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Motorola Scores Patent Wins Over Microsoft, Apple

tlhIngan writes "This week is Motorola's lucky week; they've won twice in two separate patent suits. First, an ITC judge has ruled that Microsoft's Xbox 360 has violated 4 of 5 patents related to h.264. This is just a preliminary ruling (PDF) and both Microsoft and Motorola will face an ITC panel later this year. In the other case, the ITC judge has ruled Apple violates a 3G patent, one that a German court ruled that Apple didn't violate earlier this year. "

158 comments

  1. COOL! by gregstar · · Score: 0

    Yes I was waiting for that the whole day.

    1. Re:COOL! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Motorola refusing to license FRAND patents under FRAND terms does no one any good. Hopefully Google won't fall into the same vein. The terms require that a patent be offered, and it should NOT require a company to offer up it's own IP in order to obtain use of a FRAND patent.

    2. Re:COOL! by Tough+Love · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Maybe Microsoft and Apple should not have started the war by suing Android manufacturers.

      --
      When all you have is a hammer, every problem starts to look like a thumb.
    3. Re:COOL! by crutchy · · Score: 2

      or android users

      maybe microsoft and apple should team up against "googorola"

      thn again, they'd never agree on "applesoft" or "microple"

      actually, who cares, they'll all eventually be bought out by samsung anyway

    4. Re:COOL! by Nom+du+Keyboard · · Score: 1

      Motorola refusing to license FRAND patents under FRAND terms does no one any good. Hopefully Google won't fall into the same vein. The terms require that a patent be offered, and it should NOT require a company to offer up it's own IP in order to obtain use of a FRAND patent.

      Yes, and Microsoft trying to extort both extreme license fees and an actual veto over future Android design features with absolutely crap patents does no one any good either.

      Oh, excuse me, just how many shares of Microsoft do you own again?

      --
      "It's the height of ridiculousness to say for those 9 lines you get hundreds of millions."
    5. Re:COOL! by Truedat · · Score: 1

      We don't know if the actions of motorola and apple and Microsoft are related. It could be that motorola are evil all by themselves.

    6. Re:COOL! by voidphoenix · · Score: 1

      Microkiapple?

    7. Re:COOL! by stiggle · · Score: 2

      The terms Apple wanted were better than the FRAND terms offered.
      Apple wanted the same terms as the members of the GSM Alliance get - these are patent holders of GSM (and other mobile technology) patents who have pooled their patents and cross-license them. Obviously, if you are offering something then you get something back. If you're not putting patents into the pool then your licensing costs are going to be higher as you're not contributing.

      See http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-06-14/nokia-apple-payments-to-nokia-settle-all-litigation.html for the similar Nokia - Apple case where Apple were found to be infringing on Nokia's patents where Apple demanded better than FRAND terms.

    8. Re:COOL! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      It makes no difference what Apple and Microsoft did.

      If you cause criminal damage to my car then the correct recourse is to call the police. I'm not justified in returning the favour and damaging your car.

      Motorola has an obligation to licence the 3G patent under FRAND terms (as a condition of having it included in the standard) and it has clearly refused to do so. There's no way Apple simply "forgot" about this patent - they have been in discussions with Motorola about it for years, but clearly disagree on what a "fair and non-discriminatory" price is, given that Moto are clearly major competitors of Apple (and are facing other lawsuits from them).

      It sets a dangerous precedent to allow them to do this. Now anyone with a patent in a FRAND-covered pool is free to bully another competitor and can safely ignore the FRAND terms designed to prevent abuse. Shame really.

    9. Re:COOL! by dogmatixpsych · · Score: 1

      Motorola sued Apple first. They sued before Apple started suing Android manufacturers. I'm not defending Apple or Microsoft or attacking Motorola, it's just that Apple did not start the smartphone patent wars.

      Kodak sued Apple in January 2010. Then Apple and HTC sued each other (Apple first) around April 2010. Things started escalating. Motorola sued Apple Oct. 8, 2010 and then Apple countersued a few weeks later. Check out this link for an infographic of the suits (http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2399098,00.asp).
      Also, this article for the Motorola v. Apple suit: http://articles.businessinsider.com/2010-10-06/tech/29972735_1_motorola-patents-motorola-mobility-patent-infringement.

      If anyone started the wars, it was Kodak. Apple has played their part in escalating the war but as far as Apple and Motorola are concerned, Motorola started that particular battle.

    10. Re:COOL! by dogmatixpsych · · Score: 1

      I meant to include in my previous reply that this particular patent win for Motorola was related to the October 2010 suit against Apple, precisely the one that started this particular battle (i.e., it was not Apple who started the war).

    11. Re:COOL! by Tough+Love · · Score: 1

      Apple has played their part in escalating the war but as Apple and Motorola are concerned, Motorola started that particular battle.

      A little disingenuous are we? Apple sued HTC on March 2nd, 2010, starting the phone wars. And let's not forget that Steve Jobs stated he was going to go "theronuclear" to destroy Android.

      --
      When all you have is a hammer, every problem starts to look like a thumb.
    12. Re:COOL! by dogmatixpsych · · Score: 1

      I wasn't disingenuous at all. Kodak started the suits (Jan. 2010). Then, as I said, "Apple and HTC sued each other (Apple first)". I'm not defending Apple, I was just correcting the post above implying that Apple started all the suits - they didn't. Besides, Motorola (the company this story is about) went after Apple before Apple went after Motorola.

    13. Re:COOL! by Gilmoure · · Score: 1

      How can any random company be evil. It's only when a company becomes popular and regular people start using their stuff that they become evil and uncool.

      --
      I drank what? -- Socrates
  2. Frand... by thestudio_bob · · Score: 1

    Motorola Scores Frand Patent Wins Over Microsoft, Apple

    It will be interesting to see if this will play into the EU investigation.

    --
    The real Sig captains the Northwestern. This one captains /.
    1. Re:Frand... by symbolset · · Score: 1

      Just because some of these patents are FRAND doesn't mean that they don't need to be licensed at all. Both of these companies are using Motorola's patents without even engaging in negotiation for rights. That's not allowed.

      --
      Help stamp out iliturcy.
    2. Re:Frand... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually thats slightly false, they did engage, they just never made a counter offer after getting an initial offer from Motorola, at least if your going to be biased, be slightly less informed.

      FRAND does mean that they have to license it, even to non-members. Look it up on wikipedia.org.

        Good grief, slashdot is reading more and more like reddit, which is people posting half stories and leaving out parts that make there side look good...

    3. Re:Frand... by symbolset · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I can see why you'd like me to be less informed. The issue is that Motorola offered a license, which was declined. And these companies are now using the patented technologies without a license having been offered one. They have no license. You are not allowed to use patented technology without a license. They are breaking the law. The "F" in "FRAND" does not stand for "Free".

      --
      Help stamp out iliturcy.
  3. Software Patent Reform Anyone? by Concern · · Score: 2

    And by reform, I mean, abolition?

    Come on guys. It never works. The only people getting rich off it are the lawyers. The rest of the world is laughing at us over it.

    Let's put those dollars towards creating jobs and innovating.

    Hello, Obama? Anyone home? There's a campaign donation in it for you from a few big tech luminaries, I'm pretty sure.

    --
    Tired of Political Trolls? Opt Out!
    1. Re:Software Patent Reform Anyone? by Penguinisto · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Hello, Obama? Anyone home? There's a campaign donation in it for you from a few big tech luminaries, I'm pretty sure.

      Sadly, that's not correct... most "big tech luminaries" happily use patents as cudgels to prevent little guys from entering their staked-out territories, or to push out anyone who gets in their way.

      I'm not seeing any big tech corporation wanting to remove what is arguably becoming their biggest (and still legal) weapon to fend off or tame the competition.

      After all, look at how much money Microsoft has managed to score from 'selling' Android to the manufacturers so far...

      --
      Quo usque tandem abutere, Nimbus, patientia nostra?
    2. Re:Software Patent Reform Anyone? by MobileTatsu-NJG · · Score: 0

      And by reform, I mean, abolition?
      Come on guys. It never works... Let's put those dollars towards creating jobs and innovating.

      It's been working great, you can tell by looking at the neat blinky thing in front of you that you used to make that post.

      You're thinking of class-action lawsuits.

      --

      "I like to lick butts!" by MobileTatsu-NJG (#32700246) (Score:5, Informative)

    3. Re:Software Patent Reform Anyone? by Concern · · Score: 2

      You have a wonderfully deadpan approach to sarcasm. Well played. :)

      --
      Tired of Political Trolls? Opt Out!
    4. Re:Software Patent Reform Anyone? by Concern · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I think at this point a great many are over it (Google, IBM, and the entire FOSS industry) and if enough of the patent countersuits succeed against Apple and Microsoft (the most prominent non-troll offenders), there will be a time where even they are willing to stop throwing good money after bad.

      I suspect many execs who would not publicly admit it are getting sick of the patent lawyers already.

      --
      Tired of Political Trolls? Opt Out!
    5. Re:Software Patent Reform Anyone? by Tough+Love · · Score: 1

      The rest of the world is laughing at us over it.

      European lawyers are slavering over it. And Chinese lawyers. And Indian lawyers. And Bolivian lawyers. And even Lower Slobovian lawyers.

      --
      When all you have is a hammer, every problem starts to look like a thumb.
    6. Re:Software Patent Reform Anyone? by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 2

      Yes, the big tech luminaries were very successful at preventing smaller companies from taking over their territory.

      Let's list some examples:

      AT&T prevented the Cisco from replacing switched circuit POTS.

      IBM prevented Intel/Dell from running them out of the hardware business.

      Moto and RIM prevented Apple from running them out of the mobile telephone business.

      NOT.

      Don't forget that today's tech giant is yesterday's pip-squeek upstart.

    7. Re:Software Patent Reform Anyone? by evilviper · · Score: 2

      The rest of the world is laughing at us over it.

      They are? Really? Because it seems the biggest economies are the same one who enforce software patents. USA, Japan, Germany, South Korea, etc. So who's laughing at us, exactly? France?

