CSIRO Wins Wi-Fi Settlement From HP
suolumark writes "The CSIRO has won what could be a landmark settlement from Hewlett Packard over the use of patented wireless technology. The settlement ended HP's involvement in a four-year lawsuit brought by the CSIRO on a group of technology companies, in which the organisation was seeking royalties for wi-fi technology that is used extensively on laptops and computers worldwide. CSIRO spokesman Luw Morgan earlier said legal action was continuing against 13 companies: Intel, Dell, Toshiba, Asus, Netgear, D-Link, Belkin, SMC, Accton, 3-Com, Buffalo, Microsoft and Nintendo."
The clever country indeed.
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I liked these guys much better when they stuck to making the ultimate desk toy, of science.
Remember, folks: the CSIRO is fundamentally a research institution, first and foremost. They develop technologies, patent them, and then license the patents out to the manufacturing companies. Income from the patent royalties goes towards further research work.
They've done some genuinely fantastic work in a wide range of areas. Polymer banknotes are one of their products. Agricultural research. Marine sciences. They cover a very broad base, and are very much respected in Australia for the work they do.
Personally? I hope the CSIRO wins these battles. At least with this mob, I know the money will be going to further R&D, rather than flowing to the coffers of people who don't do anything productive for society (as happens with "real" patent trolls.)
Yes and no. The question is how did these patents get into the 802.11 standard. And is this a legitimate patent or a blatantly obvious one?
To say well its OK for a government funded body to base their business model on licensing patents But its not OK for a private company to do so is a double standard. Basically saying the motive justifies the act.
To my mind the motive does not excuse the act. If patent trolling, especially on standards, is wrong then it is wrong on all cases.
The only mitigating factor I could think of is if the patented technology was knowingly included in the standard. And that the relevant commitee did this on the expectation that the CSIRO would not enforce their patent. In which case their would be a clear intent to commit IP theft.
read my mind at http://the-willows.blogspot.com/
They are in the position of having made a contribution to research program on which CSIRO was a collaborator, and are now being asked to pony up to use the patent. To quote from the research paper:
The patent (USPTO 5487069) was filed on November 23, 1993 and issued on January 23, 1996. HP contributed funding from 1995-1996, so I guess it can be claimed that they didn't contribute to the patent, but it's still got to leave a bad taste in the mouth. The point is that HP might be a special case and not indicative of the treatment other defendants might get. I'd be intrigued to know what Macquarie University's contribution was from 1991 to November 23, 1993 (which was before my time on the project).
(Yes, I'm one of the authors on the paper.)
Intel, Dell, Toshiba, Asus, Netgear, D-Link, Belkin, SMC, Accton, 3-Com, Buffalo, Microsoft and Nintendo."
Notice one missing? What happened there? (did they actually license rather than "borrow without permission"?)
Actually I suppose I don't see Compaq anywhere in there either. Any other big names I'm overlooking?
I work for the Department of Redundancy Department.
If it involves 802.11a, 802.11g, 802.11n or 802.11y, then yes.
I don't need to test my programs.. I have an error correcting modem.
It looks like it exclusively applies to 802.11n
This is a joke. I am joking. Joke joke joke.
Notice one missing?
Sony, the third console maker.
Yes
Bye!
The CSIRO is suing the wrong people. They should be suing the chip manufactures(Broadcom, Intel, Atheros, and maybe some others), not the people who bought chips and had them re-branded.
As said by others, CSIRO was in there from the beginning asking for royalties. It only went to court after a decade of negotiation failed.
No mention of patents
That you know of, the csiro has been contacting the companies producing these chipsets for quite some time, wanting royalties, only after years of refusal did they sue.
The question then becomes, is it legal to give someone infringing your patents ample time to sort out patent issues after contacting them before suing, I'd like to think yes.
Actually its 802.11a and 802.11g
Make SELinux enforcing again!
You don't have it right. The patents were mentioned in the process, and CSIRO has been contacting companies for YEARS. They only filed the lawsuits when they finally realized these companies were never going to pay up.
BZZZZZZZZZZZZZT!
No, sorry bluefoxlucid, CSIRO is not a company. And as others have already replied, yes it is legal the companies were told about the infringement and been given plenty of time to cough up.
Now I know it's part of the fun of /. to get all up in arms at the sniff of a patent troll, but in this case there isn't one. RTFA and do a wiki search for CSIRO. Then come back and post a "meh" or something.
I don't therefore I'm not.
Here's the patent. And it's pretty damn comprehensive. The patent was filed for in 1993, and granted in 1996.
As in the report here (2000), CSIRO attempted to license the tech and recieve royalties but then in 2005, big tech companies didn't want to play ball anymore.
