Bright LCD Patent Dispute
pcp_ip writes "Honeywell filed suit Wednesday against 34 companies (including, Apple, Dell, Sony, Kodak, Fuji et al.) for infringment of patent 5,280,371. The patent for "a directional diffuser for a liquid crystal display" was filed on January 1994 and enables "a display to produce a brighter image without requiring additional power." Honeywell is looking for an injunction to prevent the defendants from continuing to infringe its patent, and for "damages adequate to compensate them for Defendants infringement." So much for LCD prices coming down! Where's OLED when you need it?"
Surely it would be the manufacturer that's infringing, right?
Which also brings up the question of whether an LCD manufactured outside the US falls under the protection of this patent. Any thoughts on that?
The problem with patents rears its ugly head again... I have a friend who recently graduated and got a job at a Patent lawyer at a large corporation. His whole job is looking over old patents and "checking" to see if there are any modern infringments, ie: who can we sue that has mad money off of something we couldn't. sigh...
The Patent was actually filed July 9, 1992. I've got an idea for some patent reform: Let your patent get knowingly infringed for 1 year - lose the patent.
This patent litigation is really getting absurd. I find it hilariously ironic that Kodak is named here after just crowing about its software patent win over Sun last week.
Now, just get Sun to file something against HP and you've got a three way standoff. Schweet! Get some popcorn and enjoy the show!
Yeah? Well I think you're overrated too.
The new Sony CLIE PEG-VZ90 has a 480×320x16b OLED display. Available in Japan only, at present. A bigger picture and some news links here.
Why not go after the people who are actually infringing? IE. the manufacturers of these devices?
Well, "The two largest LCD manufacturers, LG.Philips LCD and Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd., have previously taken licenses under this fundamental patent."
So, me not knowing the market, I'm wondering who the remaining manufacturers are. From the list of companies, I get the feeling their going after companies that have made products using smaller LCD displays (Apple - iPod, camera manufacturers, etc). So who's making those displays?
Honeywell patented this in 1994, developed it, and sold it. Then someone came along, took the idea, and started selling the product before the patent expired.
This is exactly what patents are supposed to prevent. Why are you guys giving them so much crap for doing something about it?
It seems to me that aspect alone should defeat most "submarine" patents. Unless you can prove that they knowingly stole your idea, the scope of the lawsuit should automatically invalidate your patent.
But then, I'm not a lawyer, and I'm foolish enough to attempt to hold government bodies up to standards of common sense...
Bush: He's Liberal in all the wrong ways.
90 degrees didn't show anything-but maybe it does still have a diffuser, just a different kind of one, because at 45 degrees I see rainbows.
SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
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Took them 10 years to figure out that they're being infringed upon? Not a company I'd want to own stock in.
Or is this an outright scam? Wait until everyone is using it and then sue, as opposed to telling them in the beginning and letting them decide to license, work around, or do without.
If this has been a scam to wait until it is widely adopted, and then ask for all back royalities, the patent should be invalidated for lack of notice and enforcement, and Honeywell should be given NOTHING!
"It's the height of ridiculousness to say for those 9 lines you get hundreds of millions."
The practical application of light has been around for a very long time. Look at the fluorescent lights above your head (if your at work), What kind of lenselets or diffuser is being used? Look at the tail lights on cars, the red plastic is internally (or sometimes externally) covered with bumps(lenses) to redirect the light. This is very old technology for light guiding.
The government which is strong enough to protect you from everything is strong enough to take everything from you.