      Patents in general have clearly gone off the deep end in the US, and need to be reigned back in, but IP laws in general are quite beneficial when handled properly.

      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    8. Re:Software Patent Reform Anyone? by steveg · · Score: 1

      "If people had understood how patents would be granted when most of today's ideas were invented, and had taken out patents, the industry would be at a complete standstill today. " --Bill Gates

      --
      Ignorance killed the cat. Curiosity was framed.
  4. IP: the new tech product by Toe,+The · · Score: 1

    Isn't it interesting how the tech industry is increasingly about patents?

    Does Moto even make phones anymore? But who cares? As long as they have good patents, they can make money.

    1. Re:IP: the new tech product by MobileTatsu-NJG · · Score: 2

      Isn't it interesting how the tech industry is increasingly about patents?

      Not really. Technology requires an investment to develop. Once that development is done, it's easy to replicate just by observing the final product. For some reason people around here really don't understand that. I suspect sensationalist headline poisoning.

      --

      "I like to lick butts!" by MobileTatsu-NJG (#32700246) (Score:5, Informative)

  5. If you cant kick it by Anomalyst · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Then the patent is invalid.
    The world is ill-served by "imaginary Property"..

    --
    There is no right to feel safe thru security vaudeville at the expense of everyone's freedom, privacy and tax money.
    1. Re:If you cant kick it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So a radio that transmits signals in a special manner, such that there's no interference, you think doesn't deserve a patent, just because radios exist, and waves cannot be kicked?

    2. Re:If you cant kick it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      So you offer a hypothetical radio as your example, which you admit exists and can be kicked. By your own words, this radio exists. It is a physical object and can be kicked.

      There ya go. Thought you might need a helping hand setting up the scenario. You should be able to re-read what was written and answer your own question now.

    3. Re:If you cant kick it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe you need a hand with some reading comprehension next? Jesus fuck how could you possibly have missed his point.

    4. Re:If you cant kick it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While I don't entirely agree with idea of only patents on physical things. The radio example was quite bad. I don't think anyone is suggesting we patent the actual radio waves. Instead the patents are issued on the physical devices that manipulate, create, or receive the radio waves. In this case, Anomalyst is correct.

    5. Re:If you cant kick it by symbolset · · Score: 1

      Four of the five involved in the fine summary above reference wifi patents, not software. The Apple one has to do with noise rejection on a radio signal.

      --
      Help stamp out iliturcy.
  6. OT: Broken patent system by unique_parrot · · Score: 1

    I think the patent system is fundamentally broken. Isn't it that patents should help you to give birth to a vision (not trivial things), without being stolen/copied from competition? So you get the patent, manage to produce the product and sell it, that's OK. But if you screw up your patent, you can't deliver, your company goes bankrupt, etc. it would be good to delete the patent and make it unpatentable, open for everybody ! NO SELLING, BUYING, SPECUTAION ! IMHO BTW: I thing Douglas Adams invented the iPad, Jobs just copied :)

  7. h.264 by mugurel · · Score: 3, Insightful

    ...violated 4 of 5 patents related to h.264

    So this is the next standard for video on the web they're talking about?

    1. Re:h.264 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      ...violated 4 of 5 patents related to h.264

      So this is the next standard for video on the web they're talking about?

      Google, as the new owners of Motorola are obviously trying to destroy the H.264 standard because nobody wanted to use their WebM format.

    2. Re:h.264 by mugurel · · Score: 2

      Google, as the new owners of Motorola are obviously trying to destroy the H.264 standard because nobody wanted to use their WebM format.

      If they manage to do so by patent trolling, maybe it deserves to be destroyed, better sooner than later.

    3. Re:h.264 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Probably true, but regardless h.264 is a closed format which is excusable for a web standard. WebM is fine for now.

    4. Re:h.264 by SimonTheSoundMan · · Score: 3, Interesting

      A big sigh of relief from Mozilla I think. This is exactly why they wanted to keep out of h.264. It wouldn't be the patent payout for either licensing or fines, but the cost of lawyers that would cripple Mozilla.

      I don't know why Mozilla didn't just "move" the development from the USA to a European country where software patents do not exist. Rich people do it with money to avoid tax, surely Mozilla could do it to avoid patents.

    5. Re:h.264 by Tough+Love · · Score: 2

      Now that you mention it, it would be excellent to see troll patent standard H.264 destroyed by patents. In a perfect world.

      --
      When all you have is a hammer, every problem starts to look like a thumb.
    6. Re:h.264 by aristotle-dude · · Score: 0

      Probably true, but regardless h.264 is a closed format which is excusable for a web standard. WebM is fine for now.

      Fine for whom? How does an average consumer user encode in WebM out of iMovie? How does the average consumer alter the hardware decoder in modern smartphones and tablets to decode WebM format instead of H.264? I suppose you don't give a damn about the battery life of products that you cannot afford to own?

      Fuck, google, fuck WebM, fuck the Patent system, fuck FOSS, fuck RMS, fuck the GPL and fuck you for being in favour of removing my freedom of choice to use H.264.

      --
      Jesus was a compassionate social conservative who called individuals to sin no more.
    7. Re:h.264 by mugurel · · Score: 1

      Dear dude,

      It seems that we both want the same thing: a video format that can be used anywhere, without being forced to use particular software, and without software makers worrying about being sued for patent violations for implementing video codecs.

      As this case shows, h.264 is not such a video format, it depends on patented technology. Of course you can embrace such a technology, and tell people to do painful things to themselves every time your favorite software maker gets sued for infringing h.264 patents. But I would argue that it's much better to choose a video format that is not liable to patent trolling (like WebM).

    8. Re:h.264 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's a rather long winded way of saying "I support H.264 because I'm one of Slashdot's biggest Apple fanboys".

    9. Re:h.264 by stiggle · · Score: 2

      They didn't move development to Europe because the USA would still find them infringing.
      Just because you're not in the USA doesn't mean that the USA won't sue you.

    10. Re:h.264 by aristotle-dude · · Score: 1

      Dear dude,

      It seems that we both want the same thing: a video format that can be used anywhere, without being forced to use particular software, and without software makers worrying about being sued for patent violations for implementing video codecs.

      As this case shows, h.264 is not such a video format, it depends on patented technology. Of course you can embrace such a technology, and tell people to do painful things to themselves every time your favorite software maker gets sued for infringing h.264 patents. But I would argue that it's much better to choose a video format that is not liable to patent trolling (like WebM).

      Dear nontechnical person,
      WebM is controlled by "one" company named google. Open source exists at the behest of the "copyright" owners. Open source is not substitute for a documented established "STANDARD" managed by a third party patent pool. This patent should have been included in the pool. What google is doing through motorola probably violates several anti-trust laws as well as the principles of FRAND as they are trying use a patent on a "STANDARD" licensed under the MPEGLA patent pool. Do understand the situation yet? They are violating the terms of FRAND.

      Hardware decoders cannot be modified to decode another codec like WebM, consumer devices like HD cameras generally do not receive after market firmware updates. You can definitely create a decoder and flash a device to use it but the decoding will occur on the CPU rather than the decoding circuitry in the device which will mean either a sacrifice in framerate or quality/resolution.

      WebM was rejected by the industry and end users because it was inferior to H.264. Why can't you understand that? You are free to use an inferior format if you wish but don't expect everyone else to do so.

      The bottom line is that Motorola is in violation of FRAND terms by hiding this patent from the patent pool at the MPEG LA.

      --
      Jesus was a compassionate social conservative who called individuals to sin no more.
    11. Re:h.264 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Dear nontechnical person calling others "nontechical persons",

      You clearly don't understand what FRAND means and how stupid "Motorola is in violation of FRAND terms by hiding this patent from the patent pool at the MPEG LA" sounds.

      MPEG LA is a private organization that manages patents, not an international standards body. Though they wish and push hard for H.264 to become all-encompassing STANDARD so they can collect royalties - up to threatening other codecs' makers - they are not a standard yet.

      Seems like "FRAND" is making its way into the pantheon of most misused/misunderstood terms on /., right near "prior art", "fair use" and "First Amendment".

    12. Re:h.264 by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      How does an average consumer user encode in WebM out of iMovie?

      Install the QuickTime WebM codec and select 'export'.

      How does the average consumer alter the hardware decoder in modern smartphones and tablets to decode WebM format instead of H.264?

      I can't think of any modern SoCs that come with H.264 decoders in hardware. They come with some specialised DSPs for image and video processing, but most of the steps that they accelerate in H.264 are also present in VP8, and in numerous other codecs.

      fuck you for being in favour of removing my freedom of choice to use H.264.

      Did you check the manual for your device? If you do, then you will notice some very small print telling you that the H.264 output that you record may only be used for noncommercial purposes, and if you want to use it commercially (which includes putting it on a web site with ads) then you will need to buy a separate patent license for commercial use of H.264.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    13. Re:h.264 by chrb · · Score: 1

      You are against freedom of choice for consumers

      The patent system is against freedom of choice for consumers. It is the patent system that gives government the power to block products and remove consumer choice.

  8. what does "fair and reasonable terms" mean? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Ans. whatever the patent holder thinks the market will bear. In other words, it's an almost meaningless agreement.

    The people who craft industry standards like H.264 need to do better than this.

    1. Re:what does "fair and reasonable terms" mean? by Tough+Love · · Score: 2

      "Fair" in this context means we abuse all our victims equally.

      --
      When all you have is a hammer, every problem starts to look like a thumb.
    2. Re:what does "fair and reasonable terms" mean? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      FRAND is really about non-discrimination. I can't force vastly different terms on a company just because I don't want to compete against them , for example. Usually, FRAND has some sort of patent cross-licensing involved with a small payment attached. The benefit to the original patent holder is that they gain security against being sued by their competitors. It is supposed to ensure that companies compete on products and not with lawyers over competing patents. I think the status quo has changed so rapidly with smartphones, tablets, etc. that the system has just broken down. If you are a company like Apple or Microsoft, without a lot of relevant IP to cross-license, then should you pay more than companies that have cross-licensed? If so, how much more? That is what many of these cases are about.

