal gains in science were to be had by publishing sound and solid research papers. Unfourtulately this is increasingly being replaced by patent claims and all too often sensationalist reporting in newspapers, popular magazines and other assorted electronic media
      What a loss for us all if we let allow either science or software slide into another dark age, where knowledge is hoarded and everyone looses.

    4. Re:Ridiculous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Funny... I'm reading this article in a soot-darkened cave.

    5. Re:Ridiculous by cpt+kangarooski · · Score: 1

      'Intellectual property' is a very, very recent invention. It was a radical new idea in the 1700s, ignored by most nations, including many of the more prosperous ones, and where it did exist it had a much milder form than today. What we call 'IP' today really hasn't existed until just a few years ago.

      Well... the term 'intellectual property,' which I agree is bogus, dates back to the 1960s IIRC, and WIPO or a precursor to it. Prior to that people just discussed copyrights, patents, trademarks, trade secrets, etc.

      However, the idea of protecting inventions dates back to Ancient Greece, though they didn't take it seriously. The story was -- and this was intended to be a humorous story, like a modern joke about various ethnic groups -- it was that the inhabitants of the city of Sybaris were so dedicated to luxury that any chef who invented a new recipe received the exclusive right to use it for a year, so as to spur on the creation of new delicacies.

      Real patent laws however date back to 15th century Venice, IIRC, and are remarkably similar to our own laws. It's copyright that dates back to the early 18th century.

      --
      -- This and all my posts are in the public domain. I am a lawyer. I am not your lawyer, and this is not legal advice.
    6. Re:Ridiculous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your argument begs the question (used correctly :) of whether human beings will only be creative for personal profit.

      I forget who said it, but I heard a saying once that seems apropos...

      "The most fundamental need of the human psyche is to be acknowledged and respected."

      Money is just a universal form of acknowledgement. Some people, like you, see it as the only form of acknowledgement. If that's the only view of humanity that you can see, then I feel sorry for you. There are plenty of people who would give their creations to the world in exchange for other forms of acknowledgement...everything from fame to the satisfaction of seeing someone enjoy something you've created.

    7. Re:Ridiculous by kalidasa · · Score: 1

      No, IP goes back thousands of years - it's copyright laws that were a radical idea in 1709 -they were largely adaptations to the fact that the growth of the printing press in the previous 200+ years had made the circulation of knowledge (specifically, the reproduction of texts) a hell of a lot cheaper than it had been back when every copy was the product of one person working for weeks with a pen. Intellectual property - ideas that are protected, as trade secrets, for instance - goes much, much further back. You see, way back in the 8th century BC, there were special groups who only taught certain texts, or certain scientific methodologies, to members of their group. The Homeridae (those who recited the Iliad and Odyssey), the Asclepiadae and Hippocratics (doctors), etc. This fact - that IP goes back to the ancient Greeks at least - is not a secret, even the British Patent Office knows about it.

    8. Re:Ridiculous by Arker · · Score: 1

      'Intellectual property' has been around probably less than 40 years. Your examples are correct, but they don't contradict that.

      Yes, people have been keeping secrets... probably as long as there have been people. That, in and of itself, is not 'intellectual property.' It's just keeping secrets. The kernel of the idea of 'intellectual property' is quite distinct from the notion of trade secrets, or even copyright in the sense it had until recently. Trade secrets are trade secrets - and legal protection of them is little more than straight contract law. Copyrights and patents are something quite different, they're state-backed monopoly grants to ideas and implementations of those ideas. Only when these three things start being conflated with property rights do we start seeing anything like the 'IP' that corporate lawyers and their shills rattle on about today.

      --
      =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
      Friends don't let friends enable ecmascript.
    9. Re:Ridiculous by IWannaBeAnAC · · Score: 1
      Of course. "Secret knowledge" has been around (literally) forever. Typically held by the shaman/priesthood, who didn't allow the plebs access to their secret voodoo incantations - typically by keeping them in a different language that the plebs do not understand.

      But that is a very different concept to the modern notion that ideas and knowledge are on a par with physical property, and this "intellectual property" can be bought, sold, rented and licensed.

      With respect to the British Patent Office link, recognising authorship of works, pioneered by the Greeks and Romans, has nothing to do with "intellectual property".

    10. Re:Ridiculous by kalidasa · · Score: 1

      Actually, no, what I'm talking about isn't simply "secret knowledge" - it's ownership of a text for which the reciters expect to be paid, and so keep secret. This, by the way, has nothing to do with shamanism or "plebs" (you should try not to mix so many different ideas in one message: "plebs" is a Roman term, "shaman" refers to the cultures of the steppes).

      The British Patent Office link notes that the Romans and Greeks had the concept of protecting their authorship, not merely "recognizing authorship of works." It has everything to do with "intellectual property," which is the "ownership" of ideas.

  14. Hey - institutions need to catch up with culture! by GuardianBob420 · · Score: 1

    This is a great move; and, within the framework for getting these things done, which is even better. The real problem here, though, as all the ./ers know, centers around reforming our institutions that govern this type of patent / copyright / IP fun - it's become a major issue on both sides of the Atlantic and will probably become and increasingly pressing issue with each new development (and each new assertion that the development be protected / exploited / utilized in an economically beneficial - to some? - manner). The solution? You tell me, but I believe that the grass-roots type of education and promotion of the issues that /. and other websites facilitate represent a great start - how do we break through to the masses?

  15. Re:YRO getting out of hand? by thenextpresident · · Score: 1

    Is that a sign this site is heavy on making political statements, or a sign that YRO are being challenged more often?

    --
    Jason Lotito
  16. You're a Moron by ink · · Score: 1

    Don't worry, though, you can escape this state of mind through hard work, education and practicing critical thinking skills. Microsoft, as evil as they [b]can[/b] be, does not deserve the '906 lawsuit. The University of California school system should be ashamed.

    --
    The wheel is turning, but the hamster is dead.
  17. Finally some good patent news! by Weaselmancer · · Score: 1

    I almost never click the "Patent Pending" Slashdot links, because they are almost always depressing. Nice to see a change of pace!

    I really hope this wins. I get so sick and tired of people filing abusive patents to strangle the whole world just so they can make a quick buck. My company is currently fighting something similar, so it's a pet peeve of mine.

    If W3C wins this, they should keep the momentum going and go after Jeff Bezos. He's a prime example of this kind of abuse.

    Weaselmancer

    --
    Weaselmancer
    rediculous.
    1. Re:Finally some good patent news! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This isn't good news. Would it be ok if I stole ideas from you for the good of mankind? Thats sounds strangley like communism. I really get tired of people waving the Open Source flag. I think Open Source is great; but if I write a piece of software (or come up with a really good idea) and decide to patent it, I should expect (and recieve) fair price from anyone who decides to use it. Period... That goes for M$, Mozilla, AOL, Netscape and whoever else...

      Jess

    2. Re:Finally some good patent news! by Weaselmancer · · Score: 1

      AC, or Jess,

      but if I write a piece of software (or come up with a really good idea) and decide to patent it, I should expect (and recieve) fair price from anyone who decides to use it. Period.

      I agree. But only if you invent it yourself. The patent in question covers plug-in technology. It's old news, there's a lot of prior art, and the patent holder certainly didn't invent it himself. This is why it's an abusive patent, and will be a good thing when it goes away.

      Allow me to offer a counterexample. What if I were to get a patent granted for posting anonymously on the internet? I didn't invent it, but you'd owe me a nickel.

      Weaselmancer

      --
      Weaselmancer
      rediculous.
  18. Divine Justice by Yujenisis · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Call me short-sighted, but I was rather enjoying Eolas going after only Microsoft with patent infringement.

    Anything that makes IE harder to use, would make alternative browsers all the more attractive to the inherently stupid lazy average PC user.

    Sorry, to be so harsh on them, but it's true. If people sought out the best tool for the job, Microsoft would be out of business.

    I'm still rooting for Eolas, and that wont change until they start enforcing their patent on everybody. But for the time being, I am still calling it divine justice.

    1. Re:Divine Justice by iSwitched · · Score: 1

      In Germany they came first for the Communists and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a Communist. Then they came for the Jews and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a Jew. Then they came for the trade unionists and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a trade unionist. Then they came for the Catholics and I didn't speak up because I was a Protestant. Then they came for me--and by that time no one was left to speak up.

      Martin Niemoller(1892-1984)

      --
      "That naive cube! How long must I suffer this!" --Sheldon J. Plankton
    2. Re:Divine Justice by flyboy974 · · Score: 1

      Do you think Eolas is going to stop at Microsoft? Say goodbye to all your alternate browsers after they get a big chunk-o-change from M$. They will go after AOL/Netscape next. Then they'll go after Opera. Then they'll go after every other browser on the market that has Java or plug-in support. THey'll probably go after Sun claiming that Sun knowingly pushed their Servlet technology in violation of the patents.

      Heck, their definition of "external data" is so broad, that means that an or could be considered illegal. It's so broad, that if SVG files may be illegal if they access "external data".

      If your browser architecture used internally "plug-ins" for each image type (gif, png, etc), and those plugins went and fetched via HTTP themselves, then they are also in violation. So, there goes supporting new image types dynamically!

      People aren't behind Microsoft because they want M$ to win. They are behind them because there really is more to this patent. It's bound to undermind the integrity of the WWW for one man's fiscal gain.

    3. Re:Divine Justice by mccrew · · Score: 1
      Anything that makes IE harder to use, would make alternative browsers all the more attractive to the inherently stupid lazy average PC user.

      Ahhh, but you conveniently forget that alternative browsers are infringing too. The issue here isn't about browser A versus browser B, but some interloper patenting something that is obvious and holding all users of browser A and browser B hostage.

      Are you still rooting for Eolas when they start litigation against mozilla.org for supposed infringement in Mozilla, Galeon, Firebird, and any other Mozilla-derived browser? I bet you'll change your tune then.

      "First they came for Internet Explorer, but I didn't speak up because I wasn't an InternetExplorer user.
      "Next they came for the CrazyBrowser users, but I didn't speak up because I wasn't an CrazyBrowser user.
      "Then they came for the Opera users, but I didn't speak up because I wasn't an Opera user.
      "Finally they came for my browser, and there was nobody left to speak up."

      Steve

      --
      Hey, Windows users, there is no such thing as "forward" slash, there is only slash and backslash.
    4. Re:Divine Justice by VivianC · · Score: 1

      In Germany they came first for the Communists and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a Communist. Then they came for the Jews and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a Jew. Then they came for the trade unionists and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a trade unionist. Then they came for the Catholics and I didn't speak up because I was a Protestant. Then they came for me--and by that time no one was left to speak up.

      Good point. If they come after a second group, I'll speak up. For now, I can let them take Microsft.

      --
      Viv

      Gmail invites for ip
  19. Re:YRO getting out of hand? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's a sign that people are pissed that people are trying to fuck them over. ...which is funny, because they don't mind fucking other people over by pirating things and breaking into other people's computers.

  20. What about Microsoft? by SpikyTux · · Score: 1

    What about the patents they claimed but they don't actually have the rights on. Can someone revoke the patents and declare those void?

  21. Patent thoughts by Empiric · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Glad to hear Tim Berners-Lee is weighing in on this. Certainly, his views should have some impact. I would be seriously annoyed if I were in his position; it's absurd to allow companies just to wait for thousands of inventors and developers to go through the quasi-Darwinian process of technological innovation (often without compensation), see which techniques evolve as best-practices, and then hijack them.

    Supposedly, the underlying justification for patents is to encourage investment in research by protecting inventions from direct competition for a limited time. In that context, there should be a requirement for a strong correlation between the time required to create an "invention", and the time frame of the protection. If something takes 5 years of R&D to create, 7 years of patent protection seems reasonable. If it takes 5 minutes, that time frame certainly is not.

    Why not, as part of the patent process, have a peer review of the application, with a best-guess among the reviewers as to how long it would take to create the invention or (more approximately) generate the underlying insight, given a person working in that field? Multiply that time by a generosity factor of X, and limit the patent's applicability to that duration, assuming it passes all other prior art tests. It would seem that this would much more closely represent the intent of patent law, as well as eliminating irrational impediments to technological progress.

    --
    ~ Whence do you come, slayer of men, or where are you going, conqueror of space?
    1. Re:Patent thoughts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's a poor measurement. It took 15-man years for IBM to write thri first compiler. Yet the typical CS undergrad will write a more-powerful compiler for one of their courses in 3-4 months. Once something has already been done, it's easy to replicate. Doing it in teh first place is the difficulty.

