Microsoft Loses Office Patent Dispute
cwolfsheep writes "According to CNet, Microsoft has lost a patent dispute with a developer involving the company's Excel and Access product lines; specifically how they interact via spreadsheets. Carlos Armando Amado had filed a patent in 1994: the dispute covers Microsoft's products from March 1997 to July 2003. Office 2003 users will need to upgrade to Service Pack 2; Office XP users will need to apply a patch."
Um, no thanks.
The article should say that Microsoft had to release said patch. Users of Microsoft products are under no obligation to actually apply the patch and remove functionality.
Patches are for pirates!
if the patch will be made available to users who have unregistered versions of Office. Or will it be treated like a content update instead of how they treat security flaw patches.
Microsoft violated the patent, not me. I bought a copy of the software as it was - and if they have to alter it because they made a mistake then that's their problem. I should not be required to change the software in order to help them cover.
Are you required to install security patches? Many sysadmins have a wait-and-see approach to major updates for good reason. Is this any different?
Am I using infringing code? Yes. Is it my responsibility to ensure that I'm not? I don't believe so. Not only is this software that I've licensed from Microsoft, but it's not like I have the option of reviewing the source code.
I'm curious if there's a precedent regarding this kind of situation.
that this would help show to them how stupid the idea of software patents are. But I suspect this won't change the MS perspective on software patents.
I've never been to Guatemala, but I suspect the $8.9 million that Amado won will go far...
The guy who patented interaction with a spread sheet, or Microsoft?
-Rick
"Most people in the U.S. wouldn't know they live in a tyrannical state if it walked up and grabbed their junk." - MyFirs
This story doesn't exactly mention what functionality the patch removes. But there is another article about it here with a bit more information:
_ pays_excel_man/
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2005/06/07/microsoft
"In 1990 Carlos Armando Amado filed a patent for software which helped transfer data between Excel spreadsheets and Microsoft's Access database using a single spreadsheet. He said he tried to sell this technology to Microsoft in 1992 but they turned him down. According to Amado, Microsoft started including his software in their releases between 1995 and 2002."
Is OpenOffice affected by this?
Quidquid latine dictum sit, altum sonatur.
We received an email from Microsoft licensing last week that addresses this issue.
f ault.aspx.
Here's the text:
Background:
It was recently decided in a court of law that certain portions of code found in Microsoft Office Professional Edition 2003, Microsoft Office Access 2003, Microsoft Office XP Professional and Microsoft Access 2002 infringe a third-party patent. As a result, Microsoft must make available a revised version of these products with the allegedly infringing code replaced.
Action required:
As a result of the above ruling, you are required to:
Install Microsoft Office 2003 Service Pack 2 (Office 2003 SP2) for all your future deployments of Office Professional Edition 2003 and Office Access 2003, Install the Microsoft Office XP Service Pack 3 Patch (Office XP SP3 Patch) for all your future deployments of Office XP Professional and Access 2002
Action requested:
To keep your current systems in alignment with your future deployments of these products, Microsoft is requesting that you also update all your current Office Professional Edition 2003 and Office Access 2003 installations with Office 2003 SP2, and Office XP Professional and Access 2002 installations with the Office XP SP3 Patch.
How do I do this?:
You can obtain both Office 2003 SP2 and the Office XP SP3 Patch by going to the website listed below and downloading it directly, or by contacting your reseller.
Please visit our site at http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/officeupdate/de
Sincerely,
Microsoft Licensing, GP This makes it seem like we are being forced to upgrade to maintain licensing.
Post-rock/Ambient/Drone and other noise.
They would release important patches as fast as this one. But I guess this problem would harm their money.
Okay, I RTFA, and nowhere does it state what exactly it is removing or changing. I use Access very hevily with Excel. Popping data back and forth between the two. What is it going to break and what is a workaround?
------
"And may your days be long upon the earth."
In response to about half of the top level posts, no, this court decision isn't forcing you, the existing MS software users, to change the way you do things; but it prevents any -further- distribution of the infringing technology.
