Audio and Video Patents Haunt Apple and Android
FlorianMueller writes "There seems to be no end to those smartphone patent suits. This week's special: audio and video patents that its owners claim are key to formats like MP3 and MPEG 2. The targets: Apple and Android. On Monday, Alcatel-Lucent subsidiary Multimedia Patent Trust filed a patent infringement suit in Southern California against Apple, LG (over 64 different phones including some Android-based ones), Canon and TiVo over four video patents. Fortunately for Apple and LG, none of the patents asserted against those two companies are likely to be in force by the time the judge decides, so there's no risk of an injunction. They may nevertheless have to pay for past damages. The same company once obtained a record $1.5 billion jury verdict against Microsoft but saw it slashed by a judge. And on Tuesday, Hybrid Audio LLC filed a suit in Eastern Texas, asserting a patent against various Apple products and certain Android-based products from HTC and Dell."
So MPEG-LA protection racket does not actually protect anybody? What a surprise.
big corps are being targeted by patent trolls.
Read radical news here
The MPEG working group patented those formats almost 20 years ago.
I really hate these patent trolls.
Congress should fix this mess.
FREE magazine : http://clarkesworldmagazine.com/prior/
Apple, Microsoft & Google have got to be getting sick of this - they need to open up their wallets and toss some serious money towards lobbyists to get the patent system changed.
And if they are not getting sick of this: shame on them!
Word game?
Are we there yet?
---- Booth was a patriot ----
Don't really want to be pedantic but then, the "patent lawsuits" benefit only the lawyers.
Patents are there to protect the inventors, but nowadays, the entire thing has been turned upside down by the lawyers, making it a bane to society rather than boon.
I can only hope so many patent lawsuits will be started so that the whole system implodes upon its own stupidity.. Seems to much to ask for lawmakers to not take money from the industry so this might be the only way left..
I call dibs on MP3
Money is being spent on innovation........
Uh, is this not why we have things like Ogg Vorbis?
Palm trees and 8
now we can see why google bought on2 and provided (eventually) a royalty-free license for anyone implementing free software versions of the VP8 algorithm.
also we can see why the BBC developed "DIRAC" several years ago by combining the best algorithms they could find from *expired* patents.
so when you have situations where both ends of the (video) conversation can be controlled, there do exist "ways out" that terminate the possibility for patent trolls to get at you. (such as, for example, youtube being controlled by google and eventually transmitting VP8-encoded video and also android and webkit having VP8 receiver CODECs) ... it's just that there is still a sticking-point (due to the amounts of money invested) where the "de-facto" standard comes out of an organisation where patents are the norm. so i think this is a good thing, ultimately, for these big players to be smacked about and to lose billions off their profit margins. perhaps they will start to pursue similar strategies that google has with VP8, and the BBC did with DIRAC.
We will hold a meeting regarding Patents of Mass Stupidity
--CIA
My first Journal Entry ever, in 8 years! http://slashdot.org/journal/365947/aphelion-scifi-fantasy-horror-poetry-webzine
I sue you
You sue me
We're a sue-happy family
With a great big suit
And lawyer from me to you
We'll make sure we sue you too.
Maybe the big players in the market will realize that allowing private ownership of the idea of 1s and 0s was not such a great idea after all.
Then the lobbyists who once bribed congress for tougher IP laws will change their tune and then the rest of us can have a more liberated market to do business with.
This whole software patent thing is completely unsustainable. It's eventually going to get to a point where even the megafirms like Google, Apple, Microsoft etc will simply be unable to do any business at all. I'm hopeful that the whole thing implodes soon.
When you think of how much these companies make a year, having to shell out a few hundred million to squeeze out the little guy is more than worth it. They have to pay a few patent trolls, but to keep the entire market an oligarchy no price is too high.
Go ahead, mod me down for being 'anti American'.
This is frankly a cost of doing business in the country where "we don't like anything that impedes business". We have no such problems here in Europeland; whilst we might force companies to do proper safety tests on their hardware before selling it, such things are actually not especially onerous, unless you've got a dangerous crappy product.
US Patents are horribly broken, and add a considerable cost to anyone thinking about doing (high tech) business in that country. Sort it out - I dare you.
the BBC developed "DIRAC" several years ago
Someone should tell him that.
Software patents must die. Patents were never designed to protect ideas--especially mathematical ideas and a computer program is a mathematical idea that has been written down.
Copyright your code, treat it as a trade secret, but don't roadblock other developers from independently deriving their own mathematical ideas, however abstractly expresed. If you have code that you can link to a particular machine of yours, fine. But pure code must be free.
I see this thing as a ******* free speech issue. Mathematical speech is speech. So long as you're not copying somebody else's ******* speech, then you can say or write whatever the **** you want. This is ******* ******* America and it ****** me the **** off.
Maybe the big players in the market will realize that allowing private ownership of the idea of 1s and 0s was not such a great idea after all.
Exactly the opposite. The "Big Players" love this system, as it ensures that no young upstart will ever enter meaningfully threaten their dominance. As long as complex software creation requires a few million dollars, only the big guys can play. It's a small price to pay to ensure their long-term survival (especially since they all have their own IP caches they can sue over.)