    2. Re:Patent thoughts by praxis · · Score: 1

      Creating new ideas is a very chaotic process. Sometimes in five minutes one can have a eureka moment and come up with an idea that might have taken five engineers months to create using a different approach. Granting a lifetime for a patent based on creation time seems unfair to me.

      If I understand your point, you attempt to reduce the lifetime on obvious patents, that really require little thinking at all. That too is a tough situation, because sometimes once someone told you the idea, you go "Doh! That's so simple and cool, why didn't I think of that?", but coming up with that idea in the first place takes insight that's hard to come by. Patents are meant to protect exactly this. The illusion is that people usually see that an idea is simple and assume everyone could have thought of it.

      Of course, I don't mean to imply that the patent system is not broken. There *are* lots of patents being granted on ideas that many people *have* come up with, but didn't bother to patent them because they thought it was so simple.

    3. Re:Patent thoughts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Glad to hear Tim Berners-Lee is weighing in on this. Certainly, his views should have some impact.

      To you maybe, but to the average judge he's just another Joe Random techie.

    4. Re:Patent thoughts by Empiric · · Score: 1

      Yes, I understand your view that the process I'm suggesting would be somewhat subjective or arbitrary. I suggest, though, that the current fixed duration is wholly arbitrary. It could indeed often be difficult to estimate how long it might take for that "eureka" insight, but the software patents we've seen lately have required no insight at all, and I wouldn't be surprised if that was often the case in other fields as well. A peer review would at least clear out the more egregious examples, and the "generosity factor" could provide a reasonable overestimation to compensate for the fact things often look easy in hindsight.

      --
      ~ Whence do you come, slayer of men, or where are you going, conqueror of space?
    5. Re:Patent thoughts by praxis · · Score: 1

      I feel that the best way to solve the current problem as we see it (inappropriate patents getting too much of a lifetime) is this:

      1) Have a better peer review process to weed out patents which are obvious. Improve the prior art search. Perhaps allow interested parties to register as reviewers after some qualification process, perhaps by problem domain. Then select reviewers from the industry (some from that domain, some not) at random. That way each registered reviewer gets a few patents a year to check over.

      2) Perhaps grant lifetime based on a vote of the reviewers?

    6. Re:Patent thoughts by Empiric · · Score: 1

      Yes, I'd agree with both your points, in principle. The process might require some tweaking (e.g. there may be an automatic incentive for those randomly-selected peers to underplay the difficulty of the proposed patent since the applicant would presumably be a competitor; this might be taken care of by making it "blind" as to whether the application was from one's own company, or having the reviewers be government employees or academics and presumably unbiased)... but I think this could be made to work much better than what exists now.

      --
      ~ Whence do you come, slayer of men, or where are you going, conqueror of space?
  22. Link to patent by FireFury03 · · Score: 1

    The patent in question is on the US Patent Office website.

  23. History Repetition by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In 1930 the US passed the Hawley-Smoot Tariff tax on global commerace.

    It appears that the US is attempting to repeat the same process with respect to information with DMCA. MPAA, RIAA, and Super DMCA.

    Most likely the later will have as stiffing effect as the former and place the US at a considerable world disadvantage.

  24. We missed the point by utlemming · · Score: 1

    The piont of the appeal is not to protect M$ but to protect the functionality of the web. The W3C never mentions Microsoft, but mentions that the current compatability of the Web could be affected. Also the article states that the patented capabilities have been included in HTML since the early days of HTML -- before the patent.

    --
    The views expressed are mine own and do not express the views of my employer.
  25. Who said MS wanted to Win the case? by 3seas · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I believe there is a general assumption that MS really wanted to win the case.

    What should be understood is the advantages MS would gain in losing.

    Teh fact that prior art itself that was not presented by MS but of MS products, should be plenty reason to suspect MS didn't want to win the case, but only create the illusion.

    Perhpas the question to ask now is how is MS using other companies to do their bidding, like SCO..

    1. Re:Who said MS wanted to Win the case? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Perhaps the question to ask now is how is MS using other companies to do their bidding, like SCO.. "

      I know this is an off-topic tangent, but I find it interesting that SCO was one of only nine companies to license MS code. And MS was one of the few companies to pay for a SCO license. I wonder if there was some 'I'll scratch your back if you scratch mine' deal to make each others licenses look more legit.

    2. Re:Who said MS wanted to Win the case? by PAjamian · · Score: 1

      Consider that the technology at hand is the ability for IE to interact with other apps, and we all know how much MS likes to support other apps in Windows in any shape or form. Consider that by loosing this case they can pull this interoperability for other apps out of thier browser and claim that they were forced to by the judgement, a good way to get around the anti-trust rulings.

      --
      Windows is a bonfire, Linux is the sun. Linux only looks smaller if you lack perspective.
  26. IBM via OS/2 did this years ago by cdn-programmer · · Score: 1

    OS/2 opened a hole in the video display window that another program could display into. One of the external programs OS/2 could run was windows 3.11

    There is zero difference between doing this and a web browser or any other program simply assigning a range of pixels to hold an image created by an external program.

    It is totally absurd that the USPTO should assign a patent for perfectly obvious technology that was in wide spread use by the patent officer himself!

    So WTF is going on in the USPTO?

    Bloody idjots I say.

    1. Re:IBM via OS/2 did this years ago by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      It is entirely different. Specifying a new block of memory for direct video access bears no resemblance whatsoever to embedding a plugin. Even if it did, the use of an HTML tag is specifically mentioned...

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    2. Re:IBM via OS/2 did this years ago by djeaux · · Score: 1
      So WTF is going on in the USPTO?

      According to the USPTO website:

      James E. Rogan was sworn in as Under Secretary of Commerce for Intellectual Property and Director of the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) on December 7, 2001. Secretary Don Evans presided over the ceremony. Judge Rogan becomes the 55th head of the agency. He was nominated by President George W. Bush on May 25, 2001, and confirmed by the United States Senate on November 30, 2001.
      ...
      Judge Rogan served two terms in the House of Representatives. He served as a House Manager in the United States Senate impeachment trial of President Clinton, after which he was defeated for reelection in his Democrat-majority district.

      Political appointee running the show. Any questions?

      Some of you black helicopter chasers might want to look for any relationship between the Undersecretary & the "former University of California researcher" ;-)

      --
      "Obviously, I'm not an IBM computer any more than I'm an ashtray" (Bob Dylan)
    3. Re:IBM via OS/2 did this years ago by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Earth to djeaux -- Political appointees run the entire government.

      Furthermore, this patent goes back the early 90s, so who cares about Bush's appointee.

    4. Re:IBM via OS/2 did this years ago by deanj · · Score: 1

      What a bunch of FUD.

      This patent was filed years ago.

      There were plenty of stupid (1-click purchasing) patents granted in the previous administration too.
      Are you suggesting that they too had a political agenda for granting THOSE patents?

      I didn't think so.

    5. Re:IBM via OS/2 did this years ago by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      > "Political appointees run the entire government."

      A lot of plain ole GS employees run the government. The political appointees make the "tough" decisions. Like when to award a patent to a buddy or not. So yeah, the appointees "run" the government, but without federal employees the government probably wouldn't "run" at all...

      But yeah, the patent probably goes back to the reign of George II & not George III.

  27. The Patent Office should have to Pay by Marrow · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The patent office cost the companies of this country an enormous amount of money that they had to spend on researching this problem. The patent office was responsible for maintaining the validity of the Patent information. The Patent Office should have to pay the companies that endured an unecessary loss to their business as a result of the poor work done by the Patent Office when it originally issued the Patent.

    If the Patent Office had to Pay For Their Mistakes, they might be less likely to make the same mistakes over and over again.

  28. Re:MOD PARENT DOWN by Sir+Haxa1ot · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Ha-ha, yeah, I am the incredible impostor, behold my mad impostor skillz.

  29. Just curious ... by DaneelGiskard · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Does anyone know of any (software) patents which have been nullified due to prior art?

    1. Re:Just curious ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative
  30. Rogan won't read it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Come on are you serious? The patent office doesnt have any experts .. and seriously I doubt Rogan will bother to even read this letter.

  31. In my Opinion by CubeHard · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    while I think the human alliance is more advanced, the orc hord is much more effictive at overcomming base defensives, perhaps there should be a human hord? The Night Evels suck, unless you manange to stay quite wile you build your forces.

    --
    \\"You go hole now"
  32. And a job... by FatSean · · Score: 1

    so you can show off your awesome 'python' and 'ruby' skills. heh.

    --
    Blar.
  33. Double Secret Probation? by aimless · · Score: 1

    If they can show that during the patent process the applicants knowingly omitted prior art, they might be subject to triple penalties for defrauding the patent office.

    It is an applicant's duty to supply all known Prior art to the examiner. Those poor examiners can't be expected to know everything.

    -A

    1. Re:Double Secret Probation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They only need to disclose prior art that they know about. There is no requirement for the applicant to do any research. By simply not looking for prior art, you won't find any, and therefore don't need to disclose any.

  34. Effect/affect by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think the word you are looking for is effect.

    1. Re:Effect/affect by Arker · · Score: 1

      Correct. Thanks.

      --
      =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
      Friends don't let friends enable ecmascript.
  35. Somebody please explain... by djeaux · · Score: 1
    A federal jury ruled against Microsoft in August and awarded $521 million to a former University of California researcher who holds the patent the Web consortium now wants revoked.

    I thought most "work done for hire" belonged to the employer, not the employee. How much of this $521 million went to the University of California?

    (Yes, I know that a lot of universities allow researchers & faculty to retain some rights to "inventions" & such, but the university is gonna skim a thick layer of cream off the top, too.)

    --
    "Obviously, I'm not an IBM computer any more than I'm an ashtray" (Bob Dylan)
  36. no we weren't by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the blogger should have been fired.

  37. Global database? by Sebby · · Score: 1
    Is there a global database where 'ideas' can be entered in public view that would serve as prior art for any future patents (think imdb or the like)?

    --

    AC comments get piped to /dev/null
    1. Re:Global database? by lavaface · · Score: 1

      not quite yet, but look out for nooron

  38. String theroy by missing000 · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    I knew I was not the only one who watched Nova's piece on string theroy last night!

    1. Re:String theroy by Eccles · · Score: 1

      I knew I was not the only one who watched Nova's piece on string theory last night!

      is it just me, or did it end rather suddenly. They're talking about the multiple additional dimensions, then the five competing theories fragmenting the community in the late '80s, and then it stops. I thought there might at least be something on the five theories and what might show one or another to be a better model, and whether any progress had been made since 1990.

      --
      Ooh, a sarcasm detector. Oh, that's a real useful invention.
    2. Re:String theroy by cens0r · · Score: 1

      That's because part II is next week... or did you miss that blurb?

      --
      Jack Valenti and Orrin Hatch will be first up against the wall when the revolution comes.
    3. Re:String theroy by Eccles · · Score: 1

      Guess I was off in another dimension. (Not sure if it was tiny one or a big one.)

      --
      Ooh, a sarcasm detector. Oh, that's a real useful invention.
    4. Re:String theroy by ckaminski · · Score: 1

      Except that Nova program was MADE in 1991... ;-)

      Nothing to report sir!!

  39. Microsoft Wanted to Lose - Web Domination Follows by number_man · · Score: 1

    Someone mentioned this in passing earlier...

    Microsoft may not have wanted to win this lawsuit. By redesigning their browser and, in effect, making everybody that wants their site to work with IE redesign their site, they would, at a cost of $500million US gain control over the web.

    I know this may be a simplistic view, and there is probably much more that can be read into this thing, but remember what Microsoft has said:

    One World, One Web, One Program

    Maybe this is the first part of their strategery.

    Oh...and there is NO paranoia here.

  40. May be... by Petronius · · Score: 1

    this could be the end of stupid software patents in the US. Go W3C!

    --
    there's no place like ~
  41. No, I know what I'm talking about by TheConfusedOne · · Score: 1

    IE is in no way free. IE requires you to have Windows. (They're dropping their Mac port.)

    MS has already shown its willingness to use one product to drive adoption of another (Windows for IE), what would stop them from refusing to license this patent to any other browser and then "tweaking" IE so it will only talk to IIS?

    --
    --- I wish I could hear the soundtrack to my life. That way I'd know when to duck.
    1. Re:No, I know what I'm talking about by cnkeller · · Score: 1
      IE requires you to have Windows.(They're dropping their Mac port.)

      That's not exactly true.

      They are no longer developing IE6 for OSX, but you will still be able to get IE5 for OSX 10.2.X (haven't checked panther yet). According the MS FAQ it will continue to be supported for a while at least.