    3. Re:what does "fair and reasonable terms" mean? by Tough+Love · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Usually, FRAND has some sort of patent cross-licensing involved with a small payment attached. The benefit to the original patent holder is that they gain security against being sued by their competitors.

      Oh, how that smells like cartel.

      --
      When all you have is a hammer, every problem starts to look like a thumb.
    4. Re:what does "fair and reasonable terms" mean? by bws111 · · Score: 1

      How is that a cartel? If a farmer goes to market to sell milk, and he runs into another farmer with eggs, he can swap some milk for some eggs. He then runs into another farmer with some potatoes, and he swaps some milk for some potatoes. Along comes a city guy, and the farmer asks what he has to swap, and the city guy says 'nothing'. The farmer says 'ok, I'll take cash'. Is that a cartel?

      A cartel fixes prices and production. It has nothing to do with cross-licensing patents.

    5. Re:what does "fair and reasonable terms" mean? by Tough+Love · · Score: 0

      Your farmer analogy is a fail. As are nearly all arguments by analogy, but yours particularly so.

      --
      When all you have is a hammer, every problem starts to look like a thumb.
    6. Re:what does "fair and reasonable terms" mean? by organgtool · · Score: 1

      Please, by all means, make subjective statements without any attempt to support them with actual facts or data.

  9. Motorola Mobility by PCM2 · · Score: 2

    Note: This is Motorola Mobility, which ultimately means Google.

    --
    Breakfast served all day!
    1. Re:Motorola Mobility by MightyMartian · · Score: 2

      Which means a cross-licensing agreement will be put in place ending the Microsoft tax on Androids. I guess that's a win.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    2. Re:Motorola Mobility by russotto · · Score: 2

      Note: This is Motorola Mobility, which ultimately means Google.

      I imagine a few of those who sneered at the Motorola/Google deal are eating their words about now.

      Who you going thermonuclear on now, Zombie Steve Jobs?

  10. Happy to see Microsoft on the Short-End by Nom+du+Keyboard · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Given Microsoft's bullying of Android - an area where they don't even compete - I'm quite happy to see them coming out on the short-end of this stick. When I buy Android it's in part because I don't want to give my money to Microsoft or Apple. Now let's see a good strong Apple defeat such that Motorola (and other Android vendors) resolve these issues through cross-licensing instead of money.

    --
    "It's the height of ridiculousness to say for those 9 lines you get hundreds of millions."
    1. Re:Happy to see Microsoft on the Short-End by LordLucless · · Score: 2

      You do give your money to Microsoft when you buy Android. Microsoft gets a slice of every Android unit sold, due to patent chokeholds.

      --
      Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean there isn't an invisible demon about to eat your face
    2. Re:Happy to see Microsoft on the Short-End by symbolset · · Score: 2

      Not if you buy it from Motorola.

      --
      Help stamp out iliturcy.
    3. Re:Happy to see Microsoft on the Short-End by Truedat · · Score: 1

      Motorola (and other Android vendors) resolve these issues through cross-licensing instead of money.

      Be careful what you wish for, springs to mind.

      When written in diplomatic language like you have used, it all sounds rather cosy. However all that would happen is that the big guys would still have the same goal, which is to screw the customer for as much money as possible, only they would collaborate with each other more closely to do it. If forced to cooperate, they would game those rules to the max to keep out upstart companies who can't afford the "minimum stake" to enter the game. The (one) positive result of the current rules is that these huge predatory companies have natural enemies, ie themselves.

      I agree something has to change but the cross licensing consensus on slashdot seems to be ill thought out.

  11. Global Thermonuclear Patent War by bmo · · Score: 1

    It's approaching quickly.

    Joshua/WOPR: Greetings, Professor Falken.
    Stephen Falken: Hello, Joshua.
    Joshua/WOPR: A strange game. The only winning move is not to play. How about a nice game of chess?

    --
    BMO

  12. Google Wins! by TheNarrator · · Score: 3, Interesting

    So Microsoft and Apple both wanted to screw up web video by only supporting the heavily patented H.264 standard instead of Google's open Web-M standard. So Google went and bought Motorola Mobility and is now throwing their own patent strategy back at them. If they claim H.264 isn't patentable than they lose that way otherwise Google can charge huge royalties and make them pay for being so greedy.

    Brilliant chess moves as usual by the Google team.

    1. Re:Google Wins! by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      The insane amount of money spent to buy Motorola might almost be worth it.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    2. Re:Google Wins! by Overly+Critical+Guy · · Score: 0, Insightful

      Cheering for Google winning patent lawsuits while criticizing competitors for trying to win patent lawsuits is an insane double standard. Has the discussion really been reduced to such blind fanboyism? You're portraying Google for being a champion of open standards even as they ship the closed source Flash plugin in Chrome and support MP3 and AAC audio playback, which are just as patent-encumbered as H.264.

      What Google is brilliant at is being no different from their competitors yet convincing techies to side with them through populist rhetoric about openness. If Google was actually open, you'd be able to download the source code for the search engine.

      --
      "Sufferin' succotash."
    3. Re:Google Wins! by Tough+Love · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It's amazing how much the moral and ethical standards of Microsoft and Apple have converged, and it is not because Microsoft improved.

      --
      When all you have is a hammer, every problem starts to look like a thumb.
    4. Re:Google Wins! by Billly+Gates · · Score: 1

      MS doesn't seem to bad today compared to the past. At least they are not going all nuclear and killing every smartphone but their own through any means possible (like having rounded edges)like Apple. MS is even licensing their technology for affordable prices. Still I feel that part is wrong but MS is more interested in a defensive patent chest in case Windows Phone 7 takes off with Nokia and Apple turns their eyes on them.

    5. Re:Google Wins! by Tough+Love · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Microsoft shaking down Android manufacturers with its most probably bogus software patents says that you are incorrect about Microsoft improving at all.

      --
      When all you have is a hammer, every problem starts to look like a thumb.
    6. Re:Google Wins! by icebraining · · Score: 1

      Insane, yet it's only 12 Instagrams.

    7. Re:Google Wins! by icebraining · · Score: 2

      In my country we have a saying that's more or less like "a thief who robs a thief has 100 years of forgiveness". There's nothing hypocritical about judging differently someone who is bullying a bully.

      Also, when exactly did Google claim it was an open company and /or that all their products were open? Fanboys might, but if I claim that e.g. Apple products are perfect, does that tell something about Apple or myself?

    8. Re:Google Wins! by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 1

      If you weight it on a technology basis it's more like 10*9 Instagrams.

    9. Re:Google Wins! by symbolset · · Score: 1

      It wasn't Google who picked a fight.

      --
      Help stamp out iliturcy.
    10. Re:Google Wins! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It would have been less characters to just type 90 instead of 10*9. Probably meant 10^9.

    11. Re:Google Wins! by aristotle-dude · · Score: 1, Insightful

      It wasn't Google who picked a fight.

      Excuse me? This is about H.264, not phones. H.264 is used in HD video cameras, the blu-ray format and as an output format to from video editors. Various devices have H.264 hardware decoders such as smartphones, set top boxes and tablets. Those decoders cannot support WebM and would have to be done in software on the CPU.

      Google picked a fight with me and other consumers around the globe with this action. I hope google goes bankrupt because I don't appreciate being ass raped by a large advertiser that have no respect for consumer privacy and rights.

      --
      Jesus was a compassionate social conservative who called individuals to sin no more.
    12. Re:Google Wins! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Excuse me? This is about H.264, not phones.

      Wrong. It's entirely about phones. Motorola would have never bothered with these lawsuits against Apple and Microsoft if they hadn't pushed their lawyers on them. This lawsuit only came about as a countersuit against Apple's and Microsoft's legal actions. If Apple and Microsoft had just kept their lawyers the fuck out of this, they would have never had this problem in the first place. While it's upsetting that we have this decision which is a blow in the fight against software, it certainly serves Apple and Microsoft right.

      H.264 is used in HD video cameras, the blu-ray format and as an output format to from video editors.

      THE FUCK IS WRONG WITH YOU. Do you see ANY blu-ray players or HD video cameras that are affected by this decision? Does Motorola have any intention of suing them? NO. I repeat: Motorola is doing this in defense against Apple's and Microsoft's attempts to slaughter them with lawyers. You're just bringing irrelevant information into this topic so you can slander Google out of your religious hatred (not even Motorola, but Google, who has nothing to do with this since Google does not own any piece of Motorola Mobility yet).

      It's totally bizarre. You're in favor of software patents, but not when people use them against causes you support. You can't have your cake and eat it too. We wouldn't have this conundrum if we didn't have software patents. And don't even act like we wouldn't have video decoding formats if there were no 'incentive' from being able to patent it. Do you think Theora and WebM would have never existed without patents? If anything, patents have held them back, and they would be much more efficient and low power if they didn't have to route around all these IP lawyers and their fucked up distortion of reality.

      Various devices have H.264 hardware decoders such as smartphones, set top boxes and tablets. Those decoders cannot support WebM and would have to be done in software on the CPU.

      Too fucking bad. I can't put a graphical progress bar on an Android application or make a device with rounded corners. Does that seem reasonable to you?

      This is what happens when you buy into patented technologies. Now they have to pay for it. You live by greed and you die by greed.

      Google picked a fight with me

      FYI, you're not really that important. Continuing...

      and other consumers around the globe

      You mean other people who think like you.

      with this action.

      Don't forget, Google has nothing to do with this, they're just buying the company that started it (or trying to at least).

      I hope google goes bankrupt because I don't appreciate being ass raped by a large advertiser that have no respect for consumer privacy and rights.

      Now you're just proving that you're totally irrational by once again bringing it unrelated facts and demonstrating your blinded religious hatred. Good luck demonstrating how Google has anything to do with this.

    13. Re:Google Wins! by Truedat · · Score: 1

      Hmm I half agree with you but I would make a minor correction: It's amazing how much the moral and ethical standards of Microsoft, Apple, Amazon, google, oracle, Facebook et al have converged, and it is not because Microsoft improved. If you think I've mentioned somebody who you feel shouldn't be there then at least say why. I've had to include google because like Facebook, I believe they are long term evil to those that value privacy.

