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Patent Markings May Spell Trouble For Activision

eldavojohn writes "If you pick up your copy of Guitar Hero and read the literature, you'll notice it says 'patent pending' and cites a number of patents. A group alleges no such patent pends nor are some of the patents applicable. If a judge finds Activision guilty of misleading the public in this manner, they could become liable for up to $500 per product sold under false patent marking. The patents in question seem to be legitimately Guitar Hero-oriented, and little is to be found about the mysterious group. The final piece of the puzzle puts the filing in Texas Northern District Court, which might be close enough to Texas Eastern District Court to write this off as a new kind of 'false patent marking troll' targeting big fish with deep coffers."

59 of 82 comments (clear)

  1. Hold On a Moment... by mano.m · · Score: 3, Funny

    I invented trolling for false patent markings (patent pending).

    --
    Karma fed to this user will be promptly burnt. Be warned; be wary.
    1. Re:Hold On a Moment... by null+etc. · · Score: 1

      This inevitable comment is why I dread reading any /. story about patents.

    2. Re:Hold On a Moment... by Hurricane78 · · Score: 1

      Well, tough shit, cause I invented invention itself! (Patent #3735928559.)

      Oh, and green is house. Because I say so. Just as coocoo is tetracell white. Also because I say so. And I own you like a slave. Because I said so.

      </delusional-“IP”-“owner”>

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced intelligence is indistinguishable from stupidity.
  2. Someone zoned out... by ZeroExistenZ · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Guess someone in the patents-cubicle zoned out and forgot to follow up on his email properly..

    "Oh those patents, yes, they're sent off..."
    "What are those patentnumbers, we need them for printing.."
    *searches inbox on 'patent issue'* "Here's a list, let me put it in excel for you.."
    "kthx!!"

    --
    I think we can keep recursing like this until someone returns 1
    1. Re:Someone zoned out... by eldavojohn · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Guess someone in the patents-cubicle zoned out and forgot to follow up on his email properly..

      "Oh those patents, yes, they're sent off..." "What are those patentnumbers, we need them for printing.." *searches inbox on 'patent issue'* "Here's a list, let me put it in excel for you.." "kthx!!"

      I have no expertise even remotely in this area but, as the submitter, I looked up all the patents mentioned in the claim. A lot of them seem to do with specifics about the controllers like the drum set, guitar or even the mixing board for DJ Hero. But basically each seems to cover many aspects of how these input systems allow the user to 'learn' and how the played track is replayed over the recorded audio. Take 5739457 for instance, it seems to focus entirely on the electronic drum sets of Guitar Hero. I think what happened here was that the patent markings were put on every single dust jacket for several Guitar Hero products -- regardless of whether or not they came with the hardware to play the game. So you go pick up your stand alone disc of Guitar Hero and there's no plastic drum with it because you bought just the disc or maybe the guitar-only distribution. That was about as far as I could see them going with these claims. That the person buying that may be confused that the product they bought is covering patents that promise something grander than what they bought.

      A really interesting implication for anyone that makes hardware. What if all XBox packs had the same generic patent markings and the arcade came with patent markings for the headset and wireless attachment (not included in arcade)?

      Should this sort of thing be prosecutable? Should Acitivision really get any sort of judgment against them for this level of carelessness?

      --
      My work here is dung.
    2. Re:Someone zoned out... by leuk_he · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Oh yes... Activision should get a judgment, but only for 500$ times the number of unique boxes the "Patent Compliance Group, Inc." actually bought for their own use, and they did prove they did actually bought in the filing. (and a copy of a box is not an extra offense i should think)

      Like the advertising clause, it is not for every copy of a advertisement, it is once for all the copies.

      And even then, the judgment should be paid to the US state, not to some private lawyer team.

      As state in the comments before, the patents are for devices that are not included in the games. I think the provision for stating false patent information is to balance some of the patent rights. Trying to extend the patents to computer software is exactly what a tech work should not want to happen.

    3. Re:Someone zoned out... by tepples · · Score: 1

      Claim one and 18 have money validation units.

      Then they apply to any such game with paid downloadable songs.

    4. Re:Someone zoned out... by joetomato · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Should this sort of thing be prosecutable? Should Acitivision really get any sort of judgment against them for this level of carelessness?

