Start-up Granted Injunction Against Microsoft
AustinSlacker writes " A San Jose, CA start-up, Alacritech Inc, was granted a preliminary injunction against Microsoft in a patent infringement lawsuit involving several patents related to Microsoft's implementation of "Chimney" TCP offload architecture."
What is unclear to me though, is if Alacritech really the first to use this technology. They don't explicitly say this in the article. The closest thing to indicate that Microsoft tried to steal their technology is the following time line:
According to this, Microsoft met with them, asked them for the architecture details, the ceased contact 2 months later. Interesting.
Alacritch sounds like something you need Tinactin to get rid of.
"I'd rather be a lightning rod than a seismometer." -Ken Kesey
When will we finally settle all these Intelectual Property suits? My guess is probably never. Along the same lines, how could the USPO allow Microsoft to patent something that was already patented? This is screwy...
First, if it requires a much higher standard of proof to get a preliminary injunction than it does to win at trial, as they claim, how come there are trials where preliminary injunctions are granted and then the plaintiffs lose? They're trying to play up this minor victory in the opening salvo of legal maneuverings as if they've already won the trial. Their lawyers know that's not the case and so do Microsoft's lawyers and execs. So who are they tring to convince?
And would Microsoft think a single networking technology would provide that much leverage? Seeing as the phrase comes from an Alacritech lawyer, it seems like just so much more hyperbole. If Microsoft "rules the world", it does so more because it owns the consumer/business desktop than because of huge wins in the server market. Microsoft has much more competition in the server OS world than it does in the desktop OS world.
All, in all, I consider this non-news. Let's see if the injunction withstands an appeal or two, or if the case withstands some of Microsoft's early motions. Until then, IMO, this is all just a lot of preening by peacocks in suits.
- Greg
Start a happiness pandemic
And to think for all this time I thought Microsoft Chimney was going to be an addon to Longhorn to help cool down my new quad core Pentium 8 256 bit nano-processor, which is what will be out by the time they release it.
That said, if a company with the size, resources, and hipness to the patent system that Microsoft has still has problems with the patent minefield, clearly something's wrong and needs to be fixed. The patent system is there to protect innovators, not to pull the legs out from under existing and profitable companies -- the economic ramifications of permitting individuals to sink corporations over legal silliness are staggering.
I never vote for anyone. I always vote against.
-- W.C. Fields
Aren't these the guys that came up with the "network coprocessor", and didn't they sue Microsoft for SUPPORTING hardware that has said implementation?
Every time something like this happens, it pushes large companies a step closer towards realizing that perhaps software patents are not an entirely Good Thing for the industry as a whole. And that means said large companies are one step closer to lobbying for software patent reform which, as we all know, is what it takes for any actual change to occur.
End of lesson. You may press the button.
Patent lawsuits.... Microsoft.... evil quotient reaching infinity...
cannot... decide... which to... cheer for... brain can't take... much more... **BOOM**
"All great wisdom is contained in .signature files"
... about it.
Ask yourselves: Are software patents a good thing?
Do not be tempted to say: "Yes, if used against M$"
It is a question of moral judgement.
Kohlberg 1
Kohlberg 2
CC.
P.S.: Note for moderators: Offtopic, because you are stupid.
TaijiQuan (Huang, 5 loosenings)
Alacritch Inc was founded in 1997. Google was founded in 1998. This is a david-vs-goliath story but certainly not on the scale that this article makes you believe...then again Alacritch did go through three rounds of funding for a total of only $35M.
I think in this case it seems relatively clear that Microsoft was aware of the patent, but chose to ignore it, and quash a smalltime innovator. Possibly they believed the patent would be invalidated in the long run, and therefore felt like the best way to proceed would be to violate and then litigate the patent.
And just in case you weren't joking, this won't in any way sink microsoft. At worst they pay a penalty proportional to the damages, which would be quite small (for microsoft), and be forced to either license the patent or do without tcp offloading in their OS.
"Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
Seriously though, I was speaking in terms of just general evilness.
That said, if a company with the size, resources, and hipness to the patent system that Microsoft has still has problems with the patent minefield, clearly something's wrong and needs to be fixed.