    14. Re:Google Wins! by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Various devices have H.264 hardware decoders such as smartphones, set top boxes and tablets. Those decoders cannot support WebM and would have to be done in software on the CPU.

      WebM was designed to be accelerated by hardware which can accelerate H.264. If the decoder is a closed box that you hand a stream to then it won't work, but if you have access to the source to the driver then you can make the hardware accelerate WebM to some degree, bringing WebM support within the range of some fairly primitive hardware.

      I hope google goes bankrupt because I don't appreciate being ass raped by a large advertiser that have no respect for consumer privacy and rights.

      Then you should focus on Apple and Microsoft before you start worrying about Google, they're worse offenders who have been offending longer.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    15. Re:Google Wins! by aristotle-dude · · Score: 0

      Various devices have H.264 hardware decoders such as smartphones, set top boxes and tablets. Those decoders cannot support WebM and would have to be done in software on the CPU.

      WebM was designed to be accelerated by hardware which can accelerate H.264. If the decoder is a closed box that you hand a stream to then it won't work, but if you have access to the source to the driver then you can make the hardware accelerate WebM to some degree, bringing WebM support within the range of some fairly primitive hardware.

      I don't think you understand what a hardware decoder is or what the difference is between "software" and "hardware". The whole point of a hardware decoder is to have a highly optimized chip that only does one thing which is to decode H.264. It cannot be adapted afterwards to work with WebM unless if WebM was exactly the same as H.264 which would mean that it was in violation of all of the patents in the MPEG LA patent pool. The patents related to H.264 should be part of that patent pool which means that Motorola is in violation of FRAND terms and if they are being directed by Google to sue other companies then they are in violation of anti-trust laws because they are in collusion. Until the deal goes through, Google is not allowed to direct Motorola to do anything.

      --
      Jesus was a compassionate social conservative who called individuals to sin no more.
    16. Re:Google Wins! by drinkypoo · · Score: 2

      I don't think you understand what a hardware decoder is or what the difference is between "software" and "hardware". The whole point of a hardware decoder is to have a highly optimized chip that only does one thing which is to decode H.264.

      I don't think you understand that most of the modern chips don't use a truly dedicated hardware decoder. They have a GPU which can accelerate certain operations (or a DSP which can be used to accelerate certain operations, but let's just stick with the term GPU since that's becoming more ubiquitous) and the decoder uses the GPU to accelerate those operations. A H.264 stream is not handed off to the GPU hardware, it's handed to the driver which takes it apart and then hands pieces of it to the GPU hardware after preparing the data. And if you actually had been following the posts on slashdot alone about WebM vs. H.264 you'd know what I'm talking about. The only thing that's preventing the adding of WebM acceleration to most fairly modern hardware that already accelerates H.264 is the fact that the drivers are closed.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    17. Re:Google Wins! by Tough+Love · · Score: 1

      Google isn't completely gone yet. From time to time, they can still be shamed into doing the right.

      --
      When all you have is a hammer, every problem starts to look like a thumb.
    18. Re:Google Wins! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The secret to not seeming too bad compared to past behavior is not actually improving, it's three things:

      1) Hiding your excesses better,

      b) Improving your marketing department and PR management, and

      III) Having opponents who are steadily getting worse, and going down to your level.

    19. Re:Google Wins! by symbolset · · Score: 1

      You think if you pick a fight with me about my tie, and go swinging about trying to kill me, I'm going to insult your shoes in response? No. I'm going to eliminate the crazy threat and retire from the scene as fast as I can. Even if that means choking your crazy ass out.

      --
      Help stamp out iliturcy.
    20. Re:Google Wins! by symbolset · · Score: 1

      This was metaphorical, of course.

      --
      Help stamp out iliturcy.
  13. h.264 was a lot of work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Many different companies employed video compression experts, which worked together to create the h.264 standard. These companies don't pay expensive engineers for the betterment of humanity. Hence, the patents on parts of h.264. Were it not for those corporations, there would be no h.264

    1. Re:h.264 was a lot of work by Tough+Love · · Score: 1

      Waitasec, didn't Google just pay expensive engineers for the free and open VP8 standard?

      --
      When all you have is a hammer, every problem starts to look like a thumb.
    2. Re:h.264 was a lot of work by Billly+Gates · · Score: 1

      So was drafting the W3C standards and EMCA aka javascript. You do not see these organizations patenting everything to the wazoo do you?

      In the old days companies worked together to create something for the mutual benefit to both companies and the industry. Everyone wins with little to no risk. PowerPC was such a project by Motorola, Apple, and IBM. Infact, Apple and IBM were competitors and they still worked together with software as well.

      IBM of old had great leaders and did good things with the one exception of letting Bill Gates clone the IBM DOS for clone makers.

      Today, everyone is just trying to get steal from one another and hurt the other guy rather than make money.

    3. Re:h.264 was a lot of work by bws111 · · Score: 1

      Javascript was originally developed by Netscape, a company which no longer exists.

      It is funny that you think companies worked together to benefit the industry, and use PowerPC as an example of that. PowerPC was not done for some altruistic reason like 'benefit the industry', it was done to hurt Intel. It failed at that.

      It is even funnier that you think IBM of old had great leaders (I am guessing you are including the PowerPC decision in that greatness). The Apple-Motorola-IBM deal was done by John Akers, who led the company to it's near destruction. Hardly a great leader. On the other hand, their really great leaders were the Watsons, and they had several antitrust suits against them to force licensing of their patents. Today IBM has an enormous patent portfolio which they license as they see fit.

    4. Re:h.264 was a lot of work by bws111 · · Score: 1

      Google makes it's money selling ads. A free and open web is beneficial to them because they can use that free and open web to sell their product.

      The other companies make their money selling hardware and software. To them, free and open means nothing but a race to the bottom, something which no-one wants.

    5. Re:h.264 was a lot of work by Nom+du+Keyboard · · Score: 2

      Javascript was originally developed by Netscape, a company which no longer exists.

      The fact that they no longer exist is probably the only thing that is keeping Oracle from suing them as well.

      --
      "It's the height of ridiculousness to say for those 9 lines you get hundreds of millions."
    6. Re:h.264 was a lot of work by symbolset · · Score: 1

      Let's hope we don't see those Javascript patent suits. Microsoft just bought the Netscape patents from AOL.

      Who am I kidding. They're probably herding up a horde of lawyers to sue The Internet right now.

      --
      Help stamp out iliturcy.
  14. Misleading Title? by tunapez · · Score: 1

    Correct me if I'm wrong, but shouldn't the title be "Google Scores Patent Wins..."? When Google buys Motorola mobile division they take ownership, no? And yeah, what has been/will undoubtedly be repeated, retool this joke we call 'Patent Law'.

    --
    Imagination drew in bold strokes, instantly serving hopes and fears, while knowledge advanced by slow increments...
  15. Gotta love the consistency by Grayhand · · Score: 2

    "In the other case, the ITC judge has ruled Apple violates a 3G patent, one that a German court ruled that Apple didn't violate earlier this year." The courts aren't an ass it's just where they keep their heads. How can anyone hope to abide by copyright rules when even the courts can't sort out the mess!

    1. Re:Gotta love the consistency by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      How can anyone hope to abide by copyright rules when even the courts can't sort out the mess!

      Because as it turns out, German and American courts abide by different laws.

    2. Re:Gotta love the consistency by gparent · · Score: 1

      You're right, they should've pushed for Earth's Court instead so they could rely on international law rather than the laws of the United States in the United States and those of Germany in Germany.

    3. Re:Gotta love the consistency by msobkow · · Score: 1

      +10 if I had the points.

      Too many people assume that US law applies everywhere. Just because terms like "patent" and "copyright" are common amongst many nations of the world does not mean they follow the US interpretation.

      Just look at Canadian's enshrined right to make backups vs. the US DMCA for an example.

      --
      I do not fail; I succeed at finding out what does not work.
    4. Re:Gotta love the consistency by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Makes it sound as if we are all better for not moving under one big umbrella and letting the people of local governments decide the laws... funny how that works... funny how everyone seems to want centralized power.

    5. Re:Gotta love the consistency by icebraining · · Score: 1

      This is about patents, not copyright. It's well known (at least, inside software development circles) that software patents rules are very different among countries, unlike copyright, which has more or less been unified by the Berne Convention.

      Just because lawyers try to convince us that all "IP" is equal doesnt mean it's true.

    6. Re:Gotta love the consistency by lexman098 · · Score: 1

      Their right to make backups is actually a concession for royalties paid on backup media (regardless of what it's used for). Canadians don't take no shit from the MAFIAA! (lol)

  16. Worldwide Patent War of 2012 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    And so began the great Worldwide Patent War of 2012.

    Motorola launched and scored a hit with their patent.
    Apple and Microsoft panic and fire off their arsenal of patents. Facebook, Samsung, Google, IBM, etc. all get pulled into it.
    Yahoo! takes the opportunity to launch a sneak attack at Facebook. The patent scores a critical hit with the assistance of a clueless judge setting a new precedent.
    Patent trolls rejoice at this and proceed to crawl out of the woodwork to start flinging their own patents around...

    The MPAA/RIAA become jealous that there is all these lawsuits going around and they aren't getting a piece of the action. So they sue all of the above companies for lost sales, since all the money they're spending on lawsuits would have been used to license music/movies through them.

  17. So now Moto won't suck? by gelfling · · Score: 1

    Because for the last 20 years Moto has sucked as a company and generally failed at everything. Trying to save the company through lawsuits is a sure sign of that.

    1. Re:So now Moto won't suck? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Seeing as how their Mobility division has been huge in tech world news lately, and you apparently somehow completely missed it, I'm not entirely sure you're in the best position to critique what Moto has been up to in the last 20 years.

    2. Re:So now Moto won't suck? by Dan667 · · Score: 1

      it is not really that hard to see why motorola has cratered as a company. Here, I will start with one reason. Iridium Feel free to list the long long list of other terrible decisions over the last 20 years.

