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Google Enlarges Warchest With 1023 IBM Patents

First time accepted submitter ElBeano writes "Google has continued to beef up its patent portfolio in the face of the onslaught from Apple and Microsoft. The best defense is a good offense. 'Google is building an arsenal of patents that the company has said is largely designed to counter a "hostile, organized campaign" by companies including Apple Inc. and Microsoft Corp. against the Android operating system for mobile devices. Google had already acquired 1,030 patents from IBM in a transaction recorded in July, and will obtain more than 17,000 with its $12.5 billion acquisition of Motorola Mobility Holdings Inc.'"

5 of 245 comments (clear)

  1. Do patents encourage innovation anymore? by mykos · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I have a feeling that if I were to make my own cell phone from scratch, without looking at a single patent and using only obvious ideas off the top of my head, I'd owe a lot of people a lot of money.

    1. Re:Do patents encourage innovation anymore? by Sabriel · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I suspect there's a "Whoosh" floating around your post.

      GP is, I believe, referring to how the patent system fails to allow for innovations that are simultaneously developed independently, whether by complete strangers or by peers known to each other in their field.

      go back 30 years

      We can go back much further than that. Examples of concurrent independent development abound. To paraphrase an excerpt from this article: Calculus - Newton and Leibniz. Evolution - Charles Darwin and Alfred Wallace. Oxygen - Carl Wilhelm and Joseph Priestley. Colour photos - Charles Cros and Louis du Hauron. Logarithms - John Napier, Henry Briggs, Joost Burgi. Sunspots - Fabricius, Galileo, Harriott, Scheiner. Piston engine plane - the Wright brothers and Santos Dumont. And so and so on.

      It is a very strange belief that a bureaucracy enforcing the exclusive profit of singular entities within a society of billions of creative individuals will somehow ultimately encourage innovation to flourish, rather than stifle it.

      Patents dictate that the fruits of your labors are not yours to trade as you wish, if any stranger you never met and never knew "invented" those fruits "first".

      The only true benefit of patents is that they document the specifics of innovation, and this aspect does not actually require any grant of exclusivity.

  2. Re:Submission quality... by gman003 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Sun Tzu, "The Art of War", Section VI, Lines 1-2:
    1. Sun Tzu said: Whoever is first in the field and awaits the coming of the enemy, will be fresh for the fight; whoever is second in the field and has to hasten to battle will arrive exhausted.
    2. Therefore the clever combatant imposes his will on the enemy, but does not allow the enemy's will to be imposed on him.

  3. Re:just pay up already by LordLucless · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So now instead of paying protection money they are paying stupid money for Motorola and billions more buying patents from IBM and others

    Fixed that for you. As for Google's motivation, probably "if once you have paid him the Danegeld, you never get rid of the Dane."

    --
    Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean there isn't an invisible demon about to eat your face
  4. Highway to Hell by PopeRatzo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Those of you who still believe there is value to "Intellectual Property", can you please think about where this "Patent Race" is leading us?

    We've probably passed the point where any new product or innovation is safe from having an army of lawyers descend to destroy it.

    Now tell me how patents "encourage innovation". Tell me how patents "protect innovators".

    When the patent portfolios of a handful of the biggest corporations reaches critical mass, there won't be a single inventor or innovator who is safe or whose ideas are protected. It will stifle innovation in a much worse way than any "counterfeiting" or "piracy" ever could. There's a good chance that we've already reached that point.

    No, I don't believe there is any longer a single valid argument for "intellectual property" laws, of any kind. Not trademark, not copyright, and certainly not patents.

    --
    You are welcome on my lawn.