Wha? There's no minefield here. Microsoft walked in and stole their technology and planned to use its wealth to fend off any litigation. (allegedly)
The patent system is there to protect innovators, not to pull the legs out from under existing and profitable companies
This is exactly why the preliminary injunction was issued. If you're trying to be sarcastic it was a bit to thinly veiled.
My God, it's Full of Source!
OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
Wikipedia even has an entry on the software patent debate.
The amusing section is the list of quotes for and against software patents, both lead by a Gates quote:
Quotes supporting patentability
Bill Gates (Microsoft) 2005
"...There are some new modern-day sort of communists who want to get rid of the incentive for musicians and moviemakers and software makers under various guises. They don't think that those incentives should exist... I'd be the first to say that the patent system can always be tuned...the United States has led...because we've had the best intellectual-property system."
Quotes against patentability
Bill Gates (Microsoft) 1991
Internal memo
"If people had understood how patents would be granted when most of today's ideas were invented and had taken out patents, the industry would be at a complete standstill today...The solution is patenting as much as we can. A future startup with no patents of its own will be forced to pay whatever price the giants choose to impose. That price might be high. Established companies have an interest in excluding future competitors."
Patents are being handed out like hotcakes... I say we just do away with them all together (software patents that is) until a reasonable system is put in place.
..a patent infringement lawsuit involving several patents related to Microsoft's implementation of "Chimney"
I could be mistaken, but I think this might be the "chimney" patent in question.
Starsucks
1. invent technology
2. apply for patent
3. show technology to microsoft (who then copies said technology)
4. sue microsoft for infringing on patent
5. wait for buyout settlement
6. PROFIT!
abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz
If MS thinks the patent is bullshit, why not fight it?
Well, let me speak for myself. I don't think they are a good idea...at all. The best thing about *this* case is that it could easily become a thorn in the side of one of the biggest patent whores in the US. I find it particularly amusing that the patent holder is under no obligation whatsoever to ensure that the terms are "agreeable" to whomever wants to license them.
EAT PATENT, MICROSOFT!
Quite honestly, Microsoft doesn't give a shit about the industry as a whole. Microsoft cares about Microsoft, and overall software patents are a net gain for them. So they have to settle with some small company for pocket change - they win in the end, because they most likely got away with this behavior many times before. And will get away with it again. (and it just isn't Microsoft that does this kind of thing)
My beliefs do not require that you agree with them.
> The best thing about *this* case is that it could easily become a thorn in the side of one of the biggest patent whores in the US
How many patent lawsuits has Microsoft taken out?
I am no longer wasting my time with slashdot
Preventing OSS adoption through patent/indemnization FUD campaigns: priceless
Patents is really the only ace they have right now against OSS.
The Raven
A start-up with a 10-year history ?!?
:(
Looking at their timeline does make Ms look a little suspicious. And while saying a prelim injunction is harder might be stretching it a bit, it certainly isn't easy.
I'll have to side with the 'little guy' for now.
Especially as we don't like submarine patents and they are acting before Ms sells a billion dollars worth of stuff using it, sounds like they are trying to be relatively fair (without knowing what those favorable terms are, of course)
That and the fact they were able to get an injunction along with that suspicious looking timeline.
Ms using it and dealing with consequences later doesn't sound out of character. Make a billion dollars, put it in bank, years later pay fine/royalties off the interest sounds good if you can pull it off
Along the same lines, how could the USPO allow Microsoft to patent something that was already patented?
Simple. Take a buracratic process, apply it to something arguably related, inflate it beyond its staff and budget, throw in a lot of "cival" court case precendent and bake at 400 for 90 minutes. Mmm good.
... about it.
Ask yourselves: Are software patents a good thing?
Do not be tempted to say: "Yes, if used against M$"
It is a question of moral judgement.
Kohlberg 1
Kohlberg 2
CC.
P.S.: Now I wonder what happens this time - fucking stupid moderators!
TaijiQuan (Huang, 5 loosenings)
This is an example of the kinds of minefield a small startup faces when they try to deal with Microsoft. It would appear that MS simply intended to walk all over this company and suck them dry on court costs. It's actually nice to see Microsoft get their ass nailed to the wall on this.