      Absolutely not - who as a consumer goes to a store, copies down the patent numbers, goes home to look them up then buys the product solely based on what they find, completely ignoring the much more obvious "CONTROLLER SOLD SEPARATELY" warning?

    5. Re:Someone zoned out... by leuk_he · · Score: 1

      "Funny how when the RIAA sues an individual, they try to make they paÿ for every copy in existence, now and in the future... "

      No. YOu are wrong. RIAA just want want statutory damages. Not a amount that is based on real damages.

  3. Maybe they used ... by WrongSizeGlass · · Score: 5, Funny

    ... numbers from Patent Hero, the newest game from Activision - you play along with the patent process but aren't really applying for them?

    You hold the pen. You fill out the forms. You are the Patent Hero!

    1. Re:Maybe they used ... by leuk_he · · Score: 1

      Sure, but to test the game you need some input from patent specialists, who are way to expensive for a video game.

    2. Re:Maybe they used ... by Arancaytar · · Score: 4, Funny

      Hey, you guys, playing this doesn't make you real inventors! Stop having fun!

    3. Re:Maybe they used ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Apparently you don't know the personality of us patent attorneys. We love to play the kind of game where you type the same phrase repetitively and redundantly, over and over. Heck, just look at the Claims on modern patents to see how we can restate the same thing with minor variations 21 times.

    4. Re:Maybe they used ... by WrongSizeGlass · · Score: 3, Funny

      Sure, but to test the game you need some input from patent specialists, who are way to expensive for a video game.

      That's why you need Specialist Hero ... sorry, I just couldn't resist. ;-)

    5. Re:Maybe they used ... by drkim · · Score: 1

      I'm looking forward to Harmonix new "Patent Hero - Band" in which you, and a group of friends, can simulate playing "Patent Hero"

      Sorry - I just can't help it sometimes...

  4. a nutty form of anti-patent troll by Trepidity · · Score: 4, Interesting

    As the article notes, these have become common lately. Groups going under names like the one here, "Patent Compliance Group", spend their time digging through product literature looking for "patent pending" claims, and then dig to see if a patent really is pending. In some small percentage of cases, it isn't, and they hope to make enough money on those to justify the endeavor.

    I mean, I don't like false advertising, but somehow this particular cure seems even worse than the relatively minor disease of a game claiming it has a patent pending when it doesn't. Given that anyone can file a patent for pretty much anything, it's not like "patent pending" is worth much as a claim anyway.

    1. Re:a nutty form of anti-patent troll by courteaudotbiz · · Score: 3, Interesting

      What a great way to collect "taxes". Did anyone ever questionned the fact that these groups may be funded by the government to deter false "patent pending" claims?

      I mean, I don't think this is so bad that they are funded by the USPTO, but at least, they could be more transparent and simply say what they are.

      And since I'm pretty sure that no money go in the pockets of those groups when they deter a false "patent pending" claim, I'm also pretty sure that they do not have a dime to fund their research. So who would do this job for free?

    2. Re:a nutty form of anti-patent troll by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      What a great way to collect "taxes". Did anyone ever questionned the fact that these groups may be funded by the government to deter false "patent pending" claims?

      I mean, I don't think this is so bad that they are funded by the USPTO, but at least, they could be more transparent and simply say what they are.

      And since I'm pretty sure that no money go in the pockets of those groups when they deter a false "patent pending" claim, I'm also pretty sure that they do not have a dime to fund their research. So who would do this job for free?

      OK maybe this isn't the most paranoid conspiracy theory I've read about, but it is one of the more illogical. Why would the government bother to setup a shadowy organization to sue in situations like this when there is no reason not to use more above-board means. Anyone, including government employees on their own time, can file a civil suit like this! As for the profit motive, maybe there isn't one. Perhaps this is actually a group of concerned citizens who see themselves in the same light as the EFF. Alternatively, perhaps there is a profit motive, but they are only targeting Guitar Hero because it's a very well known and profitable game and this group has no intention of going after other such cases.

  5. If they're trolls, so are the EFF by tepples · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The final piece of the puzzle puts the filing in Texas Northern District Court, which might be close enough to Texas Eastern District Court to write this off as a new kind of 'false patent marking troll' targeting big fish with deep coffers.