I say, good work CSIRO - screw these guys for every penny and keep on conducting your groundbreaking research.
Oh, my... I do believe I violated this patent in 1985.
Groundbreaking research my ass.
Help stamp out iliturcy.
The CSIRO has been chasing the hardware companies for years. The paper trail is a mile long. The CSIRO should be complimented for only pressing the SUE button as a last resort.
The hardware companies, on the other hand, deserve a swift kick to the nuts. But a payout will have to do.
Because eventually, if they ignore the law enough times, they get a government bai... I mean the company gets rolled up and the sale profits go to the claimant
Yay me!
Potentially just about every technology hardware company out there should be paying them for the technology they have developed. The hardware only exists because the CSIRO helped invent it!
As has been stated many times before the CSIRO is not a patent troll. It is an Australian government funded research division, whose profits are then put back into the division to develop more technologies and provide more research.
This is a case of big American companies who were paying royalties previously, then suddenly stopped, and effectively said "I don't want to pay them anymore".
"Patent troll is a pejorative term used for a person or company that enforces its patents against one or more alleged infringers in a manner considered unduly aggressive or opportunistic, often with no intention to manufacture or market the patented invention."
I would say CSIRO meets many of those criteria.
"enforces its patents against one or more alleged infringers" - Check
"manner unduly aggressive or opportunistic" - Check
"no intention to manufacture" - Check
"no intention to market" - Check
How is CSIRO not a patent troll? I understand, it's a government funded research division. Are you saying that because it's government funded it automatically is not a patent troll? Or because it's a research facility that it can't be a patent troll? How exactly is this different than all the other patent troll who "discover" something, then lay in wait for someone to use it and then sue them for patent infringement?
Patent applies to OFDM. That is not used by .11b. It was first used by .11a (technically, .11a was approved before .11b, but equioment was made and sold long before because it was much easier to do), then .11g.
Interstitial spaces are filled with cream.
I could care less if they have or haven't a valid claim. The simple fact is nothing patented should ever be included into an "open" standard. I am so sick of all the horseshit. In my opinion nothing is patentable since it is built on the work of others. Not to mention trivial, most of the stuff created today I had working examples of when I was 12. So I would say 90% of the technology you all use is simple. Patenting software? Come on what a joke. They are mostly patenting a description to a solution to the problem. How the hell is that innovative? Sorry, we were the first to describe the solution, and get a patent. You can't solve it now.
Unfortunately the patent they won here was for OFDM. Which was developed in the 1960s. Their patent claims were specifically limited to applications above 10GHz, but somehow or another they managed to prevail in court against manufacturers making devices in the 2-6 Ghz range. It's 100% BS.
I just read the first claim and I'm not sure it's that restrictive.
It says:
A wireless LAN comprising: ...
each said transceiver being operable to transmit and receive data at radio frequencies in excess of 10 GHz,
To me that says it 'can be' be operated in excess of 10GHz not 'it must be', but I guess what it says depends on which patent lawyer you speak too :)
If they have nothing new worth licensing, sure.
If they have something worth licensing, the competitors of the ostracizing companies will come ahead with the new tech.
45 5F E1 04 22 CA 29 C4 93 3F 95 05 2B 79 2A B2
"enforces its patents against one or more alleged infringers" - Check
"manner unduly aggressive or opportunistic" - They told the companies up front they'd have to license the patent. The companies agreed. Then CSIRO asked the companies to please pay the agreed fees for a decade before suing. If that's "unduly aggressive or opportunistic" I have no idea what isn't.
"no intention to manufacture" - They are a research organisation intended to develop new technologies. Yes, you can do that even if you're not a privately-owned company. They develop new tech, license it to others and use the proceeds to fund the development of further new tech.
"no intention to market" - Again, they exist to develop new technology, not to market it. Actually, they do market it by letting companies license it.
Imagine ARM sued any of its licensees over failure to pay licensing fees.
"enforces its [IP] against one or more alleged infringers" - Check
"manner unduly aggressive or opportunistic" - Probably less than one decade of warnings so definitely check.
"no intention to manufacture" - ARM doesn't manufacture chips. Check.
"no intention to market" - ARM doesn't directly sell chips. Check.
Since ARM only licenses their IP instead of manufacturing their own chips ARM automatically becomes an IP troll if someone shafts them. Looks to me like there's some fault in your definition, most probably around the part where "unduly aggressive or opportunistic" always evaluates to true.
USE HOT GRITS WITH STATUE OF NATALIE PORTMAN (NAKED AND PETRIFIED)
"In 2007 the adoption of the 802.11n wireless networking standard was held up when CSIRO refused to provide IEEE a Letter of Assurance to not sue over patent violations.[22]. In late November 2007, CSIRO won a lawsuit against Buffalo Technology, with an injunction that Buffalo must stop supplying AirStation products that infringe on the 802.11 patent.
