NEC Demands License Fees For Carbon Nanotubes
apirkle writes "As reported in this article on EEtimes.com, NEC has claimed today that they own 'essential patents' on carbon nanotubes, and that all companies who make or sell nanotubes must purchase a license. NEC has a press release stating that they have already sold a license."
..the SCO of the Science World.
"All your nanotubes are belong to us"
FP!
Ok guys... is there any way we can stop this nonsense? I mean like really?
Greedy, greedy, greedy. Take some responsibility, take a hit for the future, realize that you're part of the world too. Carbon nanotubes have the potential to be everywhere, from space elevators to shoe laces to medical devices. NEC should step back and work on a plan that would allow their technology to be used by other companies, but the credit can still go to NEC. Money ain't everything.
Sorry for the disjointed rant, but this is a very annoying announcement.
I'd be happy to give them a micropayment for their nanotubes.
Don't blame Durga. I voted for Centauri.
New corporate motto "holding up progress, one patent at a time"
"That will be $699 per micron of nanotube length. Pay up now. Make it snappy: we have an auto-parts company to sue tomorrow."
I think it used to be the case that (for the most part) you couldn't claim a patent on a substance, only on its manufacture and its applications. That seems pretty sensible to me.
Sadly, that principle seems to have eroded away, and there are many patents on substances now that cover all future applications and ways of manufacturing them. Seems to me like that runs against the purpose of the patent system: to encourage useful innovation. I mean, if you can just claim all possible ways of manufacturing a substance and all possible ways of using it by just describing the substance, why would anybody else want to invest in finding better ways of manufacturing it or new applications for it?
In any case, this particular patent should run out in less than a decade, so it probably won't be all that significant.
I have a patent on a device that intakes mostly oxygen and the discharges carbon dioxide. It also has the ability to intake organic matter and discharges non used waste matter...
Now for the law suites... You will all be receiving a letter from my lawyer shortly
then, everything Carbon based would owe a license fee, granted we would miss much if the IC industry, but we could nail all the users of the IC industry.
Hmmm, where's that number for the patent office...
'And all the monkeys aren't in the zoo Every day you meet quite a few...'
I did not seem to find the articles that clear, are they claiming to patent a specific process for making carbon nanotubes or are they caliming to patent the nanotubes themselves, regardless of the process used to generate them? The former does not bother me, however the latter is rather troubling.
DeBeers, inspired by NEC's recent move, pattents the diamond latice crystal structure.
They have announced they intend to sue all companies who profit from their crystal, starting with synthetic diamond makers who use their crystal shape in carbon, then moving on into the semiconductor industry (where their pattented crystal structure is widely used in silicon).
"The worst tyrannies were the ones where a governance required its own logic on every embedded node." - Vernor Vinge
If they patented the structures they show in the images on their website (I can't read Japanese so I'm not sure) then they may have a point (and the world may have a big problem). On the other hand, carbon nanotubes are things that are easily formed in nature (it's the purification process that's complicated, and of course the processes involved in making carbon nanotubes with specified properties). Therefore patenting carbon nanotubes is like patenting iron, or silicon oxide. And I'm not sure if such a patent will hold in court.
-- Cheers!
What really bugs me about patents isn't the ``obvious inventions'' like ``internet auctions'' or ``method of combining two numbers in the way that the end result consists of the sum of the numbers''.
I really can't understand patents for engineering methods and devices that cannot be build at the time of patent's granting. IMO working prototype should be a part of patent application. Lack of working prototype means that you don't know how to build it, hence you shouldn't own the patent in the first place.
Otherwise what's to stop me from patenting ``cold fusion'' and sitting on those patents while bribing politicians to extend the patent expiration date ad infinitum and waiting for someone else to actually make it possible?
Robert
PS Mark my words: patents' expiration extension will be the next big thing like the copyrights extension is now. ``Meat and metal'' technologies didn't need it (they usually were obsolete long before patent's expiration), but software and business methods patents are a perfect target for such campaign.
Bastard Operator From 193.219.28.162
...NEC alleges that IBM improperly copied carbon nanotubes into Linux. :)
When asked for comment a NEOCorp spokesman said, "It really is too bad about that kid dying or whatever, but we've got to focus on the real issue here, our IP was being flagrantly abused in public with no monetary compensation to us, and we are not going to sit idly by and allow the screaming naked masses to continue to profit from the light and heat given off as a byproduct of producing NEOCorp's patented molecules."
When asked for comment on why NEOCorp felt it had the right to patent naturally occuring substances that it merely found rather than explicitly created, the original reporter was rapidly bludgeoned to near-death and taken to NEOCorp's multitrillion dollar headquarters (previously Japan) for immediate Company Re-Education.
-- I'm not a pessimist, I'm a realist. It's not my fault that life sucks so much. --
the NEC Space Elevator?
The living have better things to do than to continue hating the dead.
So, can I patent gold, silver, and platinum, and start demanding fees from Jewelry and precious metal manufacturers? Don't carbon nanotubes ever occur in nature? Seems to me the rule was that they could patent their method for building them, but if you could figure out another way to do it, it was fair game. Now NEC is claiming it is impossible to make a carbon nanotube without infringing their methods? What, is everybody infringing on step 1: "First, take some carbon..."?!?
"Freedom means freedom for everybody" -- Dick Cheney
I'll give it back to you when I'm done using it
A fine is a tax you pay for doing wrong and a tax is a fine you pay for doing all right.
1. Dave Barry wrote an important piece concerning nanotube application (in layperson's terms , carbon nanotubes are nanotubes made of carbon)
... (while being employed))
..
