Paul Allen's Lawsuit Patents To Be Reexamined
eldavojohn writes "Last year Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen filed suit against eleven tech companies citing patent infringement on four of his patents. Groklaw has followed up with some interesting documents that reveal three out of the four have already been granted a reexamination by the USPTO with the fourth still pending."
Wait a second...
I thought Groklaw was "winding down". According to the mysterious PJ, Groklaw was going into hibernations....
Now, I for one, think the idea of Groklaw taking on software patent nonsense would be a STELLAR idea.
But.. None the less, it was my information from none other than the Queen Of Groklaw herself via the press... that Grawklaw was dead?
So, what's going on here?
If you want news from today, you have to come back tomorrow.
I wouldn't get too excited yet. Of the three that have had re-exam ordered only one has had the next step, a non-final rejection. After the non-final rejection the patent owner then gets to respond with arguments, evidence showing non-obviousness (inventor affidavits), or amending claims. The reexam examiner can then if unconvinced Finally reject the claims. Even this is pretty meaningless because the examiners decision will be appealed to The Board of patent Appeals.
Of the 190 appeals revived from re-exam about 20%of Final rejections are overturned in full and another 20% are overturned in part.
http://www.uspto.gov/ip/boards/bpai/stats/receipts/fy2011_apr_e.jsp
If the patent is still rejected after this the patantee can appeal to the CAFC. Then to CAFC en banc and then finally to the Supreme Court (en banc and Supreme Court are obviously (no patent pun intended) not guaranteed).
So basically a Non-final action meas Jack and shit and Jack quit the patent office last week.
Paul Allen has done a lot of great stuff (and some not so great stuff) for the Seattle area, but on the whole he's definitely made a positive contribution. Now, at a time in his life when he might have looked to the Gates Foundation or other global interests to occupy his time, he decided instead to buy up a bunch of bullshit software patents and go trolling.
So fuck off, Paul. You could've made a difference, but you decided to enrich a gang of lawyers instead.
Isn't one rule of "novelty" for a patent that just about any expert in the field wouldn't be able to come up with the same solution to the problem? Because IIRC, his company basically gets experts to sit together with lawyers and speculate about the future. And that would pretty much mean to me that any expert in the field can come up with the same solution to the problems these patents describe. Which would make these solutions, well, non-patentable and the patents invalid.
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Sometimes I take pride in the /. community. The people who post here show clear and decisive understanding of the issues.
Sometimes I see this thread, which as of 201105290137z shows two sets of comments:
1. A lack of understanding of USPTO patent re-examination process
2. Trolls about groklaw being done
With all due respect, and whether or not groklaw is done (it's not), the USPTO re-examination is the beginning of the end for ex-MS-troll Paul Allen's world domination. Whether you agree with software patents or not (I don't), the patents on the face of it will not survive due mostly to prior art. After prior art there are issues of non-patentable material, and methods, but I doubt it will get that far.
Consider this one man saying "BOO" to those of you who instead of addressing the issue from a seat of knowledge are either taking potshots at groklaw or have no understanding of the USPTO process. If you're from another country... I'm sorry the US system is different than yours.
E
Tucson AZ US
...Paul Allen has mistaken me for this dickhead Marcus Halberstram. It seems logical because Marcus also works at P&P and in fact does the same exact thing I do and he also has a penchant for Valentino suits and Oliver Peoples glasses. Marcus and I even go to the same barber, although I have a slightly better haircut.
He has patents on how to file lawsuits? I guess for Microsoft that would go under the heading "business methods".
XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve your problem, you're not using enough of it. --AC
The people who post here show clear and decisive understanding of the issues We demand rigidly-defined areas of doubt and uncertainty!
Could PA actually be doing some 'real' good by invalidating an entire group of software patents by invalidating his own, albeit at his own expense (I think he can afford it) and thus opening the door to some innovation based on these now 'available' concepts?
Sorry, but I'm not from the west coast, nor do I have much personal knowledge of PA, his attitudes or business dealings, but I'm looking for possibilities.
