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Smartphones Patented — Just About Everyone Sued 1 Minute Later

This week the US Patent and Trademark Office issued a surprisingly (although I guess it shouldn't be) broad patent for a "mobile entertainment and communication device". Upon closer inspection you may notice that it pretty much outlines the ubiquitous smartphone concept. "It's a patent for a mobile phone with removable storage, an internet connection, a camera and the ability to download audio or video files. The patent holding firm who has the rights to this patent wasted no time at all. At 12:01am Tuesday morning, it filed three separate lawsuits against just about everyone you can think of, including Apple, Nokia, RIM, Sprint, ATT, HP, Motorola, Helio, HTC, Sony Ericsson, UTStarcomm, Samsung and a bunch of others. Amusingly, the company actually first filed the lawsuits on Monday, but realized it was jumping the gun and pulled them, only to refile just past the stroke of midnight. "

5 of 407 comments (clear)

  1. not very smrt by brian1078 · · Score: 5, Informative

    no "smartphone" required. my 2 year old Verizon LG VX8300 is a "... mobile phone with removable storage, an internet connection, a camera and the ability to download audio or video files ..."

    1. Re:not very smrt by stinerman · · Score: 5, Informative

      The main problem here is "continuation filings". Using these, you can take longer and longer to amend your patent. Of course, that means that you can amend your patent to cover things that are already in the market. So file in '97 and file enough continuations until 2000 or so and you've just retroactively patented 3 years worth of progress.

      What needs to happen is that if you file a continuation, the clock gets reset to that continuation. So file in '97 and file a continuation in 2000 means that anything in '98 and '99 now counts as prior art.

    2. Re:not very smrt by gravesb · · Score: 5, Informative

      If you add new matter, its prior art date is of the continuation in part that you filed to add the new matter. Otherwise, all of the adjustments must have support in the original filing. Essentially, what you propose is the way the system works now.

      --
      http://bgcommonsense.blogspot.com
  2. What I don't Get... by SerpentMage · · Score: 5, Informative

    I just roll my eyes and think is the USPO as dumb as the Fed?

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smartphone

    The first smart phone was developed way back when. But let's consider a more recent example:

    The Nokia Communicator line was the first of Nokia's smartphones starting with the Nokia 9000, released in 1996.

    The earlier chained patents was 1997. So I really wonder what pot, and I do mean pot, the people in the patent office are smoking.

    --

    "You can't make a race horse of a pig"
    "No," said Samuel, "but you can make very fast pig"
  3. Re:Prior art? by jonbryce · · Score: 5, Informative

    I think the Nokia Communicator 9000 was the first Smartphone, certainly in Europe. It was first introduced in 1996, and presumably in development for some time before that.