From the sounds of things, this is also (at least partially) a hardwar patent and not a pure software patent issue.
Free Software: Like love, it grows best when given away.
That seems to be what they're doing ... I don't see in this anywhere that microsoft has decided to license rather than fight?
"Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
Alacritech makes TCP offload engines (TOEs); so do several other companies. Notably, Broadcom has promised to commoditize TOE by including it in GigE controllers "for free". If this happens, Alacritech is out of business. These Broadcom TOEs rely on the Windows TCP Chimney API to work. If TCP Chimney has to be removed from Windows, then Alacritech is possibly the only TOE company left standing.
Then yeah, I'd say they're a startup.
"Politicians are interested in people. Not that this is always a virtue. Fleas are interested in dogs." P.J. O'Rourke
Below, find three sequential elements from the timeline in TFA.
How many articles have we seen here on /. that duplicates this pattern? Who else has been stepped on by the giant in such manner? I'm sure somebody could find a fist-full of articles here in history that shows exactly that behavior pattern.
Am I correct in recalling that Novell got stung? IBM? I know those are giants themselves. I'm just glad to see that a little David has been able to sling his stone bullet into the face of the Goliath. Now, let's see if they can make it really count.
I'm not asking to shut down Microsoft. Just have them play fair.
Is that too much to ask, Bill?
(Bill: "Why, yes. It is.")
- - - /.)
When you say that you agree to a thing in principle, you mean that you have not the slightest intention of carrying it out in practice. -- Otto Von Bismarck
(this sig stolen from
I find it particularly amusing that the patent holder is under no obligation whatsoever to ensure that the terms are "agreeable" to whomever wants to license them.
EXACTLY.
So-called intellectual property is, in theory, a temporary monopoly granted for the sake of the public good. By granting the monopoly, the government provides economic incentives to creators. What, though, is the good to the public if the creators do not license their intellectual property?
I would propose mandatory licensing of ALL intellectual property under standard terms. No patent holder would then be able to withhold permission to incorporate patented technologies; nor could they demand outrageous payments for their patent. They could not keep technologies off the market solely to keep from cannibalizing their existing sales.
Record companies would be required to make ALL of the music they owned available to the public or risk losing their copyright. There would be no orphaned works; failure to provide access to a work would constitute abandonment of copyright and ensure that a work passed into the public domain.
The devil, of course, is in the details. What would the mandatory licensing terms be?
Those quotes are 14 years apart. It's not so strange that someone would change their mind on a subject over 14 years, especially considering that in '91 software patents were mostly not in Microsoft's favor, and now they are.
Funny how when MS is a smaller company he's against patents and when MS is a huge company with lots of patents he's all for them.
Read my short stories - You won't regret it.
Not the issue. How many patents does Microsoft hold? The distinction is important- the reason Microsoft hasn't initiated any patent suits (that we know of anyway), is because it hasn't needed to. Put the company in a position of financial stress, and you can bet they'll be looking at every possible way to take advantage of this massive portfolio.
how many patents has microsoft been hoarding lately?
how many times has it threatened the linux kernel with litigation?
(SPOILER!)
answer 1:lots
answer 2:more than 0
Am I the only one missing how the internal memo is antipatent? It looks like a simple blueprint for exactly how Microsoft has been proceding.
Build reoccuring revenue that doesn't require the industry moving forward and exclude smaller competitors.
I read TFP (The Fine Patent), or at least a good part of it.
It seems to be nothing more than the specification of the interface to an I/O processor. There have been I/O processors since the 60's.
I couldn't find anything that was at all innovative about.
I think M$ probably looked at what they had, said "So what? How does this help us?" and proceded to go ahead and implement what they had already envisioned.
If a patent doesn't have something in it that causes you to say "Why didn't I think of that?" or "Why did the aliens contact that guy instead of me?" it probably shouldn't be granted.
Ok, lemme get this straight...
Alacritech "shows" MS this technology back in 98
MS breaks communication in 99 and starts to use the technology without license
4 years later Alacritch then "tries" to offer a license.
One year later they sue
Why did they wait 4 years if they knew MS was using it without a license? Sounds like a Phishing scheme at the corporate level to dig into some pockets.