    3. Re:So now Moto won't suck? by Tough+Love · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Today Iridium is a healthy business with nearly half a million subscribers. Motorola may have got that one wrong, but not very far wrong. You know who really deserves to crater as a company for bad management? Microsoft. Kept going only by illegal monopoly control of PC manufacturers and evil software lock-in of the kind that got IBM sued nearly into oblivion in the eighties.

      --
      When all you have is a hammer, every problem starts to look like a thumb.
  18. Oh, you are serious? by Concern · · Score: 5, Interesting

    OK. Here's how software patents work.

    There are hundreds of thousands of them. None of them required any investment to develop. They simply memorialize things that everyone always did - commenting inside of curly braces, using tables for compression, having the "AM" flip to "PM" when you scroll the hours past noon, having plugins in web browsers and "one click purchase buttons" and so forth.

    No one can ever know what their work infringes on. Not even Microsoft or Google, who have carte blance budgets for such things. They simply write code and wait to get sued.

    Even if the software patent fairy came down and waved her little magic wand, and you could know exactly which hundreds or thousands of patents you infringed, it would be worthless by tomorrow. Thousands of new patents are filed every day.

    The only effect that software patents can have is to make every piece of code a ticking patent time bomb.

    The scam was supported by a few, like Microsoft, because they saw it as a way to prevent competition and hurt free markets. They need only send part of their multi-million dollar legal team to the patent mines and amass a "war chest" that would enable them to sue others, and countersue when they were, themselves, inevitably brought to court. This would have the effect of making it impossible for anyone to write software without having a multi-million (these days multi-billion) investment in patent lawyers.

    The only reason the U.S. has a functioning software industry is that the practice of using these patents is so repugnant and ridiculous that most businesses and all individuals ignore them.

    Unfortunately, in their haste, cupidity and basic ignorance of cause an effect, backers like Microsoft neglected to realize that they would create a new kind of company, called a patent troll. These companies would buy patents that Microsoft was violating, and sue them. But Microsoft's patent war chest would be unusable as a defense, because patent trolls are very careful to do absolutely no useful work of any kind. Their entire business is suing the people who do actually do useful work. MS has already had 9-10 figures in judgments come in against them from trolls and they have had a few close calls with actually having to pay out.

    If you are wondering who created software patent law, the answer is, not congress. Some lawyers tried it, and it flew, and it's happened all on its own - a little power grab by the patent bar and the USPTO.

    This is partly why so few industrialized countries other than the U.S. have a software patent regime the way we do, because it is so prima facie ridiculous. They have been rejected in Europe and Asia. We are an international laughing stock for having such an obviously corrupt practice.

    Meanwhile there is very little basis for software patent law to exist even on this basis in the U.S.. The Supreme Court has already famously struck down patents on i.e. math equations, which are vanishingly similar. They came quite close to explicitly striking down software patents already in En Re Bilski. The whole game will be up before long - no one has any choice. The more the practice grows, the faster it chokes itself off.

    Good day, sir. Respond if you like, I won't read it.

    --
    Tired of Political Trolls? Opt Out!
    1. Re:Oh, you are serious? by MobileTatsu-NJG · · Score: 1, Informative

      Good day, sir. Respond if you like, I won't read it.

      "Don't bother trying to cure my ignorance!" Heh.

      Look, I realize that you get your news from reading Slashdot summaries. But before you get to waving your torch and pitchfork, bear in mind that the patents this site covers are way more complex than the summaries allude to. That's hardly surprising, nobody reads the articles, let alone the patents themselves. And this site is, afterall, all about advertising, so you can expect a sensationalist spin to get you hitting the 'reply' button. Go read a few. Seriously, go find some Slashdot stories about software patents, then go read the actual patent. Yes, you'll find patent trolls, but you'll also find that many of them are obvious only in hindsight.

      You won't necessarily change your mind about whether they should be abolished or not, but at least you will no longer have an extreme opinion on something you don't understand. You won't be posting any more nonsense like this: "There are hundreds of thousands of them. None of them required any investment to develop. They simply memorialize things that everyone always did... "

      Ignore my advice at your own risk.

      --

      "I like to lick butts!" by MobileTatsu-NJG (#32700246) (Score:5, Informative)

    2. Re:Oh, you are serious? by MobileTatsu-NJG · · Score: 1

      Hi Concern! Glad you returned, I was worried I wrote all that for nothing.

      We've all read actual software patents before.

      The comments around here have never indicated that. I have on numerous occasions checked up on the claims of prior art made on this site. In nearly all of these cases, the wording of the patent itself made it clear that the example of prior art did not apply at all. Not only were there numerous posts, but many of them were modded up, too. Amusingly, nobody was ever there to point out exactly what in the patent made it clear that the example of prior art didn't work. It happens ALL the time here. With that in mind, I will correct one of your statements:

      It's widely known how ridiculous the one sentence description of the patent is. Most of us are, you know, eager to get the word 'insightful' to appear next to our posts.

      Ah, much better. So, no, I do not believe you have read any of the patents, I certainly don't believe you routinely read them when these articles come up, otherwise we wouldn't be talking in generalities.

      Conclusion: Go smoke a cock, you lying astroturf PR contractor.

      Classy. Just think, if you were more educated on the topic, you wouldn't need to use responses like this! :)

      --

      "I like to lick butts!" by MobileTatsu-NJG (#32700246) (Score:5, Informative)

    3. Re:Oh, you are serious? by MobileTatsu-NJG · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry I offended you, Concern, but I am giving you good advice.

      --

      "I like to lick butts!" by MobileTatsu-NJG (#32700246) (Score:5, Informative)

    4. Re:Oh, you are serious? by icebraining · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Parasites.
      by John Carmack

      I'm proud that there is "a relative dearth of patent applications for the video game industry, especially considering how technology-dependent the video game industry is, and given its size in terms of annual sales."

      Before issuing a condemnation, I try hard to think about it from their point of view -- the laws of the land set the rules of the game, and lawyers are deeply confused at why some of us aren't using all the tools that the game gives us.

      Patents are usually discussed in the context of someone "stealing" an idea from the long suffering lone inventor that devoted his life to creating this one brilliant idea, blah blah blah.

      But in the majority of cases in software, patents effect independent invention. Get a dozen sharp programmers together, give them all a hard problem to work on, and a bunch of them will come up with solutions that would probably be patentable, and be similar enough that the first programmer to file the patent could sue the others for patent infringement.

      Why should society reward that? What benefit does it bring? It doesn't help bring more, better, or cheaper products to market. Those all come from competition, not arbitrary monopolies. The programmer that filed the patent didn't work any harder because a patent might be available, solving the problem was his job and he had to do it anyway. Getting a patent is uncorrelated to any positive attributes, and just serves to allow either money or wasted effort to be extorted from generally unsuspecting and innocent people or companies.

      Yes, it is a legal tool that may help you against your competitors, but I'll have no part of it. Its basically mugging someone.

      I could waste hours going on about this. I really need to just write a position paper some day that I can cut and paste when this topic comes up.

      John Carmack

      http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=151312&cid=12701745

    5. Re:Oh, you are serious? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      You come off as ridiculously close minded, between these "people who disagree with me must be paid astroturfers", "I refuse to read people who hold different opinions than my own," and the "let's make a list where we can auto-ignore people whose political opinions are different than our own." Why do you bother even reading the news?

    6. Re:Oh, you are serious? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are two major problems with this argument. First is that it does not cover the diversity gained from forcing developers to try another approach. We have seen interesting ideas come along as a result of having to re-think a design.

      Second is that many patents are based on ideas that are interesting because they're intuitive. The problem with this is that when something is intuitive, it's very easy to combine it with hindsight and call it obvious. This happens all the time and people get upset about it. It did take time and energy to arrive at that design choice, but it doesn't seem like it because once we see it, we get it, and there's no forgetting it. This really skews the perceived value of the patent, plus as I mentioned before, the value of trying to find an even better approach is not measured.

      Both of these points really need to be considered if there is going to be a real discussion about the abolishment of software patents.

    7. Re:Oh, you are serious? by tyrione · · Score: 1

      We've all read actual software patents before. Wooohooo. The links are always posted here. It's widely known how ridiculous they are. Most of us are, you know, actual software developers.

      No one can possibly be as stupid as your post implies while managing to operate a computer at all.

      Ergo, you cannot possibly believe the obvious and fairly trivial deceptions you have just written.

      Conclusion: Go smoke a cock, you lying astroturf PR contractor.

      First, pull that smoke out of your own rear end. Grow up, get advanced degrees in Engineering, Computer Science, Pure and Applied Mathematics and study advanced research. Then work on those obvious algorithms and patents you profess to have understood and become the Consumer Reports equivalent of Ralph Nader to save the world from software patents. Otherwise, take your own advice.

    8. Re:Oh, you are serious? by Theaetetus · · Score: 2

      They simply memorialize things that everyone always did - commenting inside of curly braces, using tables for compression, having the "AM" flip to "PM" when you scroll the hours past noon, having plugins in web browsers and "one click purchase buttons" and so forth.

      [Citation needed]

      Specifically, find a patent that claims one of those things, and then find a reference that pre-dates it showing someone doing that. Mind you, the reference has to show someone doing what the claims say, not just doing something similar to the title of the patent. There are tens of thousands of patents titled "wheel" or "engine"... They're not all claiming "wheels" or "engines".

      No one can ever know what their work infringes on. Not even Microsoft or Google, who have carte blance budgets for such things. They simply write code and wait to get sued.

      Yes, but the nice part is that you're not going to be responsible for damages until you do get notified that you infringe.

      Even if the software patent fairy came down and waved her little magic wand, and you could know exactly which hundreds or thousands of patents you infringed, it would be worthless by tomorrow. Thousands of new patents are filed every day.

      Your software that exists today cannot possibly infringe any patent that is filed for tomorrow, by definition. That magic wand analysis wouldn't be at all worthless.

      If you are wondering who created software patent law, the answer is, not congress. Some lawyers tried it, and it flew, and it's happened all on its own - a little power grab by the patent bar and the USPTO.