      As much as I dislike Microsoft, I appreciate this gesture, because as cool as Safari, Mozilla, etc are, I find that some sites (Bank of America) just work better with IE, no matter how many emails I send them requesting a browser neutral site.

      --

      there are no stupid questions, but there are a lot of inquisitive idiots

    2. Re:No, I know what I'm talking about by squiggleslash · · Score: 1
      They're not dropping their Mac port. The Mac ports will continue, but as part of their MSN package, renamed to MSN Explorer.

      It does mean that Mac users who want to use IE will have to pay to do so.

      --
      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    3. Re:No, I know what I'm talking about by Photon+Ghoul · · Score: 1

      I know this is offtopic but I have no problems using all of Bank of America's site with Mozilla and Firebird (haven't tried with others).

  42. Re:Clippy has some FUCKING advice for you... by lokedhs · · Score: 1

    And you are here because?

  43. OLE? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I never understood why M$ didn't challenge the paten... pretty sure OLE predates the application... and that's all the patent is (as far as I could tell from trying to read it), OLE in a web browser...

  44. What else happened in the 1700's? by siskbc · · Score: 0
    It was a radical new idea in the 1700s

    Gee, coinciding with the *Industrial Revolution* I bet. So you wouldn't be living in a cave without IP, you'd be living in a straw-roofed shack without electricity, plumbing, and certainly without the internet.

    Do you have even the foggiest idea of how product development occurs? Do you realize that companies aren't willing to do years of R&D work if their competitors can all steal the result as soon as they go to market?

    I guarantee you Intel and Apple wouldn't. So without IP, you are already without computers. You sure as hell wouldn't have any pharmaceuticals, I don't even want to start with how much R&D costs and how cheap production is in the drug industry.

    So without patents, we'd all have polio, we'd all still be using antibiotics for which bacteria are immune, we wouldn't have any painkillers, no TV, no internet, no computers...do I need to keep going?

    --

    -Looking for a job as a materials chemist or multivariat

    1. Re:What else happened in the 1700's? by Arker · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Gee, coinciding with the *Industrial Revolution* I bet. So you wouldn't be living in a cave without IP, you'd be living in a straw-roofed shack without electricity, plumbing, and certainly without the internet.

      You're assuming that technological progress would have stopped at that point, all over the world, just because the handful of countries that introduced relatively mild copyright and patent laws at this time did otherwise? That's a huge an unwarranted assumption, and/or a a circular argument.

      If anything, the bulk affect of these laws is to stifle progress, not to help it. Particularly with the current 'modern' implementations of these ideas.

      So without patents, we'd all have polio, we'd all still be using antibiotics for which bacteria are immune, we wouldn't have any painkillers, no TV, no internet, no computers...do I need to keep going?

      No, you need to back up and figure out where you got lost. The notion that human inventiveness would suddenly cease if people couldn't lay legal claim to ideas is absolutely absurd.

      --
      =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
      Friends don't let friends enable ecmascript.
    2. Re:What else happened in the 1700's? by vidarh · · Score: 4, Interesting
      The invention of plumbing was a couple of thousand of years ahead of the industrial revolution. Incidentally, electricity was also known, and most of the advances in the research of electricity was unencumbered by IP rights until Edison.

      Oh, and the internet was developed using US tax payers money, just the way that most early work on computers was done by researchers using public money or working on their own WITHOUT APPLYING FOR PATENTS or otherwise retaining restrictive IP rights. It's quite interesting that you bring up the internet, considering that a large part in the success of the internet is that all specifications for the basic infrastructure are available in the open, and NOT covered by any IP rights that restricts reuse.

      Try to guarantee all you want that Intel and Apple wouldn't do years of R&D if their competitors could steal it once they go to market, but the idea is ludicrous. Companies DO steal their ideas as soon as they go to market - patents doesn't stop that. It stops the blanket copying. However who would copy Intels chip designs when they lack the technical capability to manufacture the chips, and when reverse engineering the designs would take them so long the next generation chips would already be out?

      And further back in the field what you will see is that sharing of information unecumbered by patents and copyright was what advanced the computing field.

      Some IP rights might be warranted - authors of non-bestseller books don't usually make lots of money (unless they're one hell of a negotiator when dealing with their publisher), and many of them might never have gotten written or published if they could have been copied by another publisher right away. In that case not having any IP rights would have been a loss to the public.

      But most major scientific advances have not been protected by patents or copyright.

      You point to the Polio vaccine, but the "invention" of the vaccine by Salk was often heavily criticized by other researchers as containing nothing new of substance, but being just a result of combining research already in the public domain. And in fact Albert Sabin soon developed a new vaccine that more or less superceded the Salk vaccine. Add to that that the research wasn't done by a private company, but a university and the idea that lack of IP rights would have prevented it gets ridiculous.

      TV is perhaps the only area you mentioned where patents had much of an impact, but even there there is little doubt from looking at the history of it that the research would have happened regardless of patent rights - perhaps slower, perhaps faster.

    3. Re:What else happened in the 1700's? by _xeno_ · · Score: 5, Informative
      Actually, suggesting that patents encouraged the Industrial Revolution is rather amusing to me, considering I live near a city that basically flourished by breaking them.

      Lowell, Massachusetts is famous (well, was famous) as being a very important and large milling city in America. But before it could become a large milling city, the industrial era mills needed to be invented. They were orginally invented in England, where they were patented. From the Lowell National Historical Park Handbook, specifically, Early American Manufactoring:

      After independence there were a number of unsuccessful attempts to establish textile factories. Americans needed access to the British industrial innovations, but England had passed laws forbidding the export of machinery or the emigration of those who could operate it. Nevertheless it was an English immigrant, Samuel Slater, who finally introduced British cotton technology to America.

      Slater had worked his way up from apprentice to overseer in an English factory using the Arkwright system. Drawn by American bounties for the introduction of textile technology, he passed as a farmer and sailed for America with details of the Arkwright water frame committed to memory. In December 1790, working for mill owner Moses Brown, he started up the first permanent American cotton spinning mill in Pawtucket, Rhode Island. Employing a workforce of nine children between the ages of 7 and 12, Slater successfully mechanized the carding and spinning processes.

      The United States as an industrial power was basically established through patent infringement. The patent system was designed based on the idea of convincing people to share their ideas. Protecting them is a means to an end. However, when you have patents protecting frivolous inventions (once you have dynamically linked libraries, plugins are a fairly obvious next step), the system becomes abused. It no longer promotes the sharing of ideas and the development of new ones, it instead restricts innovation.

      Who knows if patents as they currently exist really do spur on invention? But patents as they existed during the Industrial Revolution almost kept America out of the game until someone "stole" the designs for mills, at which point the flood gates opened and America became industrialized.

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little relative jumps, all alike.
    4. Re:What else happened in the 1700's? by BigBadBri · · Score: 2, Interesting
      The Chinese invented the spinning frame in the mid 13th century, and very soon afterwards had water frames with up to 32 spindles.

      Arkwright's invention was independent, but there was very prior prior art.

      --
      oh brave new world, that has such people in it!
    5. Re:What else happened in the 1700's? by prowley · · Score: 1
      Do you have even the foggiest idea of how product development occurs?
      I do, if you are talking about software product development. I have many patents applied for on behalf of my employer.
      Do you realize that companies aren't willing to do years of R&D work if their competitors can all steal the result as soon as they go to market?
      Do you realise that companies are not willing to do that anyway, but oh, they will apply for any patents that result from the 4-6 month product dev cycle. The real problem of course is that software patents that are being granted are for trivial, mostly obvious things because the assessors at the patent office do not understand what they are looking at. The patent applications are generally overly verbose to ensure that the assessor cannot possibly read and understand it in the time allowed even when they do have a clue. An even bigger problem is that we have a very young industry which evolves very fast, and any significant patent can be used as a road block to the entire industry, and/or extract a tax for its use. That is not good for society. All this despite the fact that what gets done now, would get done anyway - it is not like these patents come out of blue sky research, as far as the companies themselves are concerned, they are free since they naturally occur during normal software development. In other industries they generally do actually fund research - whereas most software companies do not seem to even understand what research is or why they would need it. After all, they are getting these patents anyway right? Look at the "one click" patent, does anyone seriously consider that this took more than 3 seconds to concieve and 10 minutes to impliment? What is worth noting here is that if the fundamental computing and networking technologies upon which we build today were originally patented, then we would be at about 1950. See ya down at the soda store.
    6. Re:What else happened in the 1700's? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, what happened in the 1970's?

      True, some of the technology from that era now looks pretty clunky, but the "minicomputer era" was the first major cycle of computer development that followed the principles of Moore's Law: Computers shrank from the size of a two-car garage (which had been about the same since the Eniac and Whirlwind) to something that would fit in a small closet, accompanied by considerable increases in performance and ease of use, and drastic reductions in price. This was largely due to a large number of competitors exploiting the advances in integrated circuits that been spurred by the space and arms races.

      One curious aspect of this period was that many companies didn't put a great deal of effort into patenting the unique aspects of their designs. The reason for this was that the market was highly competitive, and that the market life of a given product was relatively short. Taking the time to seek patents would have been a resource drain and extended time to market. Furthermore, since many of not most designs were fairly derivative, there was no guarantee that many patents applied for would be granted, and the application process essentially published the details of the innovation for all to see and potentially copy. Instead, companies simply swore their employees to secrecy and asked their customers and suppliers to sign non-disclosure agreements. Their competitors could certainly purchase their products and reverse engineer them, but that could take longer than creating their own new designs.

      Some companies, like Intel, still operate in much the same way. (Getting into and out of an Intel plant to do contract work is something of an experience.) However, in much of high tech today, particularly software, development times are still short but market life can be many years. Furthermore, since the underlying technology wasn't government-funded and in the public domain, it's comparatively easier to patent some clever programming kink and then wait for everyone else to start using it.

    7. Re:What else happened in the 1700's? by mjh · · Score: 2, Interesting
      In general I agree with your original assessment. Patenting things that are obvious is absurd. However, on some of your more recent points, I have to disagree.

      Basically, there is a corelation between the invention of patents and the industrial revolution. Whether that corelation is causitive or not I don't know. The original poster seems to believe that it is. And you seem to be arguing that it isn't. But your argument against the causitive nature is pretty weak:

      You're assuming that technological progress would have stopped at that point, all over the world, just because the handful of countries that introduced relatively mild copyright and patent laws at this time did otherwise?
      In order to say that it's causitive, yes he has to make the assumption that you stated. But that's alone isn't sufficient to say that it *isn't* causitive. Just strong enough to say that he's assuming it is without proving it.

      In order for you to make the claim that it's the corelation is definately not causitive, you are assuming that technological progress would have continued w/out patents. This is something that's simply not testable. All we know at this point is that the industrial revolution corelated in time to the use of patents. If you want people to agree with you that there's definately no cause/effect relationship between the two, you're going to have to rely on something stronger than imagining something that can't be tested.

      If anything, the bulk affect of these laws is to stifle progress, not to help it. Particularly with the current 'modern' implementations of these ideas.
      Ok. I understand that you believe this, but you haven't provided any evidence that either of these statements are true. Personally, I agree with you on the 2nd point. But I'm unconvinced on the first point. And here's my logic:

      Imagine I wrote a book. I spent lots of time and energy thinking about the book, developing the ideas, writing it down, editing it, getting it printed, and then bound into a book. If after doing all of that, anyone could simply take a copy of that work and duplicate it without consequence, I would be less inclined, next time, to write another book. Because someone would figure out how to streamline the process of copying books and selling them. At that point, writers would not be able to compete. They'd simply produce works from which someone else made money. The enormous amount of effort and cost it takes to produce the first copy of a book and publish it would disincent the vast majority of writers from writing, because they'd not even be able to recover their costs before someone else plugged it into their streamlined book copying process.

      By having copyright, writers are given an incentive to produce, in that, at the very least, they can recover their costs. The current day implementations of copyright are insane, but the original implementation seems to have produced incentive to write.