On September 19, 2008, the Federal Circuit ruled in Buffalo's favour and has remanded this case to the district court ruling that the district court's Summary Judgement was insufficient on the merits of obviousness of CSIRO's patent. Therefore, this case will be tried again before the district court. In this connection Buffalo is hopeful that it will shortly be permitted to, once again, sell IEEE 802.11a and 802.11g compliant products in the United States."
At least according to the courts, the patent was an obvious patent. If my understanding of the patent is correct, the 802.11 standard doesn't even use the patents in question. The patents are very specific (Which they have to be), and the 802.11 standard does meet all the requirements of the patent, although it is very similiar. 802.11n COULD in some cases meet all the requirements of the patent, which is what probably spurred on this latest round of lawsuits. I think the companies are just waiting for it to finally be invalidated.
On a side note, I take offense that you have turned a legal battle into some sort of nationalistic fight. This is nothing to do with the countries in which the companies HQ is in. Further, quite a few of the "American" companies involved aren't even American. I see Taiwanese/Chinese, Japanese, and some American. Might as well say it's Australia vs the rest of the world. That would be more accurate, if you want to continue making it a national thing.
I refrain from taking any side. I'm not informed enough on the patents to make a serious opinion on the matter. Even if I were, I'm not well versed enough in patent law. I'll leave that to the courts and lawyers involved.
That should have read "and the 802.11 standard does [not] meet all the requirements of the patent". a/b/g doesn't fall withing the spectrum specified in the patents. 802.11n CAN I believe.
Orwell: "In a Time of Universal Deceit, telling the Truth is a Revolutionary Act"
If the patent was some innovative, creative discovery. But it's not. It rehashes technology that was a decade old before the ink hit the paper. Somebody's going to figure out that their claims (Thanks, Tick-tock-atona) are derived from prior art based on cellular packet radio technologies from the late 1970's and then this will be over. Just because you get the clerks at the patent office to sign off on your patent doesn't mean that you've won the golden ticket to jerking everybody around. The whole world knows those clerks have been clueless ever since the best of them invented global thermonuclear war. To think that the average patent clerk is qualified to judge the originality of the concepts presented to him is the pinnacle of the absurd. No thousand of them could know all of the prior art in every field, and there aren't a thousand of them.
Somebody in this group dipped from the well of common knowledge and bottled it as a new beverage. If he's just selling the drink I don't have a problem with that, but that's not the case here. He's trying to claim now that the effort of dipping entitles him to ownership of the concept of wells in general, and assume the power to tell others not to dip and that's not ok. Once an idea is in the commons it cannot be made proprietary again - that's not progress, it's regress. It's not going to hold up in court.
HP paid. That's sad but they probably got a good deal - considerably less than the cost of defending this nonsense. They got that deal because they were the first to settle and the second will have to pay much more and these settlement monies will be what pays the lawyers to pursue the case until they're ultimately defeated. Defeated, though, they must be, because their claims are crap and they're up against some big guns who can afford to fight and dig up the folks with prior art.
So really this whole thing is about wasting the court's time (taxpayer money - that's me!) and earning billable hours for lawyers on both sides, to no useful purpose. That's not the purpose of the section of Article I, Section 8 of the US Constitution which says: "To promote the progress of science and useful arts, by securing for limited times to authors and inventors the exclusive right to their respective writings and discoveries; " That part of the Constitution is for ensuring progress. Progress is the goal. There's nothing in that paragraph about supporting the barratry industry.
Look, I get that you have some nationalistic interest, but I don't care. I don't often side with the big corporations on anything, nationalism be damned most of the time they suck. I didn't even know the patent troll was Non-US. It doesn't matter. It's bad in and of itself, and the nationality of its stupidness is irrelevant. By now though you probably get that I don't approve of abuses of the patent system, no matter what flag the patent filer flies.
And yes, I did RTFA. I have personal first hand direct experience that's at odds with the reportage. When you're faced with that problem, "Who are you going to believe? ABC, or your lying eyes?"
Help stamp out iliturcy.
Sometimes when a big company settles like this, it is to keep the technology within a pool of deep pocket players and out of the hands of small players that cannot pony up huge amounts up front during their startup phase. Apple computer paid off a company recently that had a patent on navigating music databases and I believe Microsoft did also, and maybe Creative. The result is that anyone wanting to bring out a music device has to pay the huge royalty just to get started. This whole patent thing and the setting up of mutual licensing between large companies with patent portfolios is not taking us to a good place. It is killing off startup activity of those without immense wealth.