      You may have missed Congress passing the AIA. It's okay, it's pretty obscure and wasn't discussed on Slashdot or elsewhere.

      This is partly why so few industrialized countries other than the U.S. have a software patent regime the way we do, because it is so prima facie ridiculous. They have been rejected in Europe and Asia.

      Actually, Europe has exactly the same rules as the US on software patents: software, alone, is not patentable. A machine that executes software is patentable.

      Meanwhile there is very little basis for software patent law to exist even on this basis in the U.S.

      Software's not a method? That's a novel claim. Maybe you should patent it.

      The Supreme Court has already famously struck down patents on i.e. math equations, which are vanishingly similar.

      "Vanishingly," as in "the similarity you speak of is irrelevant." They didn't say that math was unpatentable because it wasn't a method. Rather, it had to do with preemption of an abstract idea, and really had to do with the fact that mathematical algorithms are really just abstractions of inherent laws of nature. Are you saying that all software is really just laws of nature? 'Cause if not, the fact that software - just like any machine - can be described in a mathematical algorithm doesn't mean that software is unpatentable, any more that it means that machines are unpatentable.

      They came quite close to explicitly striking down software patents already in En Re Bilski.

      Actually, they unanimously affirmed patentability of software, as well as unanimously affirming patentability of business methods.

      Good day, sir. Respond if you like, I won't read it.

      Yes, but hopefully it will slow down the spread of your FUD.

    9. Re:Oh, you are serious? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're seriously defending $500,000,000 from the people who actually made the Blackberry work for the trolls that owned the "wireless email" patent and never built a damn thing?

    10. Re:Oh, you are serious? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The problem with this is that when something is intuitive, it's very easy to combine it with hindsight and call it obvious.

      Intuitive. I don't think that word means what you think it means. If something is intuitive, that means it is obvious to one learned in the art.

    11. Re:Oh, you are serious? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't see any reference to the Blackberry or even to RIM.

    12. Re:Oh, you are serious? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      First is that it does not cover the diversity gained from forcing developers to try another approach.

      When on earth did this become a stated purpose of patents?
      I'm sure that if I charged you $5 every time you walked the stairs in your house, you'd find some other "innovative" way to move between floors, but wouldn't you rather use the obvious and convenient way, and use your energy on something else?
      It's absurd to posit that patent trolls should be able to harass developers because hey, if we randomly penalize them for their ideas, they might come up with something cool.

    13. Re:Oh, you are serious? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Since day one. Look it up.

    14. Re:Oh, you are serious? by Archibald+Buttle · · Score: 2

      There are two major problems with this argument. First is that it does not cover the diversity gained from forcing developers to try another approach. We have seen interesting ideas come along as a result of having to re-think a design.

      Thing is though, there are so many software patents that developers usually will not know the approach they have taken was already patented. Developers don't spend their lives searching patent databases for solutions to their problems - if they did they'd be spending more time searching patent databases than writing code. So instead they just invent. They will re-think designs anyway as part of their normal software development process.

      Give a dozen talented developers a complex problem, and it would not be surprising to see them come up with a dozen different solutions. If it's a problem that's been solved before then it wouldn't be surprising to find that most if not all of their solutions were covered by pre-existing patents.

    15. Re:Oh, you are serious? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You sound kind of paranoid, Troll. :)

    16. Re:Oh, you are serious? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Lulz.

    17. Re:Oh, you are serious? by silentcoder · · Score: 1

      >"Vanishingly," as in "the similarity you speak of is irrelevant."

      Actually - quite the inverse - it's not a similiarity but an EXACT REPLICA. No wait, that's still not the right word, it's not even a replica - it's the EXACT SAME FUCKING THING.
      If you think there is ANY difference between mathematical formulas and software programs then you don't know computational theory at all. There isn't. A software program IS a mathematical formula, it is merely a formula specifically intended for a Turing machine - which itself is a mathematical formula.
      In fact it is quite possible to rewrite any software program as a mathematical formula, in effect this is exactly what a compiler does. A step further you can actually rewrite any software program using lambda calculus, and the relationship goes the other way as well - there are programming languages that are directly developed FROM lambda calculus (literally the only difference is the choice of symbols - changed for the sake of easier typing: LISP is such a language)

      This is not a small resemblence, it's not some outdated "x developed out of y" concept - it's the entire set of laws and theories that allow computers to work, and software to be developed. Software isn't LIKE maths, software doesn't USE maths. Software programs ARE mathematical formulas. Nothing more and NOTHING less.

      You sir, are just plain ignorant. Sadly so are all the lawyers who continue to believe otherwise.

      Detailed source: http://www.groklaw.net/article.php?story=20091111151305785

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    18. Re:Oh, you are serious? by Theaetetus · · Score: 1

      >"Vanishingly," as in "the similarity you speak of is irrelevant."

      Actually - quite the inverse - it's not a similiarity but an EXACT REPLICA. No wait, that's still not the right word, it's not even a replica - it's the EXACT SAME FUCKING THING.
      If you think there is ANY difference blah blah blah...

      If you bothered reading the post, you'd see that I acknowledged that there's no difference and pointed out why that fact is irrelevant to the patentability of software and why it's based on a misunderstanding of the Supreme Court's decisions.

      Amazing how quickly you can latch on to one sentence, miss the rest of the paragraph, and prove that you're an ass:

      You sir, are just plain ignorant.

    19. Re:Oh, you are serious? by silentcoder · · Score: 1

      If you bothered to read the link I said you would find that it specifically addresses the rest of your post including showing that the supreme court was in error. It points out current research into functional proofs for software programs which will in the near future allow for a whole new type of debugger that determines whether a program is free of logical bugs by testing it as a mathematical function and determining if it is a valid proof.
      The early stages of this research already exists - thought it's not industry ready. In the near future it will be - and it will be impossible to patent software without EXPLICITLY allowing each software patent to also cover ALL of mathematics ... insane ? But true.

      On an even higher level - all computer programs really ARE just a number, because a number is a function and a function is a number (that's what lambda calculus was CREATED to prove). Numbers cannot be invented, they can only be discovered. Programming is NOT an act of invention but of discovery. Writing a program is a method of discovering a number that suits a programmer's purpose.

      This is not abstract or theoretical, it's the very essence of what programming is - though the method used to discover the program deliberately hides what is really happening to make it easier for humans to do the discovery, what is hidden does not cease to be.

      There's the second problem with software patents - patent law specifically excludes ANYTHING that is not an invention but a discovery. Changing that means that one must also allow patenting things like natural laws.

      So to answer your question: yes we really ARE arguing that software programs are like the laws of physics. They are not invented, they are numbers that are discovered - there is a process by which we discover a number which (in the given context) suits our purposes. This process is deliberately abstracted to resemble processes of things which are innovations - but that is a way to make the discovery easier, it doesn't change what is actually happening.
      Software cannot be invented, it can only be discovered.

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    20. Re:Oh, you are serious? by Theaetetus · · Score: 1

      If you bothered to read the link I said you would find that it specifically addresses the rest of your post including showing that the supreme court was in error.

      Yes, yes, I know. I've read the paper many times. You don't seem to understand, going before the Supreme Court and saying "you're all idiots, see this paper" is not going to succeed.

      Additionally, it misses the point. The Supreme Court didn't say "math is unpatentable because it's math," but rather because it was abstract. Software is math, but is only unpatentable if it's similarly abstract... but it doesn't have to be.

    21. Re:Oh, you are serious? by silentcoder · · Score: 1

      The supreme court was just plain wrong. The US law specifically excludes maths from patentability, not just "abstract" maths.

      These papers ought to be filed as friend-of-the-court briefs in these cases, so that judges can actually know what they are really dealing with.

      But now I'll really bake your noodle. I wrote this blog post about a year ago - but I'll copy and paste it for you with a link to the original at the end - I set out to prove that software is always abstract, and succeeded... it was ridiculously easy. I am happy to live in a country where software is specifically illegal to patent (and the loopholes were blocked) - but if I ever faced a a software patent court case (perhaps after a law change or emigration) - this would be the basis of my defense.

      ------------
      Lawyers have successfully managed to argue that computer programs are not mathematics and thus should not be covered by the exclusion of mathematics from patentable material. This comes from a deep misunderstanding of how computers really work â" particularly as implementations of a universal turing machine. Some great papers on this have been written â" including this one at groklaw. That explains in detail how computers really work and why all computer programs are simply mathematical functions â" and even why all mathematical functions are really just numbers.

      A great quote from it is this one: âoeProgramming a computer is, essentially, just discovering a number that suits the programmers wishesâ.

      The thing is â" for somebody whose only understanding of computation theory is even that paper- this will seem like a bit of a leap. After all the process of writing code is creative, involves design and innovative thinking â" surely this wonderful process cannot just be âoediscovering a numberâ â" after all â" you can do that just by counting â" this is WHY itâ(TM)s unpatentableâ¦

      What I want to do with this post is to â" very simply â" explain why that really is true. Iâ(TM)m going to give you a very simple computer program. Iâ(TM)ll write it in pseudocode so non-programmers can read it, but it can be implemented easily in any programming language and run â" and in most of them will take less than about 10 lines of code to do:

      Make the vairable X equal to 0;
      Start a loop here:
      Write the binary representation of X into a new file.
      increase X by 1
      continue the above loop until the program is interrupted by deliberately killing it (an infinite loop);

      With this simple program â" I can create an exact copy of every single program ever written and â" this is important â" every single program that CAN ever be written.
      This is because any compiled program becomes a file filled with zeros and ones â" to a computer, thatâ(TM)s just a big number (the whole computation theory and lambda calculus etc. that explains how a number can BE an algorithm is needed to know how this happens â" but the important thing is â" itâ(TM)s a number). This program will store every number that can exist into a file â" by just counting.