      Patents are almost exactly the same, except instead of covering books, they cover inventions. And the original implementation required that a sample of the invention be supplied with the patent application. As a consequence, someone who came up with a good idea and went to all of the effort to make it and prove that it worked, would have no incentive to publish that idea if the next guy down the line could simply copy it and sell it before you. Under the original implementation, it at least *seems* like patents rewarded real inventors. Now, I agree with you that the current day implementations have gone overboard and that they can reward people who haven't done a lick of work. But I'm going to need some convincing if I'm to believe what you're suggesting:

      1. that patents were not causitive of the industrial revolution
      2. that patents hindered it's progress
      I'm not saying you're wrong. I just don't understand how you've come to that conclusion.
      --
      Key to financial independence: Spend less than you earn. Save and invest the difference. Do it for a long time.
    8. Re:What else happened in the 1700's? by Arker · · Score: 1

      First, as to the patents, that's really a very long complicated argument you want to get into that I quite simply don't have time to cover fully today, or any day soon. I'll try, but it will inevitably be merely a teaser, because I just don't have time to write a full thesis on the subject now. This is not my page and I may disagree on some details, but it's a start. If you read other posts in this thread there is one that discusses the importance of not enforcing patents to the progress of the industrial revolution in the US and Germany, and if you do a little research you will find that Holland and Switzerland in their economic heyday are similar stories.

      At any rate, let's keep in mind that 'IP' is more than just patents, copyrights, and trade secrets - it's the combination of those conflated with property.

      This last is a very recent phenomenon, and has lead to the excessive measures even reasonable proponents of patent and copyrights decry. That's the most important point I suppose - that these things are not property, they are privelege in the original sense.

      Now beyond that, I have no problem with trade secrets at all, and I think that most everything good that could come from patents could be achieved in that way, without the violation of real property implied in a patent regime of any kind. Given that patents prohibit independent invention and prevent people from peacefully and honestly using their own property in any implementation I find them very hard to defend. And I think the notion that people would quit inventing without them is ludicrous. People invent for a great number of reasons, getting rich off patents is only one of them. Without a patent regime, an inventor who invents only for money (likely, in my opinion, to be not the most important subset, but be that as it may) will still have a profit motive, the difference will be simply in the details of how to get from A to B - rather than rushing to file a patent before anyone else, he would instead work to produce and sell actual product before anyone else, to take and maintain an early lead in the field through trade secrets and continual research and refinement. I think it is plausible that this would result in more, not less, invention. And even if that were not true, the bulk affect could easily still be positive simply from removing all the bad affects even reasonable patent proponents admit is implied in such a system, for reasons I've mentioned at least in part.

      Copyrights, in essence, are more defensible, but again it must be emphasised that they are not property, that they are in fact monopoly grants which violate property by prohibiting peaceful and honest use of ones property in certain ways, and that there is a world of difference between the original Constitutional copyright system and the current 'IP' system. Authors, under the current system, are not getting rich from their writings. Authors in fact very rarely keep their copyrights, they usually have to give them up in order to get published. People write for many reasons, getting rich is rarely one of them and when it is it almost always leads only to disappointment. Without copyright people would still write, there would still be a market for books, and authors could still make some money, very likely as much or more than they make now in many cases, without them. Is it worth money to a publishing house to have a novel written that they can hold exclusive using simple secrecy long enough to make a full run of a book and have it on storeshelves around the world before the competitor can begin typesetting it? Of course it is. So, without copyrights, there would still be money in writing, and even if there were no money in writing, there would still be writers. We write for any number of reasons, and very few make any serious amount of money anyway. So I really think the chicken little arguments are nonsense. Creativity wouldn't be abolished because copyright a

      --
      =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
      Friends don't let friends enable ecmascript.
    9. Re:What else happened in the 1700's? by mjh · · Score: 1
      First, thanks for the reply. I appreciate your thoughtful and thought provoking response. And I only have commentary with respect to one aspect
      Without a patent regime, an inventor who invents only for money (likely, in my opinion, to be not the most important subset, but be that as it may) will still have a profit motive, the difference will be simply in the details of how to get from A to B - rather than rushing to file a patent before anyone else, he would instead work to produce and sell actual product before anyone else, to take and maintain an early lead in the field through trade secrets and continual research and refinement.
      The problem that I see with this is that the process of bringing a product (any product) to market varies somewhat depending on the product, but not that much. The overall process is basically the same. Whereas inventing the product in the first place is a wildly varying process. Such marketing companies already exist. They exist even before an inventor has an idea for an invention. They can exist because marketing is a relatively static process.

      Now contrast that with inventing. It's very difficult to be an invention company: A company with the sole purpose of producing inventions. The process of inventing is just not static enough. It's a dynamic thing that explicitly relies on seeing things differently than you saw them before. Invention absolutely depends on one person who has an inspiration about a way to do something better.

      Now here's where the problem lies. Without patent protection the small guy has no chance of profiting from his inspiration. He can go and do all of this work, spend all of his time, spend a ton of money, and the day he puts up a sign post to try and sell it, is the day that the marketing firm, with a well established and stable process, swoops in, buys one version of the invention, and sells it to everyone. The inventor would be unlikely to even recover his costs.

      Yes, there are problems with patents. Inventors who come up with the same idea at roughly the same time have problems. And the entire computer software industry is built on shared ideas, and absolutely relies on interoperability, so the concept of software patents seems absurd. But these problems merit, IMHO, fixing. They do not justify scrapping all patents everywhere.

      An example of a nightmare scenario is Microsoft. Right now copyright protects GPL'd software from becoming embraced & extended into Microsoft. And anyone who thinks that Microsoft's business plan is a software creation company is misguided. They are a software marketing company. And, as an example, I ask you to cite one single thing that Microsoft has invented. I repeatedly can't think of anything. They buy up small companies, take all of their trade secrets (conveniently protected in binary executables) and then market them. Almost always the original members of the bought company suffers and Microsoft prospers. And this is in an environment where copyright protection exists. Without copyright, no software would be safe from becoming extinct due to Microsoft's practices.

      And in the patent arena it's no different. People can argue all they want about drug companies, but patents are absolutely critical to those companies. The expense of developing a drug is so astronomically high, that without protections on those investments, no one would invent drugs. And if you think I'm kidding, ask yourself how long it takes after a drug patent expires for a low cost generic to be available. The answer is it's available the very day that the patent expires. Producing generics is a marketing process. Producing the initial drug is an invention process and it's very very expensive, with massive amounts of failures. Say what you want about drug companies, but IMHO, it is absolutely clear that we would not have the breadth and depth of health care if we didn't have patents protecting drug companies.

      Still I agree that there are serious problems with patents (and other IP) that need to be fixed. I'm still not convinced that they should be scrapped altogether.

      --
      Key to financial independence: Spend less than you earn. Save and invest the difference. Do it for a long time.
    10. Re:What else happened in the 1700's? by Mark+Shewmaker · · Score: 1
      Say what you want about drug companies, but IMHO, it is absolutely clear that we would not have the breadth and depth of health care if we didn't have patents protecting drug companies.
      It may be clear to you, but it isn't clear to me.

      Can you explain your line of reasoning in more detail?

      By the way, I posted basically the same question in another comment in response to someone else's comment making a similar claim.

      Feel free to respond either here or there. :-)

    11. Re:What else happened in the 1700's? by mjh · · Score: 1
      Ok. I said that I was going to respond to this later on, but I've got a quick and dirty response right now, and I can give it.

      The reason is that our health care industry needs drugs to be patented is because the cost of developing drugs is so high. One study

      • Research of the basic idea behind the drug - e.g. this chemical reacts favorably with the thing in the body we're trying to eliminate
      • Researching the metabolic pathways - e.g. here's some additional chemicals that we can use to ensure that the active chemicals will reach their destination, without doing any damage
      • Animal testing
      • Human testing: Phases 1 - 3
      • Mass production
      • FDA approval
      • Marketing

      Contrast this with the cost to develop a post-patent generic:

      • Analysis of chemical structure of already developed, tested and FDA approved drug.
      • Mass production
      • Marketing

      By far the biggest cost of developing the drug is the R&D. And of that expense, the biggest cost is the clincal human trials. These are costs that post-patent generic companies simply don't have to pay. Without patent protection, we'd end up with a world where the developer of a drug would incur *all* of the costs to develop that drug and the generic manufacturer would gain all of the profits. The drug developer would simply not be able to recover their costs without patents. Patents enable the drug developer to earn the profits from the sale of that drug to cover:

      • Research & Development of that drug
      • Research & Development of investigatory drugs - drugs that show promise but for some reason don't make it to market

      Patents enable the pharmaceuticals to stay in business. I once read (although I can't find it now), that pharmaceuticals develop 200 failed drugs for every 1 drug that makes it to market. Inventing is a hard business, and without some sort of legal protection, we simply wouldn't have it.

      --
      Key to financial independence: Spend less than you earn. Save and invest the difference. Do it for a long time.
    12. Re:What else happened in the 1700's? by Mark+Shewmaker · · Score: 1
      I still see unstated assumptions in this version of the "we need patents for drugs" argument.

      Let me snip your argument down a bit, (mainly removing supporting data that isn't really in dispute):

      The reason is that our health care industry needs drugs to be patented is because the cost of developing drugs is so high.

      [...]

      By far the biggest cost of developing the drug is the R&D.

      These are costs that post-patent generic companies simply don't have to pay.

      Without patent protection, we'd end up with a world where the developer of a drug would incur *all* of the costs to develop that drug and the generic manufacturer would gain all of the profits. The drug developer would simply not be able to recover their costs without patents.

      Patents enable the drug developer to earn the profits from the sale of that drug to cover:

      [...]

      Inventing is a hard business, and without some sort of legal protection, we simply wouldn't have it.

      I think you might be confusing the likely failure of a particular unchanged business model under a changed regulatory environment with a claim of failure of *any* business model under a changed regulatory environment.

      Let me know if I'm misrepresenting your argument, but it basically seems to boil down to something like the following:

      1. Drug development costs big money.
      2. Drug development costs are paid by companies specializing in drug development.
      3. Drug development companies recoup these costs through sales of the resultant drugs.
      4. The drug development companies sell their drugs at a price much higher than the comparatively small cost of manufacture.
      5. Sales of their drugs would be undercut by competitors if just anyone were could make cheaper generic versions of these drugs and sell them.
      6. Patents keep these would-be competitors from making and selling cheap generic versions of these drugs (for a time).
      7. This temporary monopoly allows for the drug development companies to recoup their costs by selling at a price higher than would be economical if they didn't have a monopoly on the drug production/sale.
      8. Without patents, this particular business model would be unsustainable.
      9. I am unable to think of any other viable business model, so I conclude that it is absolutely clear that we need a strong patent system to make sure drug development continues.

      Okay, maybe the wording for the first part of #9 above was a bit strong. :-)

      However, you still concluded that there can be no viable business model for drug development in a no-patent world.

      Below I give the same line of reasoning for a different field. After examining that argument, I wonder if you would also conclude that there is no viable model for development in that field under less monopolistic conditions.

      The arguments are the same--or do you consider one argument valid and the other invalid?

      (NOTE: I do not claim here that a business model that may fit the case above will necessarily have an analagous business model that will fit the case below, or vice versa; I merely claim that both lines of reasoning that conclude with an impossibility of the existence of a viable business model are flawed.)

      So here is the second, similar, and IMHO similarly flawed line of reasoning:

      1. Software development costs big money.
      2. Software development costs are paid by companies specializing in software development.
      3. The software development companies recoup these costs through sales of their software.
      4. The software development companies sell their software at a price much higher than the comparatively small cost of manufacture.
      5. Sales of their software would be undercut by competitors if just anyone could make cheaper copies of their software and sell those copies.
      6. Strong proprietary copyright licencing k
    13. Re:What else happened in the 1700's? by mjh · · Score: 1

      I am unable to think of any other viable business model, so I conclude that it is absolutely clear that we need a strong patent system to make sure drug development continues.

      This seems to be the crux of your argument. And it's true that I am unable to think of any other viable business model. Of course, I'm in very good company. Today, right this very minute, anyone is free to develop and use a business model for drug development that does not rely on patents. You can do it if you want. All you have to do is develop drugs and then not patent them. Then sell those non-patented drugs. Thus the exact legal structure that you are championing exists today.

      But, of course, no company exists to try and exploit it. And it's not because I am personally not smart enough to think of a way to make money doing it. No one, of the 6 billion people in the world, has yet thought of a way to do it. Now, of course, it's completely true that just because no one's thought of a way, that it doesn't make it impossible. All it proves is that our species hasn't produced someone smart enough to figure out that business model. I'll be happy to say that I'm wrong when I see someone who's come up with a viable business model for drug development that does not rely on patents. Until then I feel pretty comfortable in my assertion even if it's not "proven" in the logical sense.

      On the other hand, you might just be the person to do it. I don't want to discourage you from trying. If you have a business model that will work w/out patents, go for it. I wish you the best of luck.

