Trend Micro Sues Barracuda Over Open Source Anti-Virus
Anti-virus firm Trend Micro is suing Barracuda Networks over their use of the open source anti-virus product ClamAV. The issue is Trend Micro's patent on 'anti-virus detection on an SMTP or FTP gateway'. Companies like Symantec and McAfee are already paying licensing fees to Trend Micro. Groklaw carries the word from Barracuda that they intend to fight this case, and are seeking information on prior art to bring to trial. Commentary on the O'Reilly site notes (in strident terms) the strange reality of patents gone bad, while a post to the C|Net site explores the potential ramifications for open source security projects. "Barracuda has been able to leverage open source to bring down the cost of security. Early on Barracuda was blocking spam and viruses at roughly 1/10 the price of the nearest proprietary competitor (that was only selling an antivirus solution). Barracuda has helped to bring down prices across the board, and it has been able to do so because of open source. More open source equals less spam and more security. Trend Micro is effectively trying to raise the price of security." Slashdot and Linux.com are both owned by SourceForge.
Trend Micro is effectively trying to raise the price of security
Um, that's what the patent system is supposed to do - to make it worthwhile investing in inventing things! Whether this is a reasonable thing to patent is another question, but you can't really complain about the patent system doing what it is meant to do.
ccalam - acoustic versions of new songs.
Can we really be bothered to break out those archived procmail scripts? We're talking about a functional equivalent of a unix pipe; novel or inventive -- I think not!
Go barracuda!
Pay us and we will let you protect yourself.
* Winners compare their achievements to their goals, losers compare theirs to that of others.
AV scanning SMTP isn't an invention, it's the very definition of freaking obvious. The patent is a joke.
The ISP probably didn't write their own virus-scanning software. They probably bought it, and the company they bought it from may or may not be paying royalties.
...by making him pay all the lost "possible revenue" the patent requestor might have earned if the patent had actually been worthy.
While your statement is true, there is a huge difference between what everyday admins are doing within their organization and what Barracuda is doing. Barracuda are packaging clamav and selling it as a product (regardless of the merits or lack their of of this lawsuit).
Also, while I do believe the patent is overly broad, this is what the patents are for. It is not like Trend Micro is a patent hoarding firm, they do make products, in fact they actually make products that relate to the patents they hold, so I view them slightly better then I view Minerva Industries.... (the smartphone patent)
I came, I conquered, I coredumped
I thought that patents were supposed to protect my particular "solution" to a problem, not the entire concept of solving the problem itself.
Let's say that I invent a machine to separate cotton from the seeds. I am granted a patent on MY PARTICULAR "method and apparatus for separating cotton from seeds". That does NOT give me a monopoly on ALL machines to accomplish the same task. Someone else comes up with a completely different mechanism to accomplish the same task, now we have a competition without any hint of patent infringement.
Seems to me that the onus would be on Trend Micro to prove that Barracuda and/or ClamAV copied their precise implementation (source code) and used it in their products. Simply placing a virus scanner on the same server as your email and ftp services is in NO WAY a 'patentable' idea.
I couldn't give a spit that the front end isn't open source. All I know is that I was able to get gateway level spam protection for under $5k for 200 users. Which would have cost well over $20k+ for a commercial solution that only works half as well. And, yes, I could have set all of that up from scratch and save a few thousand, but my time is better spent elsewhere.
I patented screwing your mom. But it got revoked for "prior art."
I must be missing something here...
I have configured for a number of my clients their own SMTP servers for which I charge. These servers are generally gateways with postfix as the server. The anti-virus is ClamAV which is called by postfix.
Or to put it another way they have 'anti-virus detection on an SMTP or FTP gateway'.
Does this this mean I have violated this patent? Or should the patent be rewritten as 'Patent 5,623,600: Installing software on a computer'?
Genesis 1:32 And God typed
Slashdot Burying Stories About Slashdot Media Owned
Lot's of people work in positions that would instantly fire them at the first mistake, and with much subtler mistakes than those we are arguing about*. They still like those jobs because, as long as they can keep them, they pay well.
*: I do believe that in patent granting there must be really convoluted and complex cases that involve very uses of previous knowledge in subtle ways. However I don't believe those cases conform the majority.