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Netflix Sued Over Fradulently Obtained Patents

An anonymous reader writes "Techdirt has a story about a new class action lawsuit against Netflix, claiming that the patents the company is using to sue Blockbuster were obtained fraudulently. Specifically, the lawsuit claims that Netflix was well aware of prior art, but did not include it in its patent filing, as required by law. The lawsuit also claims that Netflix then used these fraudulently obtained patents to scare others out of the market, in violation of antitrust law. 'Certainly, it makes for an interesting argument. Patents grant a government-backed monopoly -- which should get you around any antitrust violations. However, if that patent is obtained fraudulently, then I can see a pretty compelling claim that you've abused antitrust law. It would be interesting if other such cases start popping up (and, indeed, the lawyer who sent it to us said his firm is looking for additional patents to go after in this manner).'"

3 of 193 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Class action? by DragonWriter · · Score: 2, Informative

    I'm curious how this could be a class-action suit.


    Probably because the lawyer filing the case is going to claim a wide range of potential victims constituting a valid "class" through the antitrust allegations.

    I thought that's when a huge group of people band together to fight a company.


    No, when people band together, you get a big direct action suit with lots of plaintiffs (like the one depicted in Erin Brockovich). A class action suit is when a lawyer and a small number of plaintiffs allege the existence of a vast number of victims that are similarly situated, and seek to claim the right to represent all of them.

    This looks like Blockbuster v. Netflix.


    Its related to the patent issues in Blockbuster v. Netflix, but separate.
  2. Re:IANAL by Todd+Knarr · · Score: 2, Informative

    Actually it's "knew or should reasonably have known". That second part is the kicker. When applying for a patent an applicant's required by law to do certain due-diligence research (including the prior-art search) first and include the results in the application. If a reasonable person doing the research required by law would've discovered the prior art, then whether Netflix actually knew about it doesn't matter.

    Or that's the theory, anyway. In practice you get into extended argument about what's reasonable, and things go downhill from there.

  3. Article has no concept of antitrust law by hellfire · · Score: 2, Informative

    However, if that patent is obtained fraudulently, then I can see a pretty compelling claim that you've abused antitrust law.

    I continue to be amazed at how technology people are so astonishly bad with understanding Anti-trust law.

    Patents grant you a type of monopoly over the technology you are using, but they do not automatically grant you a monopoly over the marketspace you are in. Therefore you are not in violation of anti-trust laws if you lose a patent. You simply lose the ability to sue someone if they come along and copy your technology. How can you be abusing power you no longer have?

    Is netflix in hot water over abusing patent laws? You betcha, but anti-trust laws are not their problem.

    --

    "All great wisdom is contained in .signature files"