"It's not rocket science, Smithers! It's only brain surgery!" --Mr. Burns
he'll stop trying to Take Over The World ...
ya think?
-- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
or you could simply insret a non-optonal line in all edited postss stating the that time of each update and the total numbers of updates. This way people could correct gross speeling and errors gramatical. Then if someone complains about a post that been edited, you are aware ov it and u do'nt end jup with posts that read like this one :)
-kaplanfx
Visualize Whirled Peas
I thought of this the other day, and I realized that allowing /.ers to edit posts would dramatically increase the number of trolls.
You could simply set up a matrix where you are mod'd down based on how drastic the change is. Fix the spelling of a word, the format of a link or add in the dropped no or 't and your post isn't adjusted. Throw in a a sentance, get a -1. Anything more, loose all your positive mods, maybe.
For that reason alone I like the idea of static posts.
Wasn't this basically the same pattern reported for Microsoft's arrangements with a cellphone OS company (was it "Orange"?) "Partner" with them, starve them to death and let them die, then walk off with their "Intellectual Property"?
Hacker Public Radio is our Friend
Part 2: The solution is patenting as much as we can.
That's a very odd, but very true non sequitur. Well, unless you want the industry to be at a complete standstill. Which I guess they do; they have everything to lose and nothing to gain.
Random is the New Order.
It's a bit like mean people using landmines. Both the people and the mines are nasty. When a mine layer gets his leg torn off by a landmine then there's some poetic justice.
Engineering is the art of compromise.
Isn't this about pre-existing legislation already in place, that prohibits people from predatory practices? One case that comes to mind is Jim Fisk buying out the Red Line tram system in Los Angeles in the 20's and selling off the right of way piecemeal so it would never be in a position to infringe the revenue stream of Fisk Tires Corp. Use of purchasing power to deny access to competitors is a time-honoured practice of robber barons. IBM did it in the 70's and sent Memorex to the wall (bought out supply of a key component the competition needed). Or today with the RIAA -- using it's legal purchasing power to deny access to people with legitimate claims for use. Go figure.
Do not mock my vision of impractical footwear
30 guys can't run a semiconductor plant building enough memory to feed the global market
This is the biggest difference between software patents and "normal" patents. If you've got the software, you've got the software. There is no "fabrication" step beyond stamping CDs and shrink-wrapping a box for mass market consumption (which is only for the tiny sliver of the software market represented by commercial end-user products, and these tend not to contain revolutionary new ideas).
Software is also already protected by copyright laws. If you show off your software and they use your code, that's an IP violation. If you show off your software and they decide that it's cheaper to write their own version themselves... then clearly the market has given you a not-so-subtle hint about the actual value of your software R&D.
If other reasons we do lack, we swear no one will die when we attack
While reading through the posts on this topic, I noticed the same patterns I always do, how patents for the most part seem to get granted at the drop of the hat, and both big and little players can use them to very carefully target and cripple the opposition.
But then I had a thought... We should FULLY, ABSOLUTELY support the granting of insanely over-broad patents for every trivial little thing any company can think to sue over.
Why, you might ask, would I suggest such a seemingly abhorrent idea?
Simple: Because, in 20 years, it means that we'll all have the current batch of insanity to point to and excuse our "infringement" of then-current patents with "see? I implemented that, now out of patent."
"Why yes, it would appear that I violated your patent on 3rd-harmonic quantum eigenreplication, but as you can see from this now-expired-and-thus-fair-game 2002 Microsoft patent, I did nothing more than implement their 3rd claim, which covers ''the use of numbers to do stuff''. So, if we can dispense with the debate over such highly-technical language, I'd like to move for dismissal."
The devil, of course, is in the details. What would the mandatory licensing terms be?
While there is something rather seductive about your suggestion, it would be very hard to anticipate all the situations for which this would apply. Starting with the "simple" proposition of judging the now standard worth of things or what portion of the sliding scale the work in question merits is daunting in and of itself.
Instead of dictates, it could be a matter of litigation. You'd have to set it so that the job of the court in question was to resolve the matter in the interests of the public, including but not limited to, providing incentive to the creator.