From the article:
"Although existing customers can keep using older versions on current machines, any new installations of Office 2003 will require Service Pack 2, released by Microsoft in September. Office XP will need to be put into use with a special patch applied."
--Parity
'Card carrying' member of the EFF.
Don't worry: patent holders never go after end users, although, legally speaking, they can...
And, by the way, Microsoft knowinly and purposly implemented this feature in all of their versions of Excel and Access software after Carlos Amado introduced this feature to them and attempted to sell his pending patent application in mid-90's.
I am quite sure the guy would be more than happy to get some 6-figure compensation from MS (he was a grad student at Stanford at the time),
but they offered him nothing, zilch, zero, nil...
This is just a typical Microsoft's behaviour...
Penny wise, pound foolish at the end... (see Eolas, InterTrust, Stac etc.)
My first thought, after reading what the submitter posted, was that the next headline would read: "Creator of VisiCalc sued for patent infringement".
~Should i be worried when the real world starts lagging?
"As a result, Microsoft must make available a revised version of these products with the allegedly infringing code replaced."
What about a "a verdict last year by a jury" makes the code anything but_actually_ infringing instead of _allegedly_?
It seems to me that Microsoft did a bad job in defending this case. Microsoft claims (and for the purpose of argument lets assume the claim is true) that they had a working exchange between Excel and Access prior to 1990. Further you clearly saw similar types of echanges with other products (Paradox and QuatroPro, Lotus 1-2-3 and db2, etc...).
Obviously they lost I'm curious as to why though. I think this means that something like:
1) The layoffs have gotten to to the point that Microsoft can no longer prove stuff about its own code base.
2) They had committed a more serious violation (anti trust, copyright...) and so couldn't go into details.
3) They didn't take the case seriously.
Does anyone have any insight as to why they lost?
This sounds like it is becoming Microsoft's new patching practice. First patch Tuesday, which works great until a zero day issue occurs. Now we have blackhole patches; these suck functionality out of your product (both with the Xbox 360 and now office). I for one would like to thank Microsoft for removing functionality I use - as opposed to the other 90% of functions in your Office software which are bloatware and are rarely used.
Proof by very large bribes. QED.
Microsoft won't release SP3 but forces us to patch Office? :-/
"It was recently decided in a court of law that certain portions of code ... infringe a third-party patent," Microsoft said ... "As a result, Microsoft must make available a revised version of these products with the allegedly [emphasis mine] infringing code replaced."
It is not allegedly infringing, it was found to be infringing in a court of law. You can only claim no wrongdoing if you settled out of court and the settlement stipulated that you could claim that.
More music, fewer hits
What is this Microsoft Office of which you speak? Is it a clone of Open Office?
I know every once in a while someone sends me a non ODT file and I have to open it, but luckily Open Office handles lame clone formats like DOC really easily.
Something about how commercial software was superior to Free Software because it indemnified users against patent infringment?
So much for that argument!
"[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz
Microsoft will not be taken down from a gigantic mistake or the sudden appearance of some application. It will be taken down by a thousand tiny cuts from all the developers like Mr. Amado who had been infringed along Microsoft's way by the arrogant and predatory way they have historically done business. The replacement for Microsoft's 'applications' is already here: Linux and free and open source software applications. These can never be sued off the market and never taken from users computers. The idea of software as a service will die with the demise of Blackberry as users see the futility of building on any model that can suddenly and without warning or compensation be taken away. Yes, Microsoft's castle in the air will be attacked by an unsinkable armada of competing applications coming from everywhere and from every nation. Its doom is foretold just as the Prophet Moses' Handwriting on the Wall.
make it so it works on Linux.
....
I so miss Abort Retry Ignore
-- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
It's the only way the little guy can win against those who would use their stuff w/o asking.
Kevin
Microsoft found guilty of patent infringement.
_ court_excel/_ pays_excel_man/
Here are the relevant links:
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2005/05/18/microsoft
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2005/06/07/microsoft
The story goes like this:
Carlos Armando Amado filed a patent in 1990 for software which lets users move data between Excel to Access via a spreadsheet. He tried to sell it to Microsoft two years later, but they rejected it. Then it turns out that they DID use his software behind his back, without paying him a dime.