      Software development costs big money

      The reason that your analogy fails is that software development does NOT cost big money. In fact, it's exceedingly cheap, by comparison. I do software development in my spare time, and all that took was some time spent at school. But that's because I'm relatively dense and I needed someone to show me how to do it. I know plenty of really smart people who figured out software development on their own and they do it. All it takes is their own individual time. Contrast this with drug development. No one does drug development on their own time. And the reason is that it's so expensive. The costs of just one of the many basic pieces of equipment to do the research is more than I make in a year. And that's just one piece of equipment. There's tons of stuff that you'd have to have in order to do drug development. The cost to get started doing software development is a computer.

      Moreoever, testing is almost entirely free in the software development world. If I want to figure out how well software is going to work, especially in the Free/OSS world, I simply let people download it and submit bug reports. I don't have to pay for testing and certification. And in the proprietary world (e.g. Microsoft) we pay the developer to test their software. I give you Windows 95 and Millenium as examples. Testing costs next to nothing in the software development world.

      Software developers don't even have to get certification. We don't have wait 10 years after we've come up with an idea just to get it through a federal organization before we can market our software. Drug companies do. And it's wholely appropriate that the FDA does it's job. There's lots to be frustrated about the FDA, but it's hard to complain about their basic purpose. They exist in order to ensure that the claims that a drug company makes actually hold true, and to identify the long term impacts of the usage of a particular drug. They do this because the only possible test subjects are people. If something catastrophic happens to software, and a computer "dies" that's something that can be recovered by lots of techniques, including rebooting, restoring from backup, component replacement, etc. But if something catastrophic happens with a drug, people don't have backups. When they die, there's no getting them back. So testing has to be d

      --
      Key to financial independence: Spend less than you earn. Save and invest the difference. Do it for a long time.
  45. Re:YRO getting out of hand? by Waffle+Iron · · Score: 1
    I'm all for the occasional YRO, thrown in with games, science, hardware, etc. but > 30% of the front page for one topic? *sigh*

    Maybe it's because the personal computing industry is maturing. There just aren't as many significant new non-rehash developments coming out with games, hardware, etc. as there were in the past.

    Just like in the old West, once the exploring and prospecting wound down, the focus shifted to building barbed wire fences around the patches of land that people had laid stake to. The YRO articles usually cover similar efforts of various parties to claim and cordon off various sections of the technology industry.

  46. patents here patents there by rastamutz · · Score: 1

    patents everywhere... maybe somebody should take a patent on "patent"...

  47. Baloney by tkrotchko · · Score: 2, Interesting

    " Without "intellectual property," friend, you'd be reading this article on a soot-darkened cave wall"

    With all due respect, there is no such thing as "intellectual property", there are trademarks, patents, and copyrights.

    And for the most part, none of them existed more than a few hundred years ago, with the concept of "IP" existing less than 40 years.

    As to the USPTO: Do we need to throw it out? No. Do we need to roll it back by 100 years. Probably.

    --
    You were mistaken. Which is odd, since memory shouldn't be a problem for you
  48. That is patently ridiculous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Somebody already has a patent on leather...

  49. Question.. by Haxwell · · Score: 1

    Is there anybody out there that does research for prior art to invalidate patents specifically related to software? There are a lot of obviously invalid patents because of prior art, and we all know the world would be a better place without them. I just got this idea from this story.. I think there is a great need to have a group like this, or at least a place where people can post info on any prior art they know of. Maybe just having a central place to post would be a springboard..

    Anyone?

    Hax.

    --
    http://www.haxwell.org
  50. Slashdot views by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Patents = inherently evil

    Microsoft = inherently evil

    RIAA = inherently evil

    SCO = inherently evil

    Linux = the one and only Savior of humanity

    What a joke. You would think tech types would solely work in fact and not in an opinionated fantasyland. Every day there's some dribble posted with the cast of miscast characters listed above...

  51. this just in ...Lexmark slammed by Copright Office by Papyrus · · Score: 1

    According to The Globe and Mail the US Copyright Office has just ruled against Lexmark in the printer cartridge chip controversy.

    Boo-yah!!!

  52. FTC floats patent changes 10/28/2003 by nolife · · Score: 1

    FTC floats patent changes

    Released yesterday from the the FTC

    Comments from law.com

    Check this quote out:
    "There is a little underappreciation by the FTC for the applications that don't get allowed," he said, adding that more than 80 percent of business method patents are rejected.

    Sounds great but 20% do make it..

    --
    Bad boys rape our young girls but Violet gives willingly.
    1. Re:FTC floats patent changes 10/28/2003 by pavon · · Score: 1

      This is really interesting news, I wish I had mod point right now. Perhaps you should submit this to Taco as another article; I think it deserves to get that much attention.

  53. My enemy's.. by fanatic · · Score: 3, Funny

    Me enemy's enemy's friend's enemy's friend is .. oh shit, I give up.

    --
    "that's not encryption - it's a new perl script that I'm working on..." - from some Matrix parody
    1. Re:My enemy's.. by CmdrGravy · · Score: 1

      "the enemy of my enemy is my friend, until he's the enemy again"

      Dreadful song.

  54. Legal advice by 12357bd · · Score: 1

    Maybe USPTO should consult W3C stall routinelly on internet related patents.

    That way some of this non sense could be avoided.

    Sigs ?? Karma ??

    --
    What's in a sig?
  55. Re:Microsoft Wanted to Lose - Web Domination Follo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What a load of bullshit! The changes they made involved ActiveX which was IE only already.

    Conspiracy theorists never think.

  56. Short-sighted? Get some glasses 8^) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting
    Call me short-sighted, but I was rather enjoying Eolas going after only Microsoft with patent infringement.


    So what happens if the sole employee of Eolas dies: Will he pass on ownership of the patent to other people within his family or give it to business associates? Watch out! Even though Doyle says he won't sue anyone but Microsoft, the inheritors might turn the tables and sue Macromedia for Flash, Sun for applets, and Opera for their web browser, and use SCO's Gestapo tactics against Mozilla.

    But this is besides the point. Read the post by Sir Haxa1ot, under the heading "Prior art" on this page, about Pei-Yuan Wei, the UC Berkeley undergraduate who already invented applets in the ViolaWWW browser and demonstrated the concept to Sun Microsystems two to three years before a patent was ever filed. For some reason, the judge in the case NEVER allowed Microsoft to contest the validity of the patent, so Wei was never allowed to testify. That is an injustice, because patents being issued by the Patent Office these days are not actually examined for validity. For example, Patent #6,368,227 (granted in April, 2002), is "A method of swing [sic] on a swing is disclosed, in which a user positioned on a standard swing suspended by two chains from a substantially horizontal tree branch induces side to side motion by pulling alternately on one chain and then the other." It was originally submitted by a lawyer as a demonstration to his daughter of how the Patent system worked. Imagine his surprise when it was granted! The Patent Office's excuse it that it is swamped with patent applications, and so there is no way it can give each one the attention it deserves; their assumption is that the validity of the patent will be explored thoroughly in any ensuing lawsuits, when plaintiffs and defendants can have the luxury of time and money to fully investigate claims, track down and interview witnesses, and discover the true history behind it all. That's why the judge in the Eolas suit erred, and I hope that the ruling can be appealed.

  57. gotta love idiots by happyfrogcow · · Score: 1

    "invented here." is a trademark of Eolas.

    fine. "trademark of Eolas" is now a trademark of happyfrogcow.

    "'trademark of Eolas' is now a trademark of happyfrogcow." is also now a trademark of happyfrogcow.

    1. Re:gotta love idiots by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      "gotta love idiots" is now a trademark of SCO.

      It sounds really cool:

      SCO - gotta love idiots

  58. Re:Clippy has some FUCKING advice for you... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    "What are you? New here?"

    let's see:
    • Nate Fox (1271)
    • Clippy (691243)
    Look at who's the real newbie... ouch!
  59. "Ordinary skill in the art" by dpille · · Score: 2, Interesting

    W3C seems to have an odd inconsistency in its filing:

    Raggett I and II specifically teach those of ordinary skill in the art to modify a prior art browser, such as the Mosaic browser, to incorporate the allegedly new features of claims 1-3 and 6-8, rendering those claims obvious.

    Then it says this about 'ordinary skill in the art':

    The person of ordinary skill in the relevant art to the claimed invention is a software programmer with at least a bachelor's degree in Computer Science, and five years of programming experience in Internet, Web and browser technology, including specific experience with programming in HTML.

    I can't help but think that if the "new" prior art is dated July 1993 and the first NCSA Mosaic is February 1993 (?), there wasn't anybody around with the requisite "5 years' experience" for the invention to have been obvious to, not even by the time the application gets filed in 1994.

    Anyway, I just thought it was strange that they'd make such an effort on this stuff but make that kind of apparent mistake.

    1. Re:"Ordinary skill in the art" by Dachannien · · Score: 1

      The person of ordinary skill in the relevant art to the claimed invention is a software programmer with at least a bachelor's degree in Computer Science, and five years of programming experience in Internet, Web and browser technology, including specific experience with programming in HTML.

      The Internet was around for a very long time before the web was invented.

    2. Re:"Ordinary skill in the art" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ... and also, the five years is applied generically, so it could mean "five years of internet experience and six months of Web experience".

    3. Re:"Ordinary skill in the art" by mabhatter654 · · Score: 1

      I believe that Tim Berners-Lee can pretty much pick what he wants....after all, he could call his own skill "ordinary"! He didn't run out and patent HTTP because he thought it too "ordinary". I'm sure he had the prerequisites listed [and then some] at the time the patent was filed...I thought his initial experimenting was back in '88-'89. It's not his fault it took them 5 years to "catch-up" to him!

  60. Put away the tin-foil hat, Sparky by criscooil · · Score: 0

    Isnt it just a little more likely that the Beast's lawyers were -- *gasp* -- incompetent?

    --

    My life is an open book ... up to a point.

  61. There is no conspiracy here. by AzrealAO · · Score: 1

    The judge presiding over the case denied Microsoft the ability to argue the validity of the patent. They didn't "forget" to bring it up because they wanted to lose, the "Judge" wouldn't allow them to bring it up.

  62. MOD UP PLEASE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Cat got your tongue? (something important seems to be missing from your comment ... like the body or the subject!)

  63. Moderate me (-5, Conservative) by letxa2000 · · Score: 1
    Is this a news for NERDS site, or a political statement?

    Some would answer that the large amount of YRO stories is because our rights are under assault. However, the reality is that this is essentially a liberal bastion--so yes, in great part it is a political statement.

    1. This site can be a mouthpiece echoing blogs from Democrat in stories such as this.

    2. This site is alarmed over some melting glaciers, with the implication it's global warming (even though glaciers melted just a bit more many times before humans arrived).

    3. This site often consists of sour grapes, people bitter that someone besides themselves are doing well.

    4. This site often slams the oil industry despite the lack of any viable alternative at the current time.

    5. This site suggests that abundance is bad, equating spam, overeating, and traffic jams (due to urbal sprawl, of course). Our problem is having too much, apparently.

    6. Some people here even go so far as to say "Having an abudance of money might be a bad thing". WTF?

    Yes, it should come as no surprise that Slashdot is often just a political statement. A very leftist one.

    1. Re:Moderate me (-5, Conservative) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Up yours, you rich, fat, Republican, SUV-driving oil tycoon.

      (I reckon rich covers 3 & 6.)

  64. Eolas is trying to use an evil weapon for good by earthforce_1 · · Score: 1


    He already stated that they would licence the technology to Mozilla for free, and that he didn't want to see a browser monoculture.

    The fact that this is being done shows how much clout MS really has - even if you are legally in the right in taking them on, (whether he is morally right is certainly a matter of debate) they can simply get the law changed in their favour. Scary, isn't it?

    --
    My rights don't need management.
  65. Here's some more prior art by shking · · Score: 1
    . The very idea that you can patent the idea of putting something that used to appear in a new window embedded in the original window instead is just absurd beyond belief


    The equivalent "technology" in a paper document is the use of a sidebar, rather than a footnote.

    --
    -- "At Microsoft, quality is job 1.1" -- PC Magazine, Nov. 1994
  66. This may be *the* art by hobbs · · Score: 1

    I don't know the exact history, but the patent in question was derived from work at Berkeley around the same time - so it may have come from the same development work. Thus it is not prior art - it is *the* art. Remember that Eolas' patent is really an exclusive license of a Berkeley patent (Eolas' founder is an ex-Berkeley professor).

    1. Re:This may be *the* art by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thus it is not prior art - it is *the* art.

      Remember, you have to patent within a year of publicizing, So it could still kill the patent.