    Troll? Hardly. The Electronic Frontier Foundation routinely files lawsuits like this one on the public's behalf. Compare PCG's lawsuit against alleged patent fraud to EFF's investigations and other actions against alleged copyfraud. So what's the big difference between a "false patent marking troll" and EFF?

    1. Re:If they're trolls, so are the EFF by machine321 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Slashdot tells us to love EFF, and hate patents. Besides, that's copyright, which we're supposed to hate except the GPL, and this is patents. I know it's complicated, but you've got to keep track!

    2. Re:If they're trolls, so are the EFF by digitig · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Slashdot doesn't tell you anything. Slashdot is a collection of individuals. Some of them tell you one thing, others tell you something different.

      --
      Quidnam Latine loqui modo coepi?
    3. Re:If they're trolls, so are the EFF by arth1 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      So what's the big difference between a "false patent marking troll" and EFF?

      EFF doesn't file in Eastern Texas. In my opinion, anyone who files for a case related to patents and copyrights in Easter Texas does it to take advantage of the sham court system they have established there.

      Also, from what I can tell, EFFs purpose of suing isn't to line their own pockets, but to strike down invalid patents and patent claims because it stifles innovation. That difference in intent is striking, isn't it?

    4. Re:If they're trolls, so are the EFF by itsdapead · · Score: 2, Informative

      So what's the big difference between a "false patent marking troll" and EFF?

      Well, the obvious difference is that most of the EFF actions in the article you linked to involve them defending people who have actually received DCMA takedowns, C&Ds or similar nastygrams from the people dubiously claiming copyright infringement.

      By contrast, if Activision have actually been threatening people over their (allegedly) false patent claims then TFA neglects to mention it.

      --
      In a survey of 100 programmers, 111111 thought that duck-typing was a good idea.
    5. Re:If they're trolls, so are the EFF by IBBoard · · Score: 3, Informative

      Neither did this group - they're filing in Northern Texas ;)

    6. Re:If they're trolls, so are the EFF by Lostlander · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I think you may be confusing groupthink with people who are bored or really have so little to do that they bother to moderate.

    7. Re:If they're trolls, so are the EFF by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      You can adjust your settings to ignore moderation scores so no comments would be "promoted" or "buried". Digg has this setting also (just in case you were confusing the two. You see, digg is the site where comments get "buried", not /.).

    8. Re:If they're trolls, so are the EFF by Bobfrankly1 · · Score: 1

      Slashdot is a collection of individuals. Some of them tell you one thing, others tell you something different.

      We are Slashcutus of Borg. Resistance is futile.

    9. Re:If they're trolls, so are the EFF by smartr · · Score: 1

      uhh... I don't think it's hard to tell the difference between a nonprofit consumer protection group like the EFF fighting fraudulent claims of ownership based on complaints and a mysterious "Patent Compliance Group, Inc." that seems to hunt for supposed fraudulent patent claims. To me, that's apples and oranges (yes they're both fruit!). I don't know how they come off thinking Activision Blizzard is making these claims for the "purpose of deceiving the public", and I further don't see how this group should be entitled to compensation. If the state was going after ATVI, or this was some class action suit, this might make some vague sense... I mean, even if Activision is guilty of breaking this act, how has PCG possibly been harmed in any way?

    10. Re:If they're trolls, so are the EFF by tepples · · Score: 1

      If the state was going after ATVI, or this was some class action suit, this might make some vague sense

      The latter might happen. See my other comment.

    11. Re:If they're trolls, so are the EFF by MarkvW · · Score: 1

      How does slashdot tell us to love the EFF? Tell me please. I want to know about this love!

  6. It's the DrumMania patent by tepples · · Score: 1

    So you go pick up your stand alone disc of Guitar Hero and there's no plastic drum with it because you bought just the disc or maybe the guitar-only distribution.

    The 457 patent also appears to be a software patent covering the method of play of Konami's DrumMania. The Guitar Hero and Band Hero games from World Tour on contain code implementing the DrumMania methods, even if the controller isn't bundled.

  7. Go for it! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    "Patent pending" is enough for some people to think they shouldnt use the idea at all.
    "Patent pending" is enough to hinder innovation and stifle creativity.
    If someone can go after these companies marking everything as "patented", even with false claims, I say go for it.