It also talks about those dummy close door elevator buttons (whose cousins, the crosswalk buttons were talked about a lot)
2. the original title was Dave Barry: Lawyers needed, many, to test space elevator , i'll get to that in a second.
OK let sum it up
youv'e got
a - a women suing her successfull son for slander (or ST) trying to get rich.
b - a women pretrnding to fall over in a day after Xmas DVD sale to sue the company (didn't it turn out that it was the 16th time she sued them
c - companies patenting facts, ideas , linux code.
d- a women suing (and winning) a department store claiming she sprained her arm tripping over a toddler (her own child)
e - a man suing his neighbor (and getting 5 figures) claiming the dog attacked him (which is true except that "he started it" by repeatedly shooting the dog with a BB gun)
(i appologize for not citing the reference but you can google for outrageous lawsuits to see that i downtoned)
These are syndromes of a society with too many lawyers, coupled with distorted get rich quick ideas
------ why don't all these people just meet up with wealthy nigerian businessmen/inheritors and split the $20,000,000,023.85 that just needs a resourceful individual like yourself
-- Avishalom is usually vish
On that note, I claim to hold the patent on dihydrogen monoxide. So all governments, companies, or any living organism must purchase a license from me before using my patented chemical compound. If you are found to be in violation of this, I will sue you for $1,000 per molecule found in your body.
More seriously, could this "patent" be voided is nanotubes are found to occur in nature or as a biproduct from another chemical process?
I would think that you couldn't patent nature or accidental biproducts... but this is kinda rediculous so I could be wrong.
In another thought... who are these idiots who keep handing out rediculous patents? Shouldn't there be moderation?
1. Claim patent on any and all substances. 2. Follow the model of SCO. 3. ??? 4. Profit!!!
Physics makes the world go 'round.
1 6,331,690 Process for producing single-wall carbon nanotubes uniform in diameter and laser ablation apparatus used therein
2 6,157,043 Solenoid comprising a compound nanotube and magnetic generating apparatus using the compound nanotube
3 5,698,175 Process for purifying, uncapping and chemically modifying carbon nanotubes
4 5,641,466 Method of purifying carbon nanotubes
5 5,627,140 Enhanced flux pinning in superconductors by embedding carbon nanotubes with BSCCO materials
None of these patents cover the existence of nanotubes -- but the patents do cover various methods of creating nanotubes. I found 118 US patents which mention carbon nanotubes in the abstract to the patent at the US Patent and Trademark Office.
There are other patents which concern creation of carbon nanotubes which predate NEC's patents. For example: 5,482,601 Method and device for the production of carbon nanotubes.
Accordingly, I doubt that NEC has a patent on carbon nanotubes themselves. Instead, it appears that NEC has some patents on methods for manufacturing carbon nanotubes. If these methods are more efficient than other methods, I do not have any problem with NEC selling licenses to use their processes.
For some reason, the article reminds me of the South Park episode where the kids tried to build a ladder to heaven so they could find Kenny.
Nanotubes have nothing to do with ladders to heaven do they?
Or move to mars...
"Can there be a Klein bottle that is an efficient and effective beer pitcher?"
Example: Daimler-Benz (before they became Daimler-Chrysler) developed and patented the airbag. They have never enforced the patent.
Nanotube shoelaces? That's such a cool idea! Seriously, I would pay $20 a pair.
And no, I'm not trying to make the parent poster sound stupid by being sarcastic - I actually think that nanotube shoelaces would be a good idea. They would never wear out, and be kind of cool in a high-tech geeky kind of way. And people don't mind paying stupid money for clothes, so I think the market's there.
And given that shoelaces are pretty short compared to, say, a space elevator, I'd say that this is one of the sooner-rather-than-later applications.
Quick, addie, go for the patent! But you got to promise to use all the profits from the BuckyLaces (you can have the name for free) as seed capital for your space elevator project.
evil math within Nature's Cubic Creation!
Putting a Stop to NEC Nonsense: A) A boycott of all NEC products. B) A campaign to dump all NEC stock from pension funds. C) A mass movement for jury nullification of all acts of attorney-cide, that means open season on attorneys. Now some might say there are good attorneys who are trying to change the system from within, as there were some "good" Nazis.
Guess this would effect the SE too... NEC would become like "the Company" in Aliens if the Space Elevator ever was built.
Oh wait, he had a few patents of his own, didn't he... Of course, he didn't go around trying to extort "licensing fees" from people using his ideas, either.
the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
I am getting more and more dismayed by this practice of corporations saying that they have sold a license for a patent/copyright/trademark/whatever and use that as a PR gimmick to lend public credibility to the validity of their claim.
Its seems to be the PR equivalent equivalent of 'if i say it enough time it must be true'
Every time a company uses this tactic i become wary of it and i lose respect and good will for it.
http://www.firstgov.gov/fgsearch/index.jsp?dep=t&n r=20&de=detailed&mw0=carbon%20nanotubes&mt0=phrase &ms0=must&in0=domain&dom0=www.uspto.gov&db=www&rn= 1&parsed=true
- Zav - Imagine a Beowulf cluster of insensitive clods...
let me go find some prior art... *Looks in old chimney*
Will I need a license to build a campfire? I understand that burning stuff causes buckyballs and bits of nanotubes and whatnot to appear. Am I not, therefore, guilty of violating NEC's patents by "manufacturing" their product without a license?
Just wondering. I'd hate to violate the sanctity of this most worthy collection of patents...
Maw! Fire up the karma burner!