    2. Re:This may be *the* art by prostoalex · · Score: 1
      According to the guy's web page, he's clearly not too happy with Eolas.
      Now, as you probably know, Michael Doyle (Eolas's CEO and sole formal employee as I understand it), wrote to the net about his technology and eventually intent to patent this. So of course people (including me) wrote back informing him of prior arts. I'm not a lawyer but as I understand it one is supposed to disclose to the PTO any relevant prior art for the PTO examiner to assess. Doyle and I exchange letters, and I told him about this embedded capability in Viola, gave him a paper on viola, which contains pointers leading to more information including even the viola browser source code. Doyle ends up mentioning the browsers Cello and Mosaic, but interestingly not Viola! Now, Viola came before both Cello and Mosaic, and non of those two other browsers had any kind of embedded interactive capability at the core of the discussions.
  67. hrmmmm by Luveno · · Score: 1

    If the patent goes bye-bye, can Microsoft get their $521 million back? With interest?

  68. Try "Day the Universe Changed" by coyote-san · · Score: 5, Informative

    I suggest you read/watch James Burke's excellent series "The Day the Universe Changed," his other industrial history series whose name escapes me at the moment, or old columns in Scientific American.

    History shows us exactly what happens when patent law (and presumably trademark and copyright law) serves the "owner" alone, not society as a whole. You clearly don't know that Britain had 100-year patents for a while... and she made no significant contribution to chemistry or industrial processes during that time. Like copyright today a person could not extend on a process developed on the day of their birth - they and their children (and even many of their grandchildren) would be dead long before the patent expired.

    Meanwhile other countries, notably Germany, refused to respect the terms of British patents and had short patent durations themselves. If something was developed on the day you became an apprentice, you could probably use it as a journeyman and could certainly extend it as a master.

    Germany industry flourished, and a backwards agrarian society became an industrial powerhouse that far exceeded the capabilities of the British industry they 'stole' from within a working lifetime. The US followed a similar path, although it's not quite as striking here since we didn't break a centuries-old pattern.

    History is unambiguous on this question. Terms short enough to fit several consecutive patents into a working lifetime promote progress and innovation. Terms longer than a working lifetime stop innovation in its tracks and serve no useful purpose to society. They do, however, allow lazy CEOs to freeze the marketplace with them on top, and since the marketplace is frozen you see prices jacked up with none of the money "wasted" on research or innovation.

    --
    For every complex problem there is an answer that is clear, simple, and wrong. -- H L Mencken
    1. Re:Try "Day the Universe Changed" by Neil+Watson · · Score: 1
      I suggest you read/watch James Burke's excellent series "The Day the Universe Changed," his other industrial history series whose name escapes me at the moment, or old columns in Scientific American

      Connections and the less enjoyable Connections 2.

    2. Re:Try "Day the Universe Changed" by packrat2 · · Score: 1

      property? Moving from rights to interest. propably a varient of religious, authortain and democartic cultures... a cycle proposed by some french exsitencialist. faster cheaper supierior....? hum. delicate, expensive, complicated? (three not to do) new exciting diffrent. alive awake interested. wored, online, interactive. cherrio. pat

      --
      packrat ; writer-informer. http://packrat.comicgenesis.com http://www.youtube.com/area163 https://www.smashwords.com/
  69. And it still works ! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Here, the hole is still open !

  70. Prior to Prior Art by shking · · Score: 1
    The very idea that you can patent the idea of putting something that used to appear in a new window embedded in the original window instead is just absurd beyond belief

    The equivalent "technology" in a paper document is using a sidebar, instead of a footnote

    --
    -- "At Microsoft, quality is job 1.1" -- PC Magazine, Nov. 1994
  71. Re:YRO getting out of hand? by mcpkaaos · · Score: 1

    Yeah, maybe you're right. Those YRO stories are getting tired. Then again...

    michael: Omigod, the feds are using voice-activated PDA handheld bluetooth microspasm processor masheens to brainwash the general population into walking, corporate zombie consumers! Fire up Frontpage, boys, it's time for a (cue outrageous action music) YRO story!

    Taco: (Cue soft and cuddly Celine Dion song, bubblebath, candles, Richard Simmons) Settle down, Lois, we already did a few YRO stories today. Here, post this family piece from freshmeat on how Linus has explosive gas. We'll call it "Kookin' Kernels". Make that government thing a poll or something. Good. Here, copy & paste Cowboyneal some more. Don't forget to spellcheck... just kidding. Comedy! Submit! Now hit me with this hammer. Again! Now mod yourself into oblivion.

    --
    It goes from God, to Jerry, to me.
  72. I'll show them attitude by estoll · · Score: 1

    Patent lawyers can be extremely pushy. Eventually they piss off the patent examiner reviewing the patent, and the examiner takes the attitude of, "I'll show him." They approve the patent and decide that when the company loses the patent in court, they'll go after the lawyer for all he/she's worth.

    Kinda funny since a bunch of patent examiners go on to be patent lawyers...

    --
    http://www.askthevoid.com
  73. -1 Dupe Blatant Ripoff by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This guy ripped this right out of an earlier thread.

    The fact that Dun Malg hasn't been leashed out of Slashdot by his tiny balls is a travesty.

    1. Re:-1 Dupe Blatant Ripoff by Dun+Malg · · Score: 1
      This guy ripped this right out of an earlier thread.

      Sorry pal, but I didn't. There may be something similar in another thread, but I didn't see it. Not surprising, though, as I merely pointed out the obvious, only in a mildly humorous fashion.

      The fact that Dun Malg hasn't been leashed out of Slashdot by his tiny balls is a travesty.

      Huh? That sentence sense not makes!

      Crap, I'm replying to an AC. Damn. Whatsa matta? Too chickenshit to insult me even through a PSEUDONYM? Morons like you are Block 8.

      --
      If a job's not worth doing, it's not worth doing right.
    2. Re:-1 Dupe Blatant Ripoff by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You must be really quite stupid. Let me dumb down that sentence for you:

      "The fact that fucktard here hasn't been herded off of Slashdot is a travesty."

      Leashed, since you have a limited vocabulary, is a verb meaning "as if with a leash".

      Now you dirty little whore, suck my cock just like last time -- no more spitting!

  74. Re:Hey - institutions need to catch up with cultur by Bendebecker · · Score: 1

    Patent Carbon Dioxide and then sue everyone who breathes! They're illegally distributing CO2 to everyone!

    --
    There's a growing sense that even if The Future comes,
    most of us won't be able to afford it.
    -- Lemmy
  75. Missing TBL's point by jtheory · · Score: 1

    Read Berners-Lee's letter -- I think he has a good handle on what would *actually* happen, because IE is, in fact, the most widely-used browser by far.

    Your "inherently stupid lazy average PC user" doesn't know anything about switching to an alternative browser. They probably don't even think they're affected, IF they hear anything about the problem, because "I use AOL, not Internet Explorer". They will expect the websites to change to stay compatible with IE... and guess what?

    The websites will change, in spite of the expense and frustration. Unmaintained websites, academic sites, personal project sites, etc. with no budget for the changes will just have their audience cut to a fraction of what it was.

    That's why it's bad, even if Eolas never goes after anyone other than MS.

    There's also that whole concept that two wrongs don't make a right, etc., etc., but you can answer this one without leaning on morality at all.

    --
    There are only 10 types of people: those who understand decimal, those who don't, and, uh, 8 other types I forget.
  76. rules 102b and 103 by josepha48 · · Score: 1
    The patent office uses 'rules' which are based on case law:

    Rule 101, basically says that the prior art show is exactly what is in the patent in question.

    Rule 102b, basically says that given A and given B it is obvious to combine A and B for reason C. In this case I think they are saying that given the fact that people were talking about the EMBED tag and given the fact that the Mosaic browser was around 'it would be obvious to one skilling the art' to use the EMBED tag in a web browser.

    Rule 103, basically says that given A the new feature C is obvious. In this case they are saying that EMBEDding is 'an obvious enhancement to once skillind in the art'.

    I think this is a good argumment and as a former patent examiner, I'd reject it, but alas, I think this is up to a judge.

    --

    Only 'flamers' flame!
    Does slashdot hate my posts?

    1. Re:rules 102b and 103 by glwtta · · Score: 1
      I think this is a good argumment and as a former patent examiner, I'd reject it

      So you weren't that good a patent examiner, were you?

      --
      sic transit gloria mundi
    2. Re:rules 102b and 103 by josepha48 · · Score: 1

      I got tired of law, and BS and got into tech instead, where I apply for patents now ;-)

      --

      Only 'flamers' flame!
      Does slashdot hate my posts?

  77. Mod parent up! by flez · · Score: 1

    Great answer. With sources, none the less.. (slashdot first?)

  78. You could be a skit. by mcpkaaos · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Pardon my language, but yours is the most polished piece of shit post I've read in a long, long time. What kind of sad, dreary life would brand a geek website a partisan politics? Your words make you sound terribly paranoid, nothing more. This website is mostly a sounding board for one-liners, "I'm smarter than you" arguments, and notices of various inventions, innovative or not. It's your typical, average, run-of-the-mill geek site, and I love this place for it. We're all retarded here, equally so, and it's a great time. Though I fail to see any political value here, for either "side", as you see it.

    Yes, it should come as no surprise that Slashdot is often just a political statement. A very leftist one.

    I hate to break this to you, but Slashdot is about as capable of projecting a political statement as our political system is at regulating technology. (The exact calculations of said ridiculous statement are left(ist?) as an exercise for the reader.)

    Now if you'll excuse me, I must take leave to go picket the bus driving grocery store clerks drivers and lobby local government to have my way. Burn the witches!

    --
    It goes from God, to Jerry, to me.
    1. Re:You could be a skit. by letxa2000 · · Score: 1
      Pardon my language, but yours is the most polished piece of shit post I've read in a long, long time.

      Thank you, I was sure I'd ruffle some feathers and was surprised how much time went by without a reply and, even more suprising, being modded into oblivion.

      What kind of sad, dreary life would brand a geek website a partisan politics? Your words make you sound terribly paranoid, nothing more.

      That first sentence was a little hard to understand. But I've been here for years and consistently the articles themselves are written in a way that show a liberal bias. And the comments? Just read them. If you forward an idea that suggests that oil isn't so bad, you're toast. If you suggest that Bush isn't so bad, you're toast. If you suggest we shouldn't force a switch to alternative energy until a viable one exists, you're toast. If you suggest that maybe global warming isn't a result of human actions, you're toast. The list goes on.

      I hate to break this to you, but Slashdot is about as capable of projecting a political statement as our political system is at regulating technology.

      I'm not saying this site is run by a political organization. But its members and, thus, the stories that are posted are usually liberal. Examples provided above and in my previous post. And, thus, to answer the original question--it should not be surprising that so many stories are YRO. YRO stories here are usually a technical spin on what is otherwise a political or legal debate.

      Yes, the liberals here usually don't make their case any better than liberals in general--but the predisposition of people here to mod posts down just because the post doesn't agree with the liberal party line is very predictable.

      Try posting a message supporting Bush in some way. Provide facts. Generally what happens is that your post will be modded insightful and go up to about +2 or +3. Then, by the next day, it usually has a dozen liberal replies calling you a Nazi, a slave of the oil industry, and you've been modded down to 0 or -1. Try it some time and you'll see where I'm coming from.

      That said, I don't really care. I come here to relax and occasionally tweak a few liberals. But it would be nice if there was a technology-site like Slashdot that was more about technology and less about politics.

    2. Re:You could be a skit. by Adolf+Oliver+Bush · · Score: 1

      im shocked you didnt hit -1 in a hurry...

      nice post (grandparent), i agree with everything...

      especially about how it would be nice to have a tech site that isnt so political...

      --


      This post cannot be re-broadcast without the express written consent of Major League Baseball.
  79. Thanks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You just reacted the obvious old anal nerd way : keep insulting people over useless matters : to paraphrase another story : if /. could change something, it'd be in exile.

  80. Wait! by Qrlx · · Score: 1

    Shouldn't we wait until Microsoft has to pay Eolas billions before questioning the authenticity of this patent???

  81. Re-Examination explained by angle_slam · · Score: 1
    From the PTO's on-line glossary
    at any time during the enforceability of the patent, any person may request reexamination by the Office of any claim of a patent on the basis of prior patents or printed publications cited under 37 CFR 1.501. In order for the request for reexamination to be granted, a substantial new question of patentability must be present with regard to at least one patent claim. The request must be in writing and must be accompanied by payment of a reexamination request filing fee as set forth in 37 CFR 1.20(c). -- see 37 U.S.C. 302, MPEP 2209, et seq., for more
    My question is simple--why is W3C "urging US Under Secretary of Commerce for Intellectual Property James E. Rogan to initiate a re-examination of the patent because the critical prior art was neither considered at the time the patent was initially examined and granted, nor during recent patent infringement litigation."? Under the re-examination laws, any person is allowed to initiate a re-examination procedure (see MPEP 2212. It doesn't need to be started by the PTO.
    1. Re:Re-Examination explained by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This does not look like a Re-examination. It is only a "Citation of Prior Art" under 37 CFR 1.501. A re-examination should be made under 37 CFR 1.510.