    Our forefathers must be heating up in their graves as their rolling per minute increases.
    Who are these pricks anyway, patenting stuff. It's like nobody else should come up with an idea, because that has never happened before.
    Total and utter pricks and fools, because the economy and innovation is hurting because of patents.

    1. Re:Go for it! by DavidTC · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Um, no, patent pending is the opposite of stifling creativity.

      Patents stifle creativity. Patent pending lets you know what patents to look up.

      Society needs to be warned about pending patents, so that people won't waste their time developing something identical, and then learn it is patented. That is much most stifling of creativity than 'Here is a list of things you should look up before developing a product like this'.

      You can argue that patents are bad, but you cannot possibly argue that 'knowing patents exist before spending time and money developing a product' is bad.

      I'm actually amazed it's any sort of crime, and it certainly shouldn't be per instances. It's the equivalent of printing 'may contain peanuts' on food that does not, in fact, contain peanuts.

      I mean, an argument can be made that an overkill 'patent pending' use can result in the person being unable to find the actual relevant patent by throwing too much chaff in there, but these patents are relevant...if you're using the software you purchased, you're using the patents. You're just using them on the hardware you bought separately. The government should just order them to correct the error.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    2. Re:Go for it! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      patent pending doesn't tell you anything - rarely are published patent numbers put on a product AND a patent application may not even be findable for the first 18 months of its existence because it hasn't published yet.

      I fail to see how something sitting at the patent office waiting to be reviewed help society, but after it is examined and granted it then stifles creativity. In fact, by your argument, the issued patent number itself tells you exactly what to look up to see what's has been covered; "patent pending" doesn't do that.

      Actually, your argument is backward - someone may have a patent pending, but that doesn't mean they'll ever get a patent on it. Arguably they are preventing people from developing a similar product, yet currently have no right to block people.

  8. Software already has patent markings by tepples · · Score: 4, Interesting

    If hardware is required to have related patents listed on the product, shouldn't software need these markings? What a mess that would spell.

    Until Unisys's LZW patent expired, every major non-free paint program had "Licensed under U.S. Patent 4,558,302 and foreign counterparts" in its about box.

  9. Defending Roxor, for instance by tepples · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Well, the obvious difference is that most of the EFF actions in the article you linked to involve them defending people who have actually received DCMA takedowns

    Activision produces Guitar Hero series under license from Konami, owner of patent rights in the Guitar Freaks and DrumMania franchises. Konami already managed to sue Roxor Games into oblivion for In the Groove, a spiritual sequel to Dance Dance Revolution.

    1. Re:Defending Roxor, for instance by itsdapead · · Score: 1

      Well, the obvious difference is that most of the EFF actions in the article you linked to involve them defending people who have actually received DCMA takedowns

      Activision produces Guitar Hero series under license from Konami, owner of patent rights in the Guitar Freaks and DrumMania franchises. Konami already managed to sue Roxor Games into oblivion for In the Groove, a spiritual sequel to Dance Dance Revolution.

      Well, if the "Patent Compliance Group, Inc." is defending Roxor, or if they are going after Konami, or if the patent that Roxor violated is one that PCG asserts is being falsely claimed then show me, and I'll happily concede the point.

      Meanwhile, I don't think anybody is crying bitter salty tears for Activision. However the existance of IP "bounty hunters" looking to profit from anybody who steps on the cracks in the legal pavement, whether or not anybody has actually been damaged, is not good news for anybody.

      --
      In a survey of 100 programmers, 111111 thought that duck-typing was a good idea.
  10. On behalf of some developer, possibly by tepples · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Also, from what I can tell, EFFs purpose of suing isn't to line their own pockets, but to strike down invalid patents and patent claims because it stifles innovation.

    How do you know the plaintiff in this case isn't acting on behalf of some video game developer that wants to make another guitar game?

  11. false patent marking troll? by jeffmeden · · Score: 1

    Are they a 'false patent marking troll' for going after Activision? Or is Activision the troll for covering their products with misleading patent information? Or are they both trolls? Seems like it should be some sort of patent regulatory body that prosecutes such things; what are they up to?

    1. Re:false patent marking troll? by camg188 · · Score: 2, Informative

      It's a money grab, a shakedown. Patent Compliance Group filed a "qui tam" action.
      Qui tam is a writ whereby a private individual who assists a prosecution can receive all or part of any penalty imposed (from wikipedia).