This is not like the EOLAS plugin patent. This is an idea that Microsoft STOLE and got rich with. Microsoft is the one to blame, not Carlos Amado. (They could as well have licensed his technology or simply use an alternative, but did they?)
I thought MS offered indemnification. Guess I was confused. Guess that was just server software. http://www.microsoft.com/windowsserversystem/facts /topics/ipi.mspx
The world is made by those who show up for the job.
If I were the guy holding the patent, I would have sought tons of $$$ from Microsoft in court. Why did this just result in an obligation to fix up the infringement?
how open source is at threat for problems with patents.
Microsoft builds up its patent portfolio and it still can't prevent itself from having to make product patches affecting its customers due to its pervssive "theft" of "intellectual property".
Richard Steven Hack - This sig is TOO GODDAMN SHORT TO DO ANYTHING USEFUL WITH! MORONS!
Patches are for pirates!
Aye matey!
Yarrrrrr!!!
The only thing scarier than a patch that MS is forced to release is a patch that MS is -grudgingly- forced to relase.
http://cubemonkey.net/quotes -- fortune-mod quote generator
So, do you support someone (David-esque) with a patent taking on and defeating Microsoft (Goliath-esque), do you writhe at the thought of the patent process being abused, or do you simply toss it all out and side with justice be done?
A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
Microsoft has a lot of cash to burn. And what better way to spend that cash than to lose a few software patent disputes? The rewards are clear:
1. FUD in the marketplace concerning patents, giving CIOs worry about using open/free software.
2. A way to fund patent trolls who *may* turn their attention to open/free software (if they perceive money to be made from folks like Sun/OpenOffice.)
3. Precidents set on absurd patents whose licensing costs prohibit free softwar from entering a domain.
I'm not saying this particular example is applicable, but losing a few key patent cases may actually help more than harm Microsoft.
Microsoft would not say how many customers are affected, but said it is likely only a "small fraction" of Office users.
Well, a small fraction could still end up in the millions of users.
Hooray for the little guy with the million dollar patent. According to GeekNewz.com, Carlos Armando Amado patented it in 1990, and tried to sell it to Microsoft 2 years later. Microsoft looked into it, didn't buy it, but used its technology anyway in Excel 95-2002.
Good thing he waited.
He who knows best knows how little he knows. - Thomas Jefferson
Dear Lazyweb,
I wonder if the court/judge/jury were biased?
Remember Sun vs. Kodak? The jury was obviously biased there, but what can you do?
The article did not mention the exact patent or any background info about the so-called inventor/patent holder.
Can you provide any of this info please?
Thanks,
LazySurfer
Considering the idea is obvious and fundamental I'd hardly describe it as stealing as much as implementing something obvious and demanded by users world-wide.
I found two between 1976 to present, neither of which seem on the face of it to be relevant. Anyone know the actual patent in question?
News reports should include such basic info so that
readers can do some of their own analysis if they so choose.
This is what I found at http://patft.uspto.gov/:
1. 5,701,400 Method and apparatus for applying if-then-else rules to data sets in a relational data base and generating from the results of application of said rules a database of diagnostics linked to said data sets to aid executive analysis of financial data
2. 5,537,590 Apparatus for applying analysis rules to data sets in a relational database to generate a database of diagnostic records linked to the data sets
What gives somebody a right to patent a method of using two products that *I* created.
Granted this might be a novel idea, but to patent the methods of interacting between two of a specific product (belonging to somebody else) VS one that was, say, aimed at speedsheet/database apps in general...
I don't agree with MS stealing the idea, but being able to patent it seems equally wrong.
1. Review new software releases various vendors
2. Find obvious improvements
3. Patent said obvious improvements
4. Notify company of said improvements
5. Sue company when they implement any of these improvements
6. PROFIT!
-- My favorite question that I ask fellow programmers in hiring interviews: "Do you speak bachi or the binary language of moisture evaporators?"