      The practical effect is that the citation of prior art is simply put into the patent file. The PTO does not have to do a darn thing. IF W3C really wanted to have the PTO reexamine the patent, they could do so.

      Why is W3C being morons and filing under the wrong section and "begging" Mr. Rogan to intervene?

    2. Re:Re-Examination explained by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe it is because they are too cheap to put there money where there mouth is. The fee for a re-examination is high. Also, if the patent is upheld in the patent office, it would be almost impossible for someone to be succesful in attacking the validity. The standard is clear and convincing evidence to defeat an issued patent. Imagine the average juror who is told this patent was examined by government experts not once but twice- do you think they will feel that someone has provided clear and convincing evidence that this patent should not have issued with that argument being made.

    3. Re:Re-Examination explained by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It doesn't need to be started by the PTO

      No, but it needs to be ordered by the PTO. Read the stuff you're linking to, then understand that the US Under Secretary of Commerce for Intellectual Property (the "Director") can order a re-examination at any time of his own initiative. Thus, with the press coverage, etc., W3C has ensured that they've done plenty to try to secure an order for re-examination without the risk that they've wasted their filing fees if no re-ex is ordered.

  82. It's NCSA, not NSCA. by Sinistar2k · · Score: 1

    Who is proofreading the filings over at W3C these days?

  83. Re-examination of Eolas Patent by kogs · · Score: 1

    Did they pay the re-exmination fee (item 1813)?

    Did they fill in the form?

    Did they get someone who knew what they were doing to make the request?

    Looks like no, no, no to me.
    1. Re:Re-examination of Eolas Patent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're right.
      They merely filed a "citation of prior art" which "is put into the patent file." The PTO doesn't have to do anything. They did NOT file under the proper Reexamination section. It is NOT a reexamination.
      Why didn't they do it right?

    2. Re:Re-examination of Eolas Patent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uh, no, they just found somebody who knew more about it than you do.

      From 35 USC 303(a):
      On his own initiative, and any time, the Director may determine whether a substantial new question of patentability is raised by patents and publications discovered by him or cited under the provisions of section 301 of this title.

      Basically, they're asking the Director to this so they don't have to fill in the form or pay the re-examination fee. If you read on to section 304, you'll see the process is exactly the same as if W3C requested re-examination.

    3. Re:Re-examination of Eolas Patent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Me again, sorry, I don't think those Pennie and Edmonds guys know more about it than me. 'nuff said.

      What Pennie file is still not a "Reexamination" request. Whats the big deal with $2,500 reexamination fee? If W3C wanted to do it right, and have input to the process, they should have filed an "interparties" reexamination, don't ya think?

    4. Re:Re-examination of Eolas Patent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      So when the patent office fucks up you have to bribe them to do their job correctly? Do they at least refund this "fee" if you were correct? Is anyone penalized at all for seeking or granting the invalid patent?

    5. Re:Re-examination of Eolas Patent by kogs · · Score: 1

      If it was exactly the same, the re-examination provisions would not exist. The key word is "may". The Commissioner may also simply ignore it. If you are serious about getting a patent revoked, you need to pay the fees.

      This provision enables but does not require.

    6. Re:Re-examination of Eolas Patent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't understand- even if you pay the fees, they're not required to actually re-examine it, so why would you pay the fees?

  84. Abstract sound familiar... by FirstTimeCaller · · Score: 1

    From the patent abstract...

    The invention allows a program to execute on a remote server or other computers to calculate the viewing transformations and send frame data to the client computer thus providing the user of the client computer with interactive features and allowing the user to have access to greater computing power than may be available at the user's client computer.

    Sounds like X-Windows to me.

    And did anyone notice that the original inventor (not the current patent holder) is the University of California!? Please tell, me that none of my tax dollars went towards this...

    --
    Wanted: witty unique signature. Must be willing to relocate.
  85. parent sounds like a troll by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    >Isn't IE free (not as in "beer" but as in "money")? Does Microsoft charge for including IE-specific objects in your HTML code? You truely are Confused.

    Do we have to spell it out for you? Maybe rephrasing the quote you responded to might help:
    "BTW, Eolas is privately owned with only one employee. MS can't buy it unless Eolas agrees to being bought. Also, if MS were to buy Eolas you think they'd just suddenly go and license that patent to Opera, Mozilla, Netscape, Konquerer, etc out of the goodness of their heart?"

    Are you sure that you are not the "truly confused" one?

  86. Is Cowboyneal the Merovingian? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That is a statistical aberration, and inevitability that Slashdot gives rise to. It is the unbalenced remainder of what would otherwise be a ideal enviroment for the self-important exchange of platitudes, social engineering projects, and maximum extreme home-proctology. Though the moderation system is refined to supress the resultant fluctuation, it grows such that as time t proceeds to infinity, the probability P of fluctiation f becoming asymptotic, reaching manifestation, approches unity. At which time the aberration must return to the editors and disseminate his karma. In this way, Slashdot is reborn and the Guff is filled anew with karma so moderation can continue. At which point, this aberration will be prompted to select 13 new editors, one of whom will not consider Microsoft the source of all evil in the world, and starving children in africa.

  87. "IP" is prejudicial and misleading. by jbn-o · · Score: 1
    Stupid patents are not arguments against IP in general.

    Using the term "IP" or "intellectual property" in that context prejudices one of the most important discussions society needs to have about how to handle policy in copyright, patent, trademark, mask rights, and all the other diverse laws that phrase lumps together. That term makes it seem like there's one overarching principal which is being reapplied for different kinds of works, but that's not so. Some of the areas covered even conflict (patents and copyrights, for instance, conflict for any developer or would-be user of a free software MP3 player in countries that observe software patents. Thomson's extant patent claim on MP3 conflicts with the power a copyright holder has to distribute their work).

    Getting back to the topic at hand--software patents--these are completely unnecessary and one need not look back very far in computing history to see why: these patents did not exist when computing was starting up. Many corporations invested in personal computing without leveraging these patents. Therefore, we don't need them. We have them because corporations want to guarantee profit for working less.

  88. Re:Back here there's nothing- some advice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Maybe you should try to be more focused on the tasks at hand. I.E. finding work, then doing that work, rather than reloading slashdot looking for a "first post". If you miss the "big toys" maybe you should get back into the military (if you ever were), but my guess is that you don't like taking orders.

  89. Patently Absurd by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No, you need to back up and figure out where you got lost. The notion that human inventiveness would suddenly cease if people couldn't lay legal claim to ideas is absolutely absurd.

    Make that last bit patently absurd and I'll agree with you. ~ giggle ~

  90. How funny by WindBourne · · Score: 1

    MS, IBM, and HP all wanted w3c to establish the use of patents. Now MS is opposed to paying a little bit of money and count on the OSS world to at least stick to its guns.

    --
    I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
  91. Is the fee ever refunded? by Sebby · · Score: 1
    Interesting that there is a 'reexamination fee'.

    If it is found that the patent is invalid after the reexamination, is the associated fee refunded (since, afterall, they got paid for NOT doing their work properly when the thing first got submitted).

    Or do we, as the population, need to sue the patent office for their incompetence which is costing us not only the original fee, but the cost of all the extra bureaucracy of the court system needed to rectify their fuck-up?

    --

    AC comments get piped to /dev/null
  92. That's a bit extreme by siskbc · · Score: 1
    You clearly don't know that Britain had 100-year patents for a while...

    I clearly don't recall having supported the idea of infinite patents. I didn't and don't. Don't play strawman - just because I don't support NO patents doesn't mean I support neverending patents.

    History is unambiguous on this question. Terms short enough to fit several consecutive patents into a working lifetime promote progress and innovation. Terms longer than a working lifetime stop innovation in its tracks and serve no useful purpose to society.

    I completely agree. I think current patents are maybe a bit too long in certain fields. Note, however, that g'parent is supporting the notion of abolishing patents, and I stand by my original post that this would completely stifle any sort of capital intensive R&D in which barrier to entry in a market is low. This includes, specifically, pharmaceuticals.

    --

    -Looking for a job as a materials chemist or multivariat

  93. Doubtful. by PhxBlue · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If the Patent Office had to Pay For Their Mistakes, they might be less likely to make the same mistakes over and over again.

    That presumes the Patent Office would feel a greater sense of accountability for your money than they do for their work. Since they obviously don't give half a damn about their work, why would they care about how they spend your money?

    What is the benefit of keeping the patent system versus the benefit of getting rid of it? Maybe we need to wipe our hands clean of the whole concept of patenting.

    --
    !#@%*)anks for hanging up the phone, dear.
  94. Sheesh... by djeaux · · Score: 1
    NOBODY caught the "black helicopter chaser" bit... My original point WAS that the answer to "WFT is going on in the USPTO" is "the place is run by political appointees." By which I meant "incompetent brown-nosers who've sucked a$$ to get every 'job' they've ever had." And I apply that definition equally to those appointed by both parties.

    Regardless of when the patent was issued, the court decision happened on Rogan's watch. We'll soon know how much guts he really has & whether he really deserved those awards for "integrity" that he got in California.

    --
    "Obviously, I'm not an IBM computer any more than I'm an ashtray" (Bob Dylan)
    1. Re:Sheesh... by deanj · · Score: 1

      That's just more FUD. It's not like the guy running the show looks at every single patent that goes through that place.

      The patent system for software has been screwy for more than twenty years, and you can't hang it all on one guy. Doing that just points out that you A) have an axe to grind or B) you don't know what the hell you're talking about.

    2. Re:Sheesh... by djeaux · · Score: 1
      Doing that just points out that you A) have an axe to grind or B) you don't know what the hell you're talking about.

      Or both. Don't discount that possibility ;-)

      I still think it's a monumental cop-out to say that the head guy isn't responsible for what happens in his department, because the actual "decision" was made by some paper pusher stuffed away in a broom closet. Every politician who's ever come down the pike wishes that was the case.

      But you are correct: the patent system for software has been screwy for as long as I can remember (and that's a fuzz longer than 20 years). So let's return to that. Why has the system been screwy for so long? Could the answer be, um, "politics"?

      --
      "Obviously, I'm not an IBM computer any more than I'm an ashtray" (Bob Dylan)
    3. Re:Sheesh... by deanj · · Score: 1

      I think it's worse than politics: it's bureaucracy.

      I think if it were politics I think there would be a chance of fixing it. I think it's just monumental incompetency, complete lack of understanding of why should or shouldn't be granting patents, and a bureaucracy that goes on and on.

      The thing that worries me is that I think it's not just computers/software. It's kinda like being at the movies. We as computer folks see amazingly stupid hollywood versions of computers, and laugh at them. Who's to say that other professions don't see the same things?

      I'd be willing to be that the other professions see idiotic patents being granted the same way we do in our profession.

      The only way this is going to get attention is if something really big happens, or more likely that a senator gets screwed over by a patent in some way. Then politics will enter all this big time.

  95. That begs the question by FanaticalDesperado · · Score: 1

    How much would you be willing to pay for the more extensive prior art search that the patent office would be required to do? That is money that would come from taxes. Making the person/company filing for the patent pay for the prior art search would put patents out of the reach of the little people. I, too, believe that the patent office has some flaws. I'm just not sure of the best way to go about fixing it. The peer review process I read in about in another post has some merit, and perhaps should be examine more closely.

    1. Re:That begs the question by forlornhope · · Score: 1

      The USPTO is a profitable buisness already. Im sure they could foot the bill if congress stopped using that "profit" for pet projects.

      --
      "We Don't Need No Truthless Heros!" - Project 86
  96. Strawmen and other Red Herrings by siskbc · · Score: 1
    The invention of plumbing was a couple of thousand of years ahead of the industrial revolution. Incidentally, electricity was also known, and most of the advances in the research of electricity was unencumbered by IP rights until Edison.

    I was being facetious with the plumbing bit.

    Oh, and the internet was developed using US tax payers money, just the way that most early work on computers was done by researchers using public money or working on their own WITHOUT APPLYING FOR PATENTS or otherwise retaining restrictive IP rights.

    Yes, and at this time it was completely unavailable to 99.999% of the population because there were no personal computers on which to access it.

    Try to guarantee all you want that Intel and Apple wouldn't do years of R&D if their competitors could steal it once they go to market, but the idea is ludicrous.