At that point, someone wanting to obtain Fiona Apple's album, Extraordinary Machine legally, could ask Epic for licencing terms. If none are offered or are unreasonable, one could litigate, in this case most likely as a class-action. Assuming they didn't end up settling, the court would then dictate the terms to the standard of a reasonable outside opinion.
The application for patent law would be roughly the same. Additionally, the court would be empowered to invalidate patents that are brought before it if they do not benefit the public good or do not pass the sniff test. This would probably cause a bit of a rush at first, but this would probably be a better place without the one-click patent.
Filing fees would be minor but there would be arbitration fees assessed at the end of the process, even if the matter is settled out of court.
And if you look at the dates, Alacritech didn't get the patent till 2000, and another one in 2002.
I think you *need* the approved patent to sue for infringement. "Patent pending" won't cut it in court.
Besides, they may have notified MS in 2000, when they got the patent, but MS has the money to "wait it out", gambling (somewhat...eh, maybe not that much, based on their record)that the little guy will get starved out.
Burst was in the same position. I think the major reason Burst settled was because of cash flow.
Eventually, Kolar-Kotelly will have to take these types of behavior under legal consideration as evidence that MS will just not change. Maybe then we can get a ruling that's fair to the marketplace...
FPO
Assuming that this is shipped in Longhorn, does this mean that Longhorn will be another 10 years off?
LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
lawsuit documents were prepared with microsoft word:
o r_Preliminary_Injunction.pdf
http://www.alacritech.com/assets/applets/Motion_f
isn't filing suit against microsoft against their software license agreement? or if you do decide to sue microsoft, you agree to stop using their software?
The answer to that question is the public disclosure of the technology and the implicit offer of a temporary monopoly to anyone who can improve that technology in a non-obvious way.
Regardless of whether or not you buy into it or like the answer, it is what it is.
I would propose mandatory licensing of ALL intellectual property under standard terms. No patent holder would then be able to withhold permission to incorporate patented technologies; nor could they demand outrageous payments for their patent. They could not keep technologies off the market solely to keep from cannibalizing their existing sales.
This has been done in times of war when the Federal government deemed that the technology was relevant to the defense of the nation. I'm personally not opposed to a system along these lines, although I would suggest something more like the arbitration that the government does to settle labor disputes. If a potential licensee and a patent holder couldn't come to a reasonable agreement, then the potential licensee could request Federal arbitration, plead the case for a reasonable agreement, and if ultimately necessary, receive a deal through the Federal government. You'd obviously have to tinker with the rules for competitors forcing deals out of each other and it would cost a ton of money to establish the fair market value of technology (before it hits market) but I think it could all be ironed out.
I wouldn't touch the copyright issue. I know quite a lot about the patent system but I'm not an expert in copyright law. And yeah, the devil IS in the details.
If I invent something and don't want to do anything with it, why should the gov't have the right to force me to share it? And who gets to dictate the terms of the licensing? The patent office that we already love to call inept?
I understand you're reasoning, but transfering power away from big corporations and giving it to big government doesn't really solve the problem, it just moves it around.
Entrepreneur : (noun), French for "unemployed"
Wow -1 Flaimbate. No surprise though since slashdot is not about the truth.
The problem and the reason why the proper moderation is flamebait, is that you can't claim hypocrisy or inconsistency, unless if you beleive that slashdot is some sort of gestalt entity. If you mapped it out with some Venn diagrams, I think you'd find the number of people holding both portions of any of the gradparent's couplets is extremely small.
Between the short answer format and the self-selection of authors, it is not surprising that very few complete value systems with all the necessary shading and application are presented. As such, there are plenty of posts that agree on the surface but reflect widely divergent opinions and systems.
To some up, both post have some valid points, but seem to mistake some trees for the forest.
If you are against a law, pray for its enforcement against the rich & powerful. That is the quickest way it will be changed.
No doubt. Once they charged that Robert Blake and that OJ guy... I've never seen a law repealed faster.
the government is not forcing you to share what you invented, the government would be forcing you to sell at a reasonable price if you want to the government to prohibit others from inventing their own version very similar to yours
Snowden and Manning are heroes.
When did MS give you the ability to read their minds and speak their thoughts?
gosand may have simply made the inferance based on readily availible material. If it makes you feel better, Clippy confirmed each of his points.
