Microsoft, Amazon Ink Kindle and Linux Patent Deal
theodp writes "Microsoft says it has reached a wide-ranging IP agreement with Amazon in which each company has granted the other a license to its patent portfolio. Microsoft says the agreement covers technologies in products such as Amazon's Kindle — including open-source and proprietary technologies used in the e-reader — in addition to the use of Linux-based servers. Microsoft issued a news release celebrating the accord, while Amazon declined to comment. 'We are pleased to have entered into this patent license agreement with Amazon.com,' said Microsoft's deputy general counsel. 'Microsoft's patent portfolio is the largest and strongest in the software industry, and this agreement demonstrates our mutual respect for intellectual property as well as our ability to reach pragmatic solutions to IP issues regardless of whether proprietary or open source software is involved.' A Microsoft representative declined to say which of its products are covered by the deal."
The agreement provides each company with access to the other’s patent portfolio and covers a broad range of products and technology ...
Now Microsoft will be able to sell all its products with just one click!
.lit format in favor of Kindle's .azw? Will Amazon push out and offer Azure on EC2?
But seriously where does this end? Will we see the death of Microsoft's
My work here is dung.
I think MS should tell infringing parties which of its patents are being infringed, otherwise its patent claim should be invalidated due to insufficient proof.
...if Microsoft tried to take on Red Hat then they would probably wind up clashing with IBM.
Speaking of IBM, this quote in the summary hit me:
'Microsoft's patent portfolio is the largest and strongest in the software industry,...
I always thought IBM had the biggest software patent portfolio. Or is IBM's entire portfolio the biggest, but some of it's hardware, so the software component is smaller than Microsoft's?
Somebody who knows more about this, please chime in....
"City hall" in German is "Rathaus" Kinda explains a few things......
Perhaps this agreement is about ClearType. It's covered by known MS patents, and that's why subpixel font rendering is disabled in many Linux distributions. Amazon might need it, or some related technology, for its Kindle.