    So ludicrous that I suppose they won't bother patenting their designs next time? Like hell. If they weren't protecting something of value they wouldn't bother

    But most major scientific advances have not been protected by patents or copyright.

    No, because they're done at Universities, not in the private sector. Science can't be patented anyway. Engineering can, and most major engineering advances ARE patented.

    You point to the Polio vaccine, but the "invention" of the vaccine by Salk was often heavily criticized by other researchers as containing nothing new of substance, but being just a result of combining research already in the public domain. And in fact Albert Sabin soon developed a new vaccine that more or less superceded the Salk vaccine.Add to that that the research wasn't done by a private company, but a university and the idea that lack of IP rights would have prevented it gets ridiculous.

    Go after the analysis, not just polio - I listed other ailments as well. I imagine you aren't familiar with the pharm industry, but it wouldn't exist without patents. When you invest $1B in a drug, and a generic competitor can then start making it for under a $1M, NO R&D would take place. You MIGHT get cures for the most mass-life-threatening diseases, but the idea that universities could carry on the R&D that is currently done in the private sector is absolutely laughable. I'm a chemist at a top-5 research school, so you're not trumping on this one. Lack of patent protection would KILL the pharm industry.

    Bottom line is your arguments don't hold in the abstract, you're trying to fight the forest by cutting each individual tree. To win this argument, all I need is one industry in which R&D is expensive but manufacturing cheap. That's it. Your suggestion that the public sector could shoulder all necessary innovation shows your naivete in the matter - it sure as shit didn't work for the Soviets, and it wouldn't for us either.

    Why do I suspect you're more motivated by ideology than actual analysis here?

    --

    -Looking for a job as a materials chemist or multivariat

    1. Re:Strawmen and other Red Herrings by Arker · · Score: 1

      So ludicrous that I suppose they won't bother patenting their designs next time? Like hell. If they weren't protecting something of value they wouldn't bother

      Here's something you don't seem to grasp. Of course they're going to patent it. We live in a system where they can get something of value that way, sure - legal tools to use against competitors, legal tools even to use as a defense against similar legal tools in the competitors hands. Offensive patents, defensive patents - sure they're of value, because they are backed by the full force of the legal system and, if need be, law enforcement. So what?

      If you could buy a 'get out of jail free card' in real life, that would damn sure be 'something of value' also, and you'd see a lot of people buying them. This would not mean that these are therefore valuable things in the broader sense, or that it would be overall a good or right thing to have such a system.

      --
      =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
      Friends don't let friends enable ecmascript.
    2. Re:Strawmen and other Red Herrings by Mark+Shewmaker · · Score: 1
      You make a short, extremely strong claim: "Lack of patent protection would KILL the pharm industry."

      You also make a longer version of the same claim:

      Go after the analysis, not just polio - I listed other ailments as well. I imagine you aren't familiar with the pharm industry, but it wouldn't exist without patents. When you invest $1B in a drug, and a generic competitor can then start making it for under a $1M, NO R&D would take place. You MIGHT get cures for the most mass-life-threatening diseases, but the idea that universities could carry on the R&D that is currently done in the private sector is absolutely laughable. I'm a chemist at a top-5 research school, so you're not trumping on this one. Lack of patent protection would KILL the pharm industry.
      People often make this sort of claim, but I don't think I've ever seen it actually backed up.

      Can you explain why it would be utterly point-blank impossible for old and new cures to be available and to be continually developed over the long-term in a reasonable fashion (that is, not at a snail's pace for the entire medical field), if we were living in a world without patents? Two notes:

      1. I'm asking you to prove something slightly different from what you actually claimed above, though I imagine it's basically similar to what you mean to claim.
      2. I admit that this may not be a fair question, in that I am in effect asking you to prove a negative.
      In any event, I don't think I've ever seen anyone actually go through, step-by-step, and prove why medical progress would necessarily slow to a snails pace were we suddenly in a no-patent world. Instead it's more or less claimed to be obvious without too much real backing to the argument. Generally the arguments as I've seen them have all sorts of subtle assumptions. For instance:

      When you invest $1B in a drug, and a generic competitor can then start making it for under a $1M, NO R&D would take place.
      There are all sorts of assumptions in the above statement. Here are a couple:

      1. There is an assumption that the group spending the $1B has an interest in selling the drug. Why does that have to be the case?
      2. There is an assumption that another group that could make and sell this new drug for just $1M is necessarily a (feared or potential) "competitor" that would eat away from the first group's business. Why would this have to be the case? Why would it, for instance, be utterly impossible for them to be ecstatic that someone else can make the drug for $1M, (even assuming no royalties go to the first group), perhaps even talking with this so-called "competitor" to find ways of making production cheaper for them, or sponsoring some of the costs?
      Perhaps those assumptions would be considered to be valid for businesses operating in world with pharmaceutical patents, but I don't see how they must necessarily be indisputably valid for for-profit businesses operating in a world without patents.

  97. Defense of principles... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    ...trumps MS bashing anytime, and that is a sport I enjoy myself.

    Sure, MS is generally evil, and generally worthy of being ragged on, but only for the things they do that are wrong. What is at issue here is something important to the community as a whole --- it's about having one of the basic ideas that makes the modern Web work being hijacked by yet another bogus patent. It's not about MS.

    MS should be burned for what wrong they do, but we shouldn't allow our dislike of them to cause us to ignore a threat to us all.

    So instead of the nattering about "who should I hate today," get behind the challenge to this --- and all the other --- idiotic, baseless IP patents.

    Have a nice war,
    Mal te Elder

  98. THANK YOU! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Lets hope we can forget about this whole Eolas crap.

  99. You could be an idiot... by Clippy · · Score: 0

    In fact, it's very likely! Blather on, fry boy. Just remember that as a Slashdotter, you are prohibited from backing up your crap with facts! And, in this respect, you are doing FANTASTIC! Rock on, dude, and yes, I do want fries with that.

    --


    My Karma is bad. May I take you out for a drink? It's on me...
    1. Re:You could be an idiot... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nice. A handful of sentences, no point. At least you're consistent.

  100. Care to respond to the rest? by siskbc · · Score: 1

    Particularly the demise of the pharm indistry? You seem to have forgotten that bit.

    --

    -Looking for a job as a materials chemist or multivariat

    1. Re:Care to respond to the rest? by Arker · · Score: 1

      You obviously hold yourself to be the expert in that area, and I'm not going to dispute that. I question whether I should even bother going further, because I doubt you'll pay any mind to ideas that contradict your own in your field of expertise, but on the off chance that you do, I'll point out that science and engineering made great progress before the patent system ever existed, and continued to make progress in many countries that didn't have patents long after that point. I think your argument is deeply rooted in fact, but also in missing the point in a way. Obviously, without all the features of the current situation, the current business model would not work as it does. This doesn't mean no business model would be possible, let alone that progress would suddenly come to a halt.

      --
      =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
      Friends don't let friends enable ecmascript.
  101. Play the game right, Tim by reasonable+observer · · Score: 1

    Tim Berners-Lee seems to think that his name, the mighty weight of the name of his organization (W3C), and his oh-so-rational argument will cause the U.S. Under Secretary of Commerce for Intellectual Property, James E. Rogan, to simply agree and toss the patent. That isn't this man's job. The process for challenging a patent isn't some sort of "who you know or who you are" sort of thing, it is a very well defined process. If Tim was smart enough to research all of this prior art and present an argument for why this patent is invalid (seems to hinge more on the economic impact of Microsoft changing their browser and not choosing to license the technology from Eolas rather than a procedural error on the part of the USPTO), why couldn't Tim figure out the proper way to file this challenge? Amazing.

  102. Block ? No. Bloc ? No! by Daath · · Score: 1

    Dude, I'm sure he meant bloke! You know, blokes! :)

    --
    Any technology distinguishable from magic, is insufficiently advanced.
  103. Maybe this is all not what it seems by CokoBWare · · Score: 1

    What intrigued me about the New York Times article is that Microsoft didn't even know about the patent. There a significant number of companies that stand to benefit from this patent being invalidated. If all these companies which include Microsoft's rivals work to invalidate this patent, then we're all sitting better. Maybe W3C is playing politics in the fact that if it protects it members interests, including Microsoft, it has now more power to sway MS when Gates doesn't wanna play ball with the W3C.

  104. HTML 101 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Use HTML entities to represent reserved characters:

    &lt; == <
    &gt; == >
    &amp; == &

    so your sample code would be written:
    &lt;embed type="application/eqn"&gt;2 pi int sin (omega t)dt &lt;/embed&gt;

    to represent:
    <embed type="application/eqn">2 pi int sin (omega t)dt </embed>

    1. Re:HTML 101 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What about the img src from Mosaic which was, iirc, the innovation that caused the web to truly boom? Wouldn't that be "embeding" an image in an otherwise text document with a little formating? After that, isn't it obvious to create conventions for embeding anything else in a HTML page, and after that doesn't embedding anything in anything become a pretty obvious idea? Where only the methods of doing so are non-trivial?

      Sort of like the hydrogen bomb made the concept of a world destroying machine/device obvious, but the death star a specific non-obvious example.

  105. This isn't the first time! by Heretic2 · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Nothing new here. I know personally of another incident involving Microsoft firing or having fired full-time employees and temps over a blog. Harte-Hanks, the company that houses XBox tech support here in Austin is located on Metric about 2 blocks from where I lived for nearly 3 years. I had friends that worked there and stopped by on lunch. These guys do XBox tech support, making $9/hour and they all hate their jobs. I hate doing what they do. Harte-Hanks is a thankless company that won Microsoft's bid by driving a slave farm.

    They deal with a lot of BS and many stupid callers. One started a Blog called XBoxIdiots or something. They thought it was private, but someone in Microsoft found it. They posted here about all their stupid customers. Everyone that had an entry there was fired. People that posted as few as one time in it we treated the same, including my good friend Ali. Losing that job was the best thing that ever happened to him.

    That was giving away private company info though. Like the fact that the first generation nVidia MCP didn't do Dolby Digital right, but they made the customers pay to get it fixed. Of course Microsoft likes Macs. They make software on Macs. How else are they going to develop software for Macs without Macs to develop on. What's the logic in this?

  106. Well I (for one).... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    am pleased to see that LISP has languished in near obscurity. As a person who frequently used parenthetical phrases (force of habbit), I can only imagine what wide adoption would have ment for the supply of parentheses. Even with the ever expanding volume of not only code, but higher math, parenteses volumes manage to remain high. Were LISP the defacto standard (as opposed to C/C++) why we could well be plunged into a crisis, not just for programers, and mathematicians, but also self-important hack writers.

  107. Yes, they can buy Eolas by autopr0n · · Score: 1

    They will have to pay a lot of money (more then 500 million, at least), and then they will own the patent

    Anyway, there are a lot of people and organizations in the world that are far more selfish and harmful them Microsoft.

    --
    autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
  108. Would they? by autopr0n · · Score: 1

    Well, has microsoft ever used a patent offensively? I don't think they have, but then again they've never had to pay more then $500 million for one either (since the company is at least worth as much as the fine MS needs to pay).

    If I were this guy, I'd collect my half billion dollars, put the patent in the public domain, and move on. Being greedy about it is only going to make things worse for him.

    --
    autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
  109. Story problem! by mabhatter654 · · Score: 1
    If some Slashdotters are LInux lovers and some Slashdotters are MS haters, then is it true or false that some slashdotters are patent lovers....My head is aching.

    I could come up with these all night!

  110. Re:Microsoft Wanted to Lose - Web Domination Follo by mabhatter654 · · Score: 1

    Yes, but It's a good excuse to break compatibility for lots of other stuff too while they are changing specs. And they get to use the "court made me do it" as an excuse! Then they can release a new "tool" that updates all the infringing stuff [and other stuff marketing determines!] to the newest version by MS. Once all the vendors get compliant tools, it will all have to be reverse-engineered again by other programs that want to share the data...MS will definately be having Lemonade from this ordeal....the fine was probaly worth it.

  111. Anyone have movie rights yet? by SPeW · · Score: 1

    I can't wait to see someone make a movie out of this fiasco, just like "Pirates of Silicon Valley" . Only it should be called "The Lone Cockblocker Who Almost Destroyed The Web" . No one else could make such outrageous claims like they invented the letter "e" and sold it to IBM.

    All I can say is Tim Berners-F'n-Lee is on this now? ... hell yeah baby, lead the charge and while you're at it get that other guy that invented the information super thingy , Al what's-his-beard!

    Booyah, Grandma, Booyah!

    --
    MoRe... LaTeR... -=PJK=-