Slashdot Mirror


Preliminary Finding Invalidates VoIP Patent

netbuzz writes "After a review, the US Patent Office has issued a preliminary finding that the Electronic Frontier Foundation calls 'an important first step in busting a patent that stifles innovation and the use of VoIP as a free speech tool.' (Here is the EFF's press release.) C2 Communications has used the patent to extract one-time payments from the likes of AT&T, Verizon, and Qwest."

3 of 77 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Free VoIP by popeye44 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I have a question in cases like this, Assume you paid 1 billion dollars to this company. Can you now ask for it back because their patent was invalidated? "probably not I'm guessing"

    --
    Inane Comments are Generously Disregarded
  2. Re:Free VoIP by Algorithmnast · · Score: 4, Interesting

    IANAL, but I would think that if company A coerces company B into leasing rights to use a patented idea... then the contract would probably have a "too bad sucker" clause in it for just this possibility.

    In other words: the contract would either specify the answer and preclude a lawsuit, or it would (foolishly) leave the issue unanswered which might encourage the suit.

    Of course, even if companies sued and won the money back, they'd probably never see a penny - the company likely paid out all of its money to employees and/or stockholders. And you can't really sue them.

  3. Let's read the claims! by CajunArson · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Claim 1:

    1. A method of routing a full duplex telephone call between a first telephone set and a second telephone set using a public computer network as at least part of a communication link connecting said first and second telephone sets, comprising the steps of:

    receiving at a first computer network access port a first telephone call from a central office placed from said fist[sic] telephone set initiating said full duplex telephone call, said first telephone call specifying a telephone number of said second telephone set, without specifying additional telephone destinations;

    converting data received from the central office to an Intenet protocol;

    establishing a communication link over said public computer network between said first computer network access port and a remote second computer network access port;

    placing a second telephone call from said second computer network access port to said second telephone set using a PSTN;

    converting data received from the public computer network from Intenet protocol to a PSTN protocol; and

    connecting said first telephone call, said communication link and said second telephone call to thereby establish a telephone call between said first telephone set and said second telephone set.

    A little broad, but then again it was filed in 1995 which is over a year before H.323 was even published. Note the requirement of a PSTN: If you are just making a VoIP call over Skype this patent does not cover that since there is no PSTN. In fact, and Pure VoIP call is outside the scope of this patent. I wonder if the EFF had been around in the 1870's if they would have been accusing Alexander Graham Bell of "stifling free speech" with the original telephone....

    --
    AntiFA: An abbreviation for Anti First Amendment.