Is the impending Microsoft buy-out of the company. We've seen this exact pattern repeated any of number of times in the past with Microsoft and I'm sure we'll see it again in the future. In the business world, meeting with Microsoft to divuldge your technology secrets is the same as a sorority girl yelling "I'm soooo drunk!" at a frat party. Suing them is the the foreplay to some hot Microsoft buy-out action!
I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?
"Reasonable price" is very subjective. Who gets to decide what is reasonable? Lobby groups and special interests. Who will win in that arrangement? Big companies who can afford to lobby. All of a sudden behemoth companies will demand "reasonable" pricing for everything, and the government will provide at the detriment of small businesses.
If I invent something and don't want to do anything with it, why should the gov't have the right to force me to share it?
Because you presumably petitioned the government for patent protection in the first place. If you don't want to do anything with your invention, then please don't get the government involved by applying for a patent.
Unless of course your goal is to protect a market for an existing, inferior product. An example would be Gilette's rumored patent on everlasting razor blades.
This paper provides information about a new innovation in Microsoft networking--TCP Chimney protocol stack offload.
As I suspected, most of innovation they have been producing so far may have been of the old kind...
Off-loading to I/O processors is a standard technique, and the ways you implement it is an application of common engineering principles. What exactly is supposed to be patentable about TCP off-loading?
although I am against software patents
it is the way microsoft treated the other company. they have done this for years and yet they still keep doing it and getting away with it.
Microsoft is just slimey with the way they do business and I will never use any of their products again - unless it is shoved down my throat like at my job that's okay though it just reminds of why I hate windows - it is just a piece of junk.
It is certainly true that the readers of slashdot hold a wide variety of views on these subjects. However, the site editors clearly promote a pretty specific position themselves. Almost every single article on this site regarding copyright infringement of music or movies presents the infringers as good guys and the copyright holders as evil. Meanwhile, any time an alleged GPL violation comes up, Slashdot presents the violators as automatically evil and the original developers as good. These positions are contradictory.
Of course, there are always plenty of comments calling Slashdot on their bias when it happens, showing that at least some of the readers hold more consistent positions. But, the editors never change. In six or seven years that I have been reading this site, they haven't changed. Indeed, it seems like some of their positions only get more ridiculous over time.
They're just blowing smoke.
To try to understand why even a very large company that performs due diligence on prior art cannot escape the patent minefield, read my presentation at this page (it's the first .pdf link on the page):
http://wiki.ffii.org/Madras050408En
It's released under the FDL and/or GPL, so feel free to borrow ideas from it.
Okay, patents create an eco-system that supports companies like yours. Your company would not exist without them. Why is that a better eco-system than one without patents? You say something particularly interesting:
It is this very reason why our company won't even contemplate doing business in Korea or Taiwan. IP is the only thing we have, and those nations are not exactly know for their respect of ownership of IP. IP laws are what keep our business in existence and in the US.
Korea and Taiwan seem to be cranking out real products pretty darn quickly from what I can tell. There seems to be alot of technological inovation saturating Korea. Perhaps it is easier to create real products in those places?
Would you be unemployed without patents to build your business model around? If you are smart, I doubt it. You would find a way to build the deliverable products, or partner with folks that do. It would be a different business model, and perhaps a better one for everybody.
--- -- - -
Give me LIBERTY, or give me a check.
Exactly. I/O processors have been known since the 60s (IBM, CDC, ...) and even in the specific case of TCP offload, there have been ISA and PCI cards available from the 80s. For instance, take a look at the ARTIC family from IBM (then, now Radisys).
The NYU Computer Science Department is slowly removing sun machines and replacing them with dells running redhat enterprise workstation. Big improvement over a sunblade.
-dB
"It if was easy to do, we'd find someone cheaper than you to do it."
Newsflash:
_ __
_ __
SCO has announced it's purchase of Alacritech.
CEO of SCO Darl McBride commented: "This is an important step for us in our "SueTheWholeWorld" (TM) campaign. We have been looking for an opportunity to sue Microsoft ever since they stopped funding our campaign against Linux.".
(Slashdottters suffer confused loyalty.)