      Does anyone have any info on Patent Compliance Group, Inc.? Even though they are incorporated, I can't find any information about them, like who is on their board and where they are located.

  12. one or more by CockMonster · · Score: 2, Interesting

    "Covered by one or more of the following patents..." seems to me they have their ass covered

    1. Re:one or more by Bigjeff5 · · Score: 1

      The law doesn't work that way. Misrepresentation is misrepresentation, and if interstate comerce is involved it's fraud.

      Now, that doesn't mean you leave out the ass covering statement, because they might be able to show that they did not intend to mislead anybody, and it was just a mistake that was missed. That can work, because intent is 9/10 of the law, but is by no means a given, they will still have to fight for it and hard.

      You've got to remember that just because someone wrote it down doesn't make it so. It's the same thing with EULA's, they talk a good game, but in fact a lot of what is in there is completely unenforceable. They can say they can change the EULA whenever they want, but that doesn't mean they can change it whenever they want and still have it apply to you.

      The flip side, of course, is that if they never make the claim they'll never get away with it, so they put all the useless unenforceable crap in there anyway, just in case.

      --
      Security is mostly a superstition... Avoiding danger is no safer in the long run than outright exposure. - Helen Keller
  13. qui tam by camg188 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I was wondering why a third party would be bringing legal action against Activision for allegedly violating federal patent law because it seemed to be a criminal, not a civil case. Then I look up the definition of "qui tam"
    Qui tam is a writ whereby a private individual who assists a prosecution can receive all or part of any penalty imposed (from wikipedia).

  14. Going after Activision in order to go after Konami by tepples · · Score: 1

    Well, if the "Patent Compliance Group, Inc." is defending Roxor, or if they are going after Konami

    If PCG is working on behalf of a video game developer, then my first guess is that PCG is 1. going after Activision for Activision's patents and 2. going after Activision for the patents it licensed from Konami as a first step toward going after Konami.

  15. Can someone make sense of this story? by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 2, Interesting

    So Activision is being sued because they put "patent pending" on a product that doesn't actually have a patent pending. Ok, with you so far.

    But then the summary adds this:

    The patents in question seem to be legitimately Guitar Hero-oriented, and little is to be found about the mysterious group.

    If there are patents in question, then ... why are they being sued? Either they have pending patents or they don't, right?

    1. Re:Can someone make sense of this story? by ArsenneLupin · · Score: 1

      If there are patents in question, then ... why are they being sued?

      Because, although the patents were "valid", they referred to articles not included in the box (such as patents on the drum set, on a box that contained only the software and the guitar).

    2. Re:Can someone make sense of this story? by DavidTC · · Score: 2, Informative

      The pending patents are for hardware, not software. They cannot apply to a box of software people purchase.

      Okay, everyone seems to be very ignorant here, and the article isn't explaining this, so I guess I have to give a damn history lesson:

      The US government requires that you put notification of patent use on things you sell. (Either your own patent, or something you've licensed from someone else.)

      That is fine for issued patents, but what about pending patents? Remember, you can use something for up to a year before filing a patent on it, and you do have some amount of protection when patents are pending.

      Ergo, you should have to put pending patent notifications, so people can look those up, too, and not waste their time building something that's going to be in violation of a patent in two months.

      Well, the problem then arose. You see, actual patents are easy to look up. Patent lawyers could have copies of the entire set, you could go to a law courthouse in state capital, etc.

      Pending patents, OTOH, are real bitch to find. Only the patent office has those. So some enterprising people who couldn't, or didn't bother, to get patents, just went around putting 'patent pending' on everything, resulting in other people unable to figure out what, exactly, was patented. Or they could keep resubmitted a rejected patent, and it remain 'pending'.

      Hence, at some point, falsely claiming to have patents pending, or actually having one pending, but unrelated to what you put it on, was made criminal and you can be fined for it.

      Those laws don't really make any sense anymore, but are still there.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    3. Re:Can someone make sense of this story? by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      Erm, in what manner am I very misinformed?

      The only thing I said wrong was the US government requires you to mark your patents, which, as you pointed out, they don't, that's just required to collect more damages.