Software patents ruin inovation
whats next, patenting linked lists? for loops?
you cant write ANYTHING anymore without using someone elses patents how is bring all development to a screeching halt. or tieing up developers in courts for the rest of their existance supposed to help inovation?
i dont even like microsoft but i think everyone sueing them for things they arent even doing wrong is terrible for the whole industry
And a second thanks to TiVo, who is doing the same thing. It seems a lot like Bait & Switch to me.
"It's the height of ridiculousness to say for those 9 lines you get hundreds of millions."
Eolas patent was upheld by PTO.
W3 didn't prove a shit.
MS lost, lost, lost and lost again...
Ok, I just don't understand, unless it is pure cheapness and greed. Why doesn't MS just pay the man $1 per shipped license. The marginal cost to press the cd and license the software is basically nill. It's not like they don't make a basically 100% profit on each license already. So surely they can cough up $1 out of the $370 that I paid them for my license. But Nooooo, they want to remove the functionality instead of licensing it. Come on MS, just fork over the cash (its basically chump change to you) and let the users keep the functionality.
For those unfamiliair, here are the originals:
http://ugp.trenchman.com/sept95newsletter.jpg
http://ugp.trenchman.com/oct95newsletter1.jpg
http://ugp.trenchman.com/oct95newsletter2.jpg
microsoft will tout this lost functionality as part of their new office program... upgrade so you can lose functionality!
seriously, how freaking unethical of bill and company to review this guy's idea, reject it and then steal it outright.
it reminds me of the guy who said "microsoft isn't the devil, but when they meet, they will speak the same language."
Microsoft where's my companies rebate since we lose some of the functionality that what we had paid for!!!
Microsoft appreciates your insight; however, they've already paid plenty of bean counters and lawyers to determine for them which course of action would be the most profitable. They decided that fighting the lawsuit and then removing the functionality was better for their pocketbook than paying the licensing fee. Your armchair evaluation can be found in the circular file.
Maybe now some people will realize how bad software patents are. The majority of computer users don't care when Linux is prohibited from doing something because of patents but hopefully the fact that this will affect more users of proprietary software, people will start to take notice.
Time makes more converts than reason
Like Microsoft will get away with having infringed on a patent for the entire lifespan of a SERIES of products....
Wow... way to hold out until it doesn't matter anymore.
On the one hand I blindly hate Microsoft, and cheer for anything that impacts them negatively. On the other I blindly hate software patents, and boo whenever one is upheld or someone takes someone else to court over one.
So, I say "splonge"!
There you have it: Angst! =8-|
A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
I'm just wondering if Carlos Armando Amado would offer a license to the public rather than forcing everyone to upgrade?
Is there a way to contact him to find out?
He might consider making a free license to people that already have the product but restrict M$ from using it for any future sales.
See 35 U.S.C. s. 103(a).
Everybody bitches about how MS has so many software patents, yet MS has never sued anybody for infringement (as opposed to Amazon and RIM). So why does MS have so many software patents? Because of bullshit like this.
/. would be bitching about.
Microsoft had been working on this feature in-house already by the time Carlos came to them, but it didn't matter because it wasn't documented. If MS had filed the patent first, though, it would just be another patent for an obvious software process that somebody on
Keep in mind, this is just one little feature idea, in a set of applications that has thousands of features. It's not like Carlos approached them with some code and they used the code without paying him. All they did was implement what seems to be a fairly obvious feature. Can you imagine what life would be like as a software developer if your users patented all good feature ideas so that they could extort money out of you when you go to implement them?
dom
In the C sense of that word. This isn't going to impact Microsoft sales one bit- it's a relatively minor piece of functionality that most professional software engineers would stay the hell away from to begin with (after all, you can mimic it in a more controled fashion using an ODBC or OLEDB connection from VBA anyway). Who it's going to impact is those people who don't really understand the difference between a spreadsheet and a database to begin with- who link to their spreadsheets to gain SQL Query capability over them, or to keep a spreadsheet in sync with a database for reporting purposes. This is going to result in a major headache for anybody who provides helpdesk support for such people. In the organization I contract for, I'd say we're going to generate about 800 requests in the first week to "fix my broken database".
SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
Looks like each and every software patent is obvious to /. crowd.
And NO, if you work on something in-house and at least have some proof
like a documented notebook, then you can fight patent claims by others in court later.
Apparently, MS is lying about them working on this feature before the guy came to them - lying in court is a second nature to MS by the way..
Remember Eolas trial and Pen Wei's fraudulent demo ?
I just "upgraded" from w98 to wXP after being hit by the Sony rootkit and discovering that I'd lost the driver disks for my audio and video, and there aren't any w98 drivers for the vid card on the internet. Funny, I can still get parts for my 1988 Chevy...
A week after the "upgrade" windows notifies me that there are some patches, so I let it do its thing.
Being paranoid (I was using 98...) I keep my cable modem shut off unless I actually want on the internet.
The next time I try to get on the internet, Windows tells me it can't conect to the network. Thinking there is an Insight network outage I fugure it will be back up the next day... it isn't.
So I call Insight tech support, who confirms there's nothing wrong with the cable modem. Bad cable? Bad ethernet card?
There was another problem with my CD burning software that XP didn't like, I reinstalled Windows. Lo and behold, the internet's back!
So a week later there is anopther XP patch. I download it and pay a bit more attention, and notice that one of them is an update to my ethernet chip's drivers. As soon as I applied the patch, Windows informs me the network is down - no internet.
Reinstalling the original network drivers restored internet connectivity.
Microsoft's software is as shoddy as its business practices, it seems. So if this patch breaks something else (I apply the patch and a non-Microsoft product stops working), what then?
Could some one please send me complete information on how to get the service pack and install it. ...
It is most important that this is accomplished because big bad Microsoft infringed on some ones patent.
BTW please send the text of the instructions directly to my blackberry
i don't think so. according to the article, they had to pay the developer 8.9 million dollars in damages. Microsoft has made a lot more than that just on sales of Microsoft Office. So they paid little money for the concept, but they'll still be making money off the idea, even with a different code.
> I call BS on that. I don't take any legal liability unless enter into a contract stating that I accept such potential liabiity BEFORE the sale. And the EULA click-thru doesn't count - its too late to add terms to an agreement after the sale.
:( After all, according to some perversions of copyright law, you don't have the right to actually *use* that shiny disk you bought without their permission (i.e. accepting the terms of the EULA). I have no idea how or why that ignores the provisions in USC 17 that seem to think that loading it into memory to use it isn't copyright infringement, but I assume they claim that installing it to your hard drive is. Or something. Judges aren't known for making good rulings in terms of technology, I fear :/
While that *SHOULD* be true, the laws that we have right now appear to be quite perverse. Unless a court decides that those terms are "unconscionable" (in this context, it would mean that no sane buyer of software would enter into them without duress), mere knowledge that there was a EULA attached, doubly so because these are "standard" clauses (e.g. pretty much all software licenses contain such language), indicates acceptance
IANAL. I *HAVE* read court judgements against people who advanced your line of arguement, however. I dislike them very much. As much as I think that the First Sale theory *should* apply, there's not a damn thing I can do about judges who disagree. For the record, this was under US law. If you are fortunate enough to live somewhere with a more reasonable jurisprudence concerning software, this *might* not apply to you. But don't take my word for it: get a lawyer.
They are anything but fast.
The court decision was in summer of last year. They needed 1/2 year to release this.
who are the 'authorities' here? suppose that i find a company using the offending products and they did not apply the patch. who do i call? i'm pretty sure that it's not the sheriff... the fbi?
or do i contact the patent holder and what would his remedy be?
eric
Probably because they worked out that less than 1/370th of their customers used it making the requested amount extortionate.
In Microsoft going to keep 2 product lines going? From what I understand this ruling is only for the USA since software patents do not exist in the EU (they may be registered but they are invalid).