_________________________________________________
Disclaimer: All content of this posting is intended to be of a satirical nature and should not be used as a basis for investment decisions, lawsuits etc. _________________________________________________
The government would be bigger than it already is, and it would be empowered more than it already is to push people around.
There is already a strong precedent, and much disclosed IP out there. A massive government power grab as proposed here is the equivalent of changing the rules of a card hand after the cards are dealt and bets have been made.
Hahaha,i prefer D.
00000000h, teh nipplez0rz
stfu, n00b!
Karma: Terrible
Abusing the slashdot mod system! RAWK!!
Karma: Terrible
The end goal isn't to have small, secretive start-ups, it's to have usable technology. So if we have to put patent restrictions on how we can use technology in order to have them, then maybe we don't need small, secretive start-ups. They tend to be very expensive/innefficient and prevent the core idea from being used as effectively or as early as it could be, anyway - and the core idea has almost always been thought of _before_ the start-up starts up.
Get rid of the "IP" encumbrance, and the person who came up with the core idea just publishes it and lets the market decide how best to use it. That publication (amongst others) and its subsequent import then scores the inventor his job at an industry-sponsored research body, or at a start-up targetting a particular problem for which a bounty has been offered by the industry in question.
--
Evan
"$30 for the One True Ring. $10 each additional ring!" -- JRR "Bob" Tolkien
Dude, can't you see that MS is actually sponsoring this FUD? What's better than attack them, everyone gang up on MS, you bad dog, in the meantime chanting 'you violated software patents.' The whole idea here is to get you chanting dumbass broad patents as something very valid.
Except for the one I took out on Schadenfreude. Think about it, though. What IS Microsoft except a huge rat's nest of intellectual property? Oh, and those mice and the X-box.
the parent to your parent asked when was the last time microsoft sued for patent infringement - i mentioned that they're hoarding patents and threatening linux because it wouldn't suprise me (dispite their history of not actually litigating) if they did sue.
--
Evan
"$30 for the One True Ring. $10 each additional ring!" -- JRR "Bob" Tolkien
They didn't but its looking increasingly like they will (patent hoarding and making threats)
A rundown through the first page of returns ("Microsoft sued patent") shows that people who have sued Microsoft include Eolas, American Video Graphics, AT&T, University of California, Burst.com, the State of Florida, Kodak, InterTrust, Priceline.com, Forgent and others.
In the same return page, Microsoft sued Lindows (not for patent abuse), eight identity thieves (not patent), several spammers (not patent), a Brazilian magazine (for defamation), 117 phishers (not patent), and more spammers (not patent).
Of the returns on Google's first page, almost all are people suing Microsoft over patents, or Microsoft suing over non-patent related issues. The closest thing is a breach of contract suit against Timeline, Inc over SQL Server that involved a patent filed on their joint project by Timeline while they were partners.
It occurs to me that I've seen far more "Foo sues Microsoft over Patent X" than "Microsoft sues Bar over Patent Y" articles.
Of course, Microsoft does plenty of other dubious competitive practices... I haven't touched a product of theirs in almost eight years now. But I've not seen them wielding patents the way Sun and Apple do (or that IBM used to).
--
Evan
"$30 for the One True Ring. $10 each additional ring!" -- JRR "Bob" Tolkien
The threat i was talking about is here
It seems that all the discussion here is about patents. But what I think is significant here is that in a Linux-centric group here noone has thought to bring up the lack of TCP-offload architecture for Linux. What is the plans for Linux in the longrun? Are there plans for any "chimney" in Linux? Where will this start? This is one of those opportunities where Linux could lead instead of follow
We already have mandatory licensing of music. It's doable in theory.
Everyday Slashdot readers I would guess are mostly people who are in software, computers, math and high tech. Among these it is therefore very unlikely to find anyone being pro sw patents. I would guess around 98% of everyday Slashdot readers are against software patents, and then it is also rather relevant so say:
"we are against software patents"
No. Everyday Slashdot Readers are mostly people in their mother's basement.
Regular Slashdot Readers include many people who are in software, computers, math and high tech.
I doubt there are all that many slashdotter's who make their living in these fields, who are not effected by software patents and have opinions on them both varied and nuanced to the point that it would be a gross oversimplification to describe it as being "for" or "against" software patents.