      The process is very ineffective for a few reasons: firstly almost every program it produces wonâ(TM)t run, the vast majority of numbers do not correspond to useful programs â" in fact only an incredibly small subset of them do â" but they are still numbers you can count to, and they are still numbers my program WILL produce. Secondly there is no real way to determine the useful programs from the ones that arenâ(TM)t- you have to manually try to run all of them â" and see for yourself what happens. More-over for every program in there, youâ(TM)ll produce thousands of copies â" some that will only run on other computers than yours. But somewhere in there will be a full version of Microsoft OutLook that can run on your computer⦠if you run it long enough at least.
      Another inefficiency is t

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    22. Re:Oh, you are serious? by Theaetetus · · Score: 1

      The supreme court was just plain wrong. The US law specifically excludes maths from patentability, not just "abstract" maths.

      Actually, it doesn't. The three concepts - "laws of nature, mathematical algorithms, and abstract ideas" are explicitly grouped, so they must be considered in terms of common characteristics.

      Additionally, while your post is interesting - and thank you - I still don't see that it supports your conclusion that all software is abstract, merely that it supports the conclusion that all software - or rather, encoded versions of software - are numbers. Abstraction, however, is a much broader (and vaguer) concept.

  19. what is this fascination with patent lawsuits? by k6mfw · · Score: 1

    OK, so any big company gotta have lawyers to deal with business issues but geez, I remember back in 20th century when Motorola made components (transistors, ICs), TV sets ("works in a drawer" I remember seeing the commercial then going to a friend's house to pull it out and see inside), and the best two-way radios. They were really ***expensive*** but damn them Mocom-70s can easily last 30 years, couldn't be narrowbanded but take the trunkmount units and be used as armor plating. And the HT-200s can chock a runaway railroad car or withstand a nuclear blast at 50 yards (OK so I made up the last two). Nowadays, I only hear about the Big /\/\ when they're suing someone or offshoring one of their enterprises.

    --
    mfwright@batnet.com
    1. Re:what is this fascination with patent lawsuits? by Asic+Eng · · Score: 1

      They split the company - e.g. the semiconductor division is now Freescale, so you hear less of them because they are now a smaller company. Also Motorola is being bought by Google for the patents - they probably want to show they are worth it.

  20. Ha by Billly+Gates · · Score: 1

    Only Microsoft and Apple supported h.264 in this version of the browser wars.

    Couldn't happen to nicer people. This is why Google and Mozilla supported WebM because of BS like this. For those defending h.264 all I have to say is I told you so. Maybe next time do not be so gung ho on supporting patented technology as standards.

    1. Re:Ha by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A lot of people wanted H.264 to win, not because it's closed source and patented but because IT IS SUPERIOR to WebM given the same bitrate.

      Also, almost everything already supports at least decoding of H.264 in HARDWARE, meaning better battery life.

      Now that they seem to own it, if Google were truly genuine about their goals, they'd MAKE H.264 OPEN AND FREE instead of pushing their inferior WebM crap down everyone's throats.

    2. Re:Ha by symbolset · · Score: 1

      Motorola patents are only a tiny fraction of those that make up the MPEG patent pool. Google can't make H.264 open and free. WebM on the other hand, Google owns all of that - and they already have made it open and free. They opened it under a permissive license as soon as humanly possible after they bought it.

      It's the folks in the MPEG Patent licensing group that were making it impossible to do video on open and free platforms. I will not mourn their passing.

      --
      Help stamp out iliturcy.
  21. Motorola Mobility is not Google by DragonWriter · · Score: 3, Informative

    Note: This is Motorola Mobility, which ultimately means Google.

    Except that it doesn't. Google will inherit anything Motorola Mobility gets out of this if China approves the acquisition, but until then Google doesn't have management control over Motorola Mobility.

    1. Re:Motorola Mobility is not Google by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      True. Google is buying evil. How convenient for them. They make an offer on a company. That company does a bunch of evil that is in their best interest and then they buy them out. What a business model.

  22. Accurate Title by DragonWriter · · Score: 1

    Correct me if I'm wrong, but shouldn't the title be "Google Scores Patent Wins..."?

    No, because Google doesn't own Motorola Mobility yet (and may never own it) since the Chinese government still hasn't approved the purchase.

    When Google buys Motorola mobile division they take ownership, no?

    Yes, if Google is allowed to buy Motorola Mobility, it will take ownership, but that hasn't happened yet, and might not ever happen.

    1. Re:Accurate Title by ppanon · · Score: 1

      The weight of the Chinese government is not to be underestimated, and Google is not exactly in their good books given past head butting over search and censorship. That said, since the US and EU have both given the go ahead, I wonder if Google/Motorola might decide to tell the Chinese gov. to go stuff itself if the answer is no. Losing the Chinese market and manufacturing facilities would hurt, but the main markets Motorola sells to these days are probably still Japan, S. Korea, the EU, and the US. Chinese labour costs have been rising and losing their advantage. Motorola could shift Chinese production to Indonesia, Taiwan, Vietnam, etc. It depends on how much Google want/need Motorola's patent portfolio, but they may yet be willing to forego the Chinese market. They would be stupid to reveal their hand since it would only aggravate Beijing and ensure a rejection, but I would be surprised if they haven't discussed the possibility and looked at contingency plans.

      --
      Laissez lire, et laissez danser; ces deux amusements ne feront jamais de mal au monde. - Voltaire
    2. Re:Accurate Title by ppanon · · Score: 1

      Oops. That should have been "forgo the Chinese market".

      --
      Laissez lire, et laissez danser; ces deux amusements ne feront jamais de mal au monde. - Voltaire
    3. Re:Accurate Title by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thanks for the clarification. I seem to recall the write-ups were talking it up like it was a done deal.

  23. Motorola refused to license patents? by dgharmon · · Score: 1

    Where did Motorola refuse to license patents related to h.264 to Microsoft to be used on the Xbox 360?

    I mean it is Microsoft who is threatening Google downstream developers over their use of Android. Answer the first point first ..

    --
    AccountKiller
  24. Kind of a win for Apple by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Even though apple must conceed it violates the patent, Motorola having been declared in judgment as a standard must now license to Apple with FRAND licensing.
    Motorola has been trying for the better part of 2 years to prevent that and negotiate a superior deal with Apple.
    This is the outcome Apple was really expecting.

    And they'll appeal, but really I'm sure they're happy with the ruling. It puts a hard ceiling on what Motorola can charge.

    All OS loyalty should be thrown out the window when looking at Google and Apple and Motorola, etc. They all make great products, but you have to step outside and look at the larger battle going on.

  25. "Lucky week" - WTF? by djlowe · · Score: 1
    Hi,

    "This week is Motorola's lucky week;

    Now, I know that Slashdot, despite its "slashdot.org" domain name [1] is a for-profit company, and I know that you need to make money to stay in business... but do you have to resort to trolling to do so?

    My subscription is nearly up [2], and if you guys need money that badly, why not just ask?

    Regards,

    dj

    Notes:

    [1] Don't you think that it is about time that you reverse the DNS entries, and have slashdot.org point to slashdot.com, instead of the other way around? Let's face it, you're not a ".org", nor have you been, for a LONG time.Why not honor Internet conventions? Or,is this a way of saying that Slashdot is not making a profit?

    [2] BTW, somewhere along the line, though I PAID for the privilege, I lost the magic subscriber star that every other subscriber gets, and I've not seen it for years now.

    From my Subscriber page:

    You have paid for a total of 25000 pages and so far 21550 have been used up (10 today). Thank you for supporting Slashdot! We appreciate your contribution very much.

    So, basically, you've taken my money, and somewhere along the line deprived me of the benefits for which I have paid. I emailed once, asking about this, but got no reply. I'll try again, but I doubt it will help.

    1. Re:"Lucky week" - WTF? by djlowe · · Score: 1

      OK, you fixed it. Good for you!

  26. Fairness and FRAND - Reciprocity part of Fairness? by Guppy · · Score: 1

    Frand Patent

    You know, I've been wondering, if it would be possible to make an argument based on the "Fair" portion of FRAND; that the relationship goes both ways, with Fairness involving a two-way element of reciprocity between parties.

    As such, it could be argued that cooperation should be an integral part of receiving FRAND licensing, and Apple was not playing nicely with others.

  27. time line? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    could someone do a movie or a blog that spell the hole story about , who sues who ,and time line?

  28. Re:Fairness and FRAND - Reciprocity part of Fairne by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That doesn't matter - all that matters is that Motorola licences that 3G patent for the same value that it did for everyone else. That's the purpose of FRAND terms for a patent pool that is included in a worldwide standard; to prevent exactly this sort of abuse.

    Say what you will about Apple's legal nonsense (a lot of it is nonsense and shortsighted) but Motorola is going about it the wrong way. You simply cannot "punish" a competitor for "not playing fair" by suing them over a patent that is included in a FRAND-covered standard - not without putting yourself in hot water. If they get away with it then it sets a very dangerous precedent for everyone concerned who uses any standard featuring patents covered under these terms.

  29. Wow, So Many Lies by Concern · · Score: 1

    I am fascinated by your post - which I contains so much information that is outright wrong as to appear to be a deliberate attempt to advocate by deception.

    [Citation needed]

    Can you cite a software patent that has merit? I have read close on 50 at this point and seen hundreds of summaries and have yet to see it.

    For further reference, a post by a different user.

    Yes, but the nice part is that you're not going to be responsible for damages until you do get notified that you infringe.

    This is part of how software patents kill the economy and destroy jobs, because the "damages" are a legal negotiation of unlimited dimension and cost, that can be held at any time with hundreds or thousands of unknown individuals, some of whom may just be trolls out for a quick mugging, and some may be convicted monopolists like Microsoft who wish to destroy potentially competitive businesses rather than negotiate a "fair" price for, I don't know, their patent on page up and page down. Then their license cannot be had at any cost.

    Or you can just not go into business. Which was the point, originally.

    Your software that exists today cannot possibly infringe any patent that is filed for tomorrow, by definition.

    That was great, it was true.

    You'll notice that this didn't mitigate the software patent problem at all, since prior art is virtually ubiquitous among software patents.

    You still get to have a multimillion dollar lawsuit proving it. So, discovery, evidentiary quality, motions, debate over applicability, etc etc. All at $500 per hour, on both sides.

    But your own AIA instituted First to File, so you are precisely wrong, now, no?