      I fail to see how that makes me 'very misinformed'. I should have said that they require you to do that 'to actually collect any damages from infringement'. Otherwise they will just assert they didn't know, and as long as they stop when you notify them, they are fine. Without it, copycats can flood the market until you write each one a letter.

      So, yes, in theory, you don't have to put patents on a product. In practice, however, you do, if you ever intend on suing people for cloning your product. Or they will say 'Oh, that's patented? Now that I know, I'll stop.' and you get nothing.

      I think you also decided I was wrong about how hard pending patents are to find, but I was giving a history lesson...pending patents used to be very hard to find. Patents themselves used to be almost as hard.

      Hence it's illegal to mark something as having patents pending when it does not. And it's illegal to mark something as applicable to a patent when it is not.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
  16. It's worse in germany by s-whs · · Score: 3, Informative

    This reminds me of the 'Abmanhnungen' in Germany. In both cases it's gaming the system and should be severely punished...

    For many years in Germany attorneys have gamed the system, related to what you are allowed and not allowed to do esp. when selling something. These 'people' have for example scoured ebay ads, and when they found say a missing telephone number or missing note on how to undo the deal for a business seller, they sent such a 'Mahnung'. Not for free obviously, no, with an invoice for payment (for their own time/effort!). Yes, you will have to pay... It gets even worse. Suppose you've got an old magazine with old demo software disk on it and put it on ebay.de (as a German, I don't think you can be touched if not), then you'd better check there are no programs on there that are now forbidden. DVD copying software for example that circumvents the protection scheme is no longer allowed since several years.

    People have been sent a 'Mahnung' for putting a mag with such no longer allowed software on ebay, and had to pay large amounts of money to such 'scammers'. You think you get a few euros, but you have to pay many hundreds. Nice.

    These people are the worst kinds of assholes around just as the guy I mentioned in a previous posting, 'Pieter Lakeman' (who created a foundation supposedly to help clients of the DSB bank with supposedly bad loans, but in reality this foundation just pays his 300 euro/hour salary and there were hardly any bad loans anyway; He then influenced people to take away their money from DSB which led to its collapse. Nice!), and I consider them to be legal scammers.

    See for one notorious guy, who was sentenced to jail for other things, this page (it didn't end well for him and I don't think many people will give a damn, he was really hated as one can see in many forums...): http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/G%C3%BCnter_Freiherr_von_Gravenreuth

  17. "Sad" news: Günter von Gravenreuth dead at 61 by ArsenneLupin · · Score: 1
    I just read some "sad" news on Slashdot - The infamous lawyer Günter Freiherr von Gravenreuth was found dead in his Munich student club this morning. He gave himself the deadly shot just as police special units looking for him were busting down the doors. I'm sure nobody in the Slashdot community will miss him - even if you didn't receive any of his "Abmahnungen", there's no denying his contributions to popular culture. Truly a German icon. He will not be missed.

    Now, don't anybody dare to mod this as offtopic!

  18. "Patent Pending" has no legal effect by DustyShadow · · Score: 1

    Stamping "Patent Pending" on a product has no legal effect. It just makes you feel good.

    1. Re:"Patent Pending" has no legal effect by spire3661 · · Score: 1

      I disagree. Speech on products is highly regulated and printing a false claim on your product SHOULD be actionable. Printing patent pending while not actually having a patent pending is misleading. Patents are legal instruments, do not invoke them trivially.

      --
      Good-bye
  19. Re:Going after Activision in order to go after Kon by DavidTC · · Score: 3, Informative

    Okay, to recap what is actually happening for insane people who have no reading comprehension: No one is going after any patents whatsoever.

    Some extraneous 'patent pending' numbers were printed on software boxes. No one has even slightly indicated that anyone would attempt to 'enforce' said patent-printing mistakes, or that other people wish to use said patents on their software, because the patents do not even relate to software.

    Again: There are no actual patents involved at all. The 'offense' was a box that asserted that various pending patents applied to it, when they clearly do not, and no one is even slightly asserting they do. No one is attempting to enforce any patents, no one is attempting to strike down any patents. The patents mentioned will remain valid (For the things they actually apply to) even if this suit succeeds.