Greedy evil rich people are the real problem with this planet. They corrupt, cheat and steal. There's no capital left for honest people.
If there was any justice, these enemies of capitalism, democracy and freedom would be in jail. They are the scum of humanity.
A young man is walking down by the docks one day and decides to stop by a bar and have a beer. He walks into a bar, and sees a grizzled old fisherman, crying into his beer. Curious, the young man sits down and says, “Hey old timer, why the long face?”
The old man looks at him and points out the window, “See that dock out there? I built that dock with my own two hands, plank by plank, nail by nail, but do they call me Simon the dockbuilder? No,no."
The old man continued, “And see that ship out there? I ’ve been fishing these waters for going on thirty-five years! but do they call me Simon the fisherman? No,no. ”
The old man starts to cry again, “But you fuck one goat ”
> The real problem is that patent examiners start off with the assumption that having more patents in existance are better. If you would like to reply (and be held credible) please also explain why the swinging on a swing patent was granted, and why we had to waste our tax dollars getting it invalidated. (Answer: It was easier to get the dumb idea through the system, than to get it invalidated.)
Um... no, not really. Most applications are rejected. Examiners have the job to follow MPEP procedures. They are generally there to both reject invalid patents and work with the applicant to the extent that the applicant has a good invention, at least a little--which is part of why they have to explain why things are rejected, thus giving applicants the chance to narrow the scope of the rejection.
And no, I have no idea what's up with the "swing" patent, and that doesn't make my reply not credible. First, different groups withing the patent office tend to function a little differently, though they aren't really supposed to. Second, a single examiner can always make a bad call. Third, I can't explain Windows ME either, but that doesn't make all of Computer Science a horrible operating system.
Sometimes I take pride in the /. community. The people who post here show clear and decisive understanding of the issues.
Sometimes I see this thread, which as of 201105290137z shows two sets of comments: 1. A lack of understanding of USPTO patent re-examination process 2. Trolls about groklaw being done
With all due respect, and whether or not groklaw is done (it's not), the USPTO re-examination is the beginning of the end for ex-MS-troll Paul Allen's world domination. Whether you agree with software patents or not (I don't), the patents on the face of it will not survive due mostly to prior art. After prior art there are issues of non-patentable material, and methods, but I doubt it will get that far.
Consider this one man saying "BOO" to those of you who instead of addressing the issue from a seat of knowledge are either taking potshots at groklaw or have no understanding of the USPTO process. If you're from another country... I'm sorry the US system is different than yours.
So, you qualify under comment type 1, huh?
First, from a proces perspective, the USPTO would not even begin to address prior art if there were serious issues of non-patentable material and methods. The Office looks first for patent-eligible subject matter - why bother exhaustively searching the prior art to determine that your mathematical equation is, in fact, new and non-obvious when the equation isn't patentable in the first place? So, "after prior art there are issues of non-patentable material" and not getting that far is simply incorrect.
Second, the majority of patents survive re-examination. The USPTO helpfully provides data here. Only 11% of patents lose with all claims canceled. 23% get reissued with no changes, and 66% get some narrowing amendments, but still get reissued. So, it's unlikely that the USPTO reexam means "game over".
Consider this one patent practitioner saying "BOO" to you for shouting "BOO" at people who have no understanding of the USPTO process.
Could PA actually be doing some 'real' good by invalidating an entire group of software patents by invalidating his own, albeit at his own expense (I think he can afford it) and thus opening the door to some innovation based on these now 'available' concepts?
No, if he wanted to do that, he could just withdraw them from issue, not pay maintenance fees so that they expire, or even publicly announce that he gives everyone in the world a permanent, irrevocable non-exclusive license for the lifetime of the patents. And all of those methods are free.
Its main products are Windows operating system ,Internet Explore Web browser and Microsoft Office office suite. 1999 launched the MSN Messenger instant messaging client network, Xbox game console launched in 2001, the game terminal market competition.
Reexamination is one of the best ways to fight back against patent trolls, or is at least a good first step.