    You may have missed Congress passing the AIA

    Software and "Business Method" Changes: There has been much debate in recent years in the software community about the propriety of software patents, and the America Invents Act does little to clear that up, except in a few minor niches. One provision, for example, specifically excludes tax preparation software from a rule prohibiting the patenting of tax strategies, and another creates a way to defeat patents related to financial products, with the aim of quashing a certain group of patents for check-imaging software.

    --5 Key Facts About Patent Reform Act

    Actually, Europe has exactly the same rules as the US on software patents

    A categorical and obvious lie. Please see the Proposed Directive on the Patentability of Computer-implemented Inventions of 2002.

    There will always be gray areas, as there are in the EU (where patenting software is, if not impossible, very difficult), but the attempt to bring a US-style, "liberal" software patent regime to Europe categorically failed, and the ensuing controversy shed light on the underlying issue: that large companies, especially American ones, had the idea of using patent law as an tool to prevent competition.

    The UK is following the EU. India and China do indeed reject them. I'm unaware of Russia or Brazil's policy. But their policies, collectively, matter at least as much as the US and EU.

    Japan, South Korea, and some others do allow software patents as of now. Hence this gem from wikipedia:

    In South Korea, software is considered patentable and many patents directed towards "computer programs" have been issued.[23] In 2006, Microsoft was ordered to halt sales of its "Office" suite due to a patent infringement ruling by the Supreme Court of Korea.[24][not in citation given] The company was found to have infringed upon patents directed towards aut

    --
    Tired of Political Trolls? Opt Out!
    1. Re:Wow, So Many Lies by Theaetetus · · Score: 1

      I am fascinated by your post - which I contains so much information that is outright wrong as to appear to be a deliberate attempt to advocate by deception.

      Thanks, I think. Of course, you've not shown any of it to be "outright wrong", so I'm not sure what your specific gripes are.

      [Citation needed]

      Can you cite a software patent that has merit? I have read close on 50 at this point and seen hundreds of summaries and have yet to see it.

      Happily, but before I do so, I'd like to call attention to your goalpost moving. You stated "[Software patents] simply memorialize things that everyone always did - commenting inside of curly braces, using tables for compression, having the "AM" flip to "PM" when you scroll the hours past noon, having plugins in web browsers and "one click purchase buttons" and so forth," and I merely asked for some citation. In response, you swiftly discarded that assertion and demanded instead that I produce a software patent.

      I'll do so, after you've provided the requested citation. After all, if you're not going to argue in good faith, I see no need to do any further research.

      Yes, but the nice part is that you're not going to be responsible for damages until you do get notified that you infringe.

      This is part of how software patents kill the economy and destroy jobs, because the "damages" are a legal negotiation of unlimited dimension and cost

      Except that they're not unlimited, by definition. If you only made $1000 infringing the patent, then your damages at most can be $1000. Incidentally, this is why small developers, who may infringe hundreds of patents, usually don't need to worry about getting sued. Who's going to spend $100k in a patent litigation lasting 6 months to earn $1k? Trolls exist to earn money, not waste it.

      Your software that exists today cannot possibly infringe any patent that is filed for tomorrow, by definition.

      That was great, it was true.

      Thank you for acknowledging your error.

      You'll notice that this didn't mitigate the software patent problem at all, since prior art is virtually ubiquitous among software patents.

      Again, this was the assertion that I asked for a [citation] of. So, please do so. Shifting the goalposts and repeatedly making the same assertion without evidence won't work.

      But your own AIA instituted First to File, so you are precisely wrong, now, no?

      No. First to file actually has nothing to do with prior art. All it affects is the old Interference procedure, under 35 USC 102(g), where two inventors separately and simultaneously file for the same exact patent. It was very rare - about 20 per year - and very expensive - requiring about $25k in costs prior to the application even being examined. All first to file changes is that, rather than going through a long procedure to find out which inventor really thought of the idea first, instead, the one that got to the patent office first wins.

      But no, it doesn't affect prior art at all. So, you are "precisely wrong".

      You may have missed Congress passing the AIA

      Software and "Business Method" Changes: There has been much debate in recent years in the software community about the propriety of software patents, and the America Invents Act does little to clear that up, except in a few minor niches. One provision, for example, specifically excludes tax preparation software from a rule prohibiting the patenting of tax strategies, and another creates a way to defeat patents related to financial products, with the aim of quashing a certain group of patents for check-imaging software.

      --5 Key Facts

    2. Re:Wow, So Many Lies by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      Can you cite a software patent that has merit?

      RSA? Someone working in GCHQ invented the same algorithm a few decades earlier, but didn't disclose it. In the intervening period, no one came up with it even though there was an obvious need for this kind of cryptography. I'd say it's pretty close to the canonical example of an algorithm deserving a patent: not obvious, not trivial, documented well enough that anyone could implement it, and with a clear use.

      On the other hand, things like Marching Cubes are pretty obvious - it's basically the naive way of doing isosurfacing from a voxel data set, and to make matters worse the algorithm in the original patent application was wrong.

      Right at the far extreme are things like Amazon's one-click patent, which don't even describe enough of the system to be able to be used to implement what was described in the application. To make this even worse, pretty much any moderately competent web developer could implement it without referring to the patent just by looking at the UI.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    3. Re:Wow, So Many Lies by Concern · · Score: 1

      Slashdot, I present to you a case study: the intelligent person arguing in bad-faith.

      We've seen them before. But let's study the technique in this case.

      Of course, you've not shown any of it to be "outright wrong"

      Technique: "the bold summary." The skimmers in the audience may be fooled.

      Of course, he could have claimed it gladly, had he explained how any software developer can determine what they infringe upon.

      Or if he had said, "Microsoft, Google, Apple, etc. have a patent compliance process for all their code, and here is where you can read about it..." But he knows that no one can tell the full set of patents they violate, and so no one can avoid violating a large number of patents. He knows these companies and the elite few others who can afford it build their own portfolio to countersue when sued, and all others exist on sufferance. And he even knows about the patent troll problem - even if just from us. He makes no comment on this state of affairs. Perhaps it suits him.

      I'd like to call attention to your goalpost moving

      Note that we are so awash in bad patents, he chooses the "goalpost moving" argument - "opponent framing" - "trees for forest arguing" - rather than actually finding patents he thinks are defensible. Since the latter would have been such a stronger retort, he undercuts himself rather amusingly.

      Here the psychology of the debater becomes apparent. He sees the argument as a theatrical performance for others. When someone will go into hysterical paroxysms of verbal illogic rather than concede any point, they similarly assume that others would feel the same. This is the worldview of an egotist with a contemptible notion of his intelligence versus yours.

      Should he even engage the software patent quality issue honestly - which he has seemed reluctant to do, and if the crowd could list 10 terrible patents for every good one he finds... if in fact this goalpost can be moved by an entire football field and not change the central point - that software patents are destructive, ludicrous, utterly indefensible in both design and track record... but no. We have goal post feng shui.

      Except that they're not unlimited, by definition. If you only made $1000 infringing the patent, then your damages at most can be $1000. Incidentally, this is why small developers, who may infringe hundreds of patents, usually don't need to worry about getting sued. Who's going to spend $100k in a patent litigation lasting 6 months to earn $1k? Trolls exist to earn money, not waste it.

      This technique - authoritative statement of lies (or "incorrect facts" if we're being polite) - is still surprisingly common, despite the fact that the truth can often be had in the first result of a google search:

      http://www.fr.com/patentdamages/

      Damages can be set at a reasonable royalty, which can be anything in your imagination. Courts also have the discretion to award "lost profits" beyond this royalty - so any hypothetical economic damage - and then triple the number.

      From 1991 to 1996, there were at least eight cases in which patent damages exceeded $100 million. Since then, the number of damages awards that have reached eight – and even nine – figures have steadily risen. Indeed, patent cases now make up a significant number of the largest jury awards in the United States.

      Thank you

      This is a particularly clever technique: the out of context quote. In this quote, you can clearly see Theaetetus thanking me, in gratitude for proving him wrong.

      Hahaha. In fact, his full quote is:

      Thank you for acknowledging your error.

      He has played this trick as I point out that the presence of prior art is both incredibly common and of little use to defendants in patent lawsuits, who must engage in incredibly expensive, risky civil litig

      --
      Tired of Political Trolls? Opt Out!
  30. Trying to make peace - apk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I know this is off-topic but I wanted to send you a message, see also here -> http://apk.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=2802947&threshold=1&commentsort=0&mode=nested&cid=39784535

    * I understand my software "apkapp2backgrounddaemonprocessengine.exe" has been described by some groups as dangerous malware. I apologize for the anger I've expressed against those who have stated such opinions, I don't agree with them and feel it is unfair of them to call my software that, but I respect that they have different opinions.

    * I have advised many people to use a customized "HOSTS" file to block malware and spam sites. Some people may have misunderstood my advice and be assuming I am saying HOSTS does more than it does. Sensible download and quarantine policies, as recommended and practiced by most computer professionals, will eliminate almost all threats, but HOSTS files can help reduce infections for people who don't understand that.

    * I may also have recommended the use of HOSTS files for purposes that would introduce security risks and actually destabilize the networks on which they're used. In particular I happily withdraw the recommendation to cache commonly used website hostnames.

    * I have frequently ignored good advice by demanding evidence of qualifications, demanding questions be answered when they have been, and otherwise ignoring the information given to me. I apologize sincerely for this. I apologize in particular to the legions of computer professionals, from Thor Schrock - who I may have used juvenile insults against, to (by inference) Bill Gates, a man whose decisions I might not always agree with, but who has proven himself time and time again to be a quality business and technology leader.

    While we may continue to have disagreements, I recognize that my views may have been poorly expressed, and I sincerely apologize for my rudeness, my lack of respect, and the poor way in which I have handled myself, and I hope you will forgive me and give me a second chance to present my case.

    Sincerely,

    APK

    P.S. => Hope we can have a friendly discussion about HOSTS files! I have many people who I have advised over the years to use my method, and they're very happy, with HUGE gains in their security and little or no viruses, trojans, or other bad software.