    Apparently, falsely claiming you have a patent pending is a civil liability, as is claiming a pending patent applies to something it doesn't, and groups have arisen to run around suing people for this. This is the story of one of those groups.

    --
    If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
  20. Re:Going after Activision in order to go after Kon by tepples · · Score: 1

    No one is attempting to enforce any patents, no one is attempting to strike down any patents.

    Yet. There are three ways it can play out:

    • Activision can prove in court that its product is patented, and the scope of the patents owned or licensed by Activision becomes clear to competitors.
    • Activision can fail to prove that its product is patented, and the scope of the patents owned or licensed by Activision becomes clear to competitors.
    • Activision can leave it ambiguous, and the anti-patent troll responds: "Grant $developer a license to your game's patents, or we'll seek class action status for every box that you've ever listed a patent on."
  21. Re:Going after Activision in order to go after Kon by Panaflex · · Score: 1

    PCG is going after several companies, including Timex, Brunswick, and Wright Medical. This type of lawsuit is essentially an extortion scheme, though IANAL.

    --
    I said no... but I missed and it came out yes.
  22. Please don't compare North Texas to East Texas by gravis777 · · Score: 1

    While we are one big state of Palin-worshiping Bible-thumping pro-life conservatives, I find the insenuation that those of us from North Texas just want to hunt and fish insulting. We care about cows, oil, airlines and fighter jets here.

    1. Re:Please don't compare North Texas to East Texas by guyminuslife · · Score: 1

      Don't forget stadiums and big hair. And office parks.

      --
      I don't believe in time. It's a grand conspiracy designed to sell watches.
  23. Re:Going after Activision in order to go after Kon by Bigjeff5 · · Score: 1

    Man, your reading comprehension is terrible.

    There are no actual patents involved in this case, period. There can be no judgement for or against a patent in this case, because there are no patents involved. No patent will be "clarified" accept to say that yes it does exist (or at least its application exists) or no it doesn't, and yes it does apply or no it doesn't apply. That's it. Nothing is going on with the patent itself, at all.

    What is involved is a statement of patents pending which, if there were no such patents pending, is fraud.

    So the possibilities are as follows:
    - The plantif can prove that there were not applications pending for all of the "patent pending" statements on the box, or that the pending patents did not actually apply to the game. If they do, Activision can be hit for fraud and end up paying $500 for each copy of the game they sold.
    - The plantif can fail to prove that there were no applications pending for some patent statements or fail to prove that the patents do not apply. In that case, the little fly goes away.

    If Activision attempts to "leave it ambiguous" they will almost certainly lose. The burden is on the plantiff, but it's pretty easy to prove just about anything if the defense doesn't fight back.

    --
    Security is mostly a superstition... Avoiding danger is no safer in the long run than outright exposure. - Helen Keller
  24. Re:Going after Activision in order to go after Kon by DavidTC · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Man, your reading comprehension is terrible.

    Indeed. This entire discussion is a rather blatant example of the failure of moderation. Half the people here seem to think we're actually discussing whether a patent is valid or not.

    Actually discussing whether or not the large fine makes sense in this day and age, when it's fairly easy to look up patents, is another thing, as is whether or not it should apply if you do it accidentally, and a real discussion we could actually be interesting.

    Likewise, an argument could be made that you should have to lists patents required to use a device on said device even if the device itself doesn't use the patent. (You can replace 'device' with 'software'.)

    If you really truly need a patent to do something with what you buy, like if you need to use a patented device to put fuel in your car, I would argue that it would actually make sense to require the car, as well as the fuel device, to state that. This isn't how the law works, and thus that argument won't really help Activision, but it would make sense.

    Or, for perhaps a more relevant example, some companies have taken to patenting hardware interfaces. But they can patent just the cable, and hence stop people from making compatible cables, while not patenting the plug itself, and hence not having to notify people on their device.

    Hence I might build and sell my own cable and be in violation of patent law, even after I've looked up the patents on the device itself. Yes, in theory, I could be in violation of patents for all sorts of things, but the point is that companies should be required to inform me, a purchaser of their stuff, all the patents that are relevant, even if, strictly speaking, they don't apply to the stuff itself. Perhaps some sort of 'See also' patent list.

    But almost all the people here seem to think this is some actual patent dispute, so heaven forbid we have an actual relevant discussion. Ugh.

    --
    If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?