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Judge Suggests Apple, Motorola Should Play Nice

sl4shd0rk writes "Federal Judge Richard Posner seems to be a man who gets the screwed up patent system in the U.S. As Apple pressed for more injunctions against Motorola regarding alleged patent infringement, Judge Posner has stressed the two companies should just 'get along' and pay each other royalties. A jury trial set to start last week was cancelled when Posner ruled that neither side could prove damages, and grilled Apple's legal team saying an injunction against Motorola would be 'contrary to the public interest.' Furthermore, as Apple tried to plead its injunction case concerning four patents, Posner called the U.S. patent system 'chaos' and said an order barring the sale of Motorola phones could have 'catastrophic effects.'"

14 of 140 comments (clear)

  1. Finally by Vskye · · Score: 5, Informative

    A judge that gets it. A refreshing change for once.

    --
    Life was hell, then I discovered Linux...
    1. Re:Finally by haploc · · Score: 5, Informative

      He's the judge that really adroitly handled the Microsoft antitrust trial, then flubbed it by speaking to the press about the trial before it was over. That gave Microsoft the grounds for an appeal (and subsequent 'slap on the wrist' punishment) based on him 'not being impartial'. Which was bunk, but his mistake gave the appearance, and that was enough.

      That judge was Thomas Penfield Jackson.

    2. Re:Finally by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Posner is probably the most famous judge alive that's not in the SCOTUS. His words may even be mroe influential than some Supreme Court judges. His decisions are in practically every law case book that every law school student will read in every subject imaginable.

      Also, as pointed out above, he wasn't the judge that handled the Microsoft antitrust case.

    3. Re:Finally by Merk42 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Catastrophic effects are good. That will lead to changes in the patent systems which will benefit everyone...

      You're assuming that second part would happen...

  2. Re:Catastrophe theory by easyTree · · Score: 4, Insightful

    They could always get some other phone.

    First they came for Motorola,
      and I didn't speak out because I wasn't a Motorola fan-boy.

    Then they came for Nokia,
      and I didn't speak out because I wasn't a Nokia fan-boy.

    Then they came for HTC,
      and I didn't speak out because I wasn't an HTC fan-boy.

    Then they came for me
      and there was no one left to speak out for me.

  3. Re:Catastrophe theory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    So, you are a Samsung fan-boy then?

  4. Re:Catastrophe theory by blackest_k · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There is a massive supply chain and investment that goes into the production of these shiny toys. That is the catastrophe when all of a sudden you can't bring your product to market. That investment can become a massive loss.

    Any company that uses lawyers to ban competing products is going to get a bad reputation and damage their own sales.

    Is an iPad such a bad product that it can not compete with a Samsung tablet? If I want a Samsung tablet and I can't buy it because of Apple, I really don't think I will buy an iPad instead. I probably will buy a different tablet from a different manufacturer.

    I may well refuse to buy Apple products in general due to their interference manipulating what I can buy.

    Change the company names and the products to suit your own preferences, it doesn't really matter who's manipulating markets through court rooms. They deserve to lose sales due to their tactics.

    Products should compete on their merits not on legal technicalities where 2 engineering teams solved similar problems, independently of each other.

  5. Re:Catastrophe theory by wierd_w · · Score: 5, Interesting

    No, its properly with Apple.

    A patent is a limited right, granted to get the information published for the public to read and implement later.

    It is intended to help prevent industrial secrets, and improve the state of the art. That is the purpose for a patent.

    Apple's violent brandishing of the powers afforded to it via the patent process to stifle innovation, and to suppress the advancement of the state of the art is directly counter-intuitive to the reason they were granted the patent in the first place.

    Apple could have chosen to license the patent for a steep fee, or to charge a royalty for the use of their patent, but instead seek to use it as a barrier to entry for other and competing products.

    This is not the fault of the USPTO. It is squarely the fault of Apple Inc.

  6. Re:Catastrophe theory by chrb · · Score: 5, Interesting

    So too big to fail? Sounds like these big manufacturing companies need to be broken up.

    There is a big difference between a) a company declining over time, and b) what would happen if the government prevented a large consumer electronics company from selling its wares, thus forcing it into rapid failure, probably to the point of bankruptcy within days as the stock crashes.

    Having said that, politically speaking these companies probably are "too big to fail"; can you imagine politicians standing idly by if some foreign competitor ever got a complete sales ban on iPhones? I bet patent law would be reformed within weeks to "protect American jobs".

  7. Re:Judge is walking a thin line over a slippery sl by Rogerborg · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Remind me, who exactly is it that implements these most hallowed "checks" and "balances" to laws that take a huge steaming dump all over the Constitution?

    Superman, right? That's who does it? Or Jesus. Or Super-Jesus-man?

    A judge who interprets Article I, Section 8, Clause 8 literally, including the preamble which clearly explains its actual purpose and goal, is OK in my book.

    --
    If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
  8. He's an appellate judge. by GodInHell · · Score: 4, Interesting

    This story really needs to mention that posner is actually an appellate judge sitting on the trial bench because we have too many open seats on the federal bench. Appellate judges are being forced to do double duty. Posner, as an appellate judge, is accustomed to commenting on and changing our interpretation of law. Dangerous man to pull for a trial judge.

  9. Re:Catastrophe theory by lorenlal · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Nope. Not biased at all. The suit that Motorola fired against Apple was a direct reply to the suit the Apple opened against Motorola for violating Apple's patents.

    See, Apple is vilified in this case because they aren't asking for compensation, they're trying to leverage their patents to *prevent anyone from licensing them or bringing a competitive product to market.* Motorola does license their FRAND patent fairly, with one exception being made for customers who are currently suing them.

    Apple's actions are completely against any spirit of patents. They're not just a dick maneuvers, they harm markets, prevent innovation, and hurt us (the consumers). Considering that Apple has a bit of history of manipulating images to "prove" likeness with Samsung, the population here is going to side with whomever Apple is suing.

    And given your posting history, I'd be very cautious when calling someone a shill.

  10. Re:"I dont think so, Mr. Powers..." by IamTheRealMike · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I think you'll find that started after Apple began attempting to destroy all other companies. Motorola, being a company that invents important technologies, has its patents largely in pools licensed to others. I don't think anyone ever anticipated anything like what Jobs started, if they had, the terms around FRAND patents would likely look different.

  11. Re:Yes, that's what FRAND means. by jo_ham · · Score: 4, Informative

    You're arguing semantics. I offered an opinion and a question - that's the point of a discussion, no? I'm asking why, not proclaiming that they can't.

    Here's a scenario for you.

    A: I slipped over on a wet floor, it's the store's fault

    B: How is it the store's fault?

    A: They didn't have a sign up warning me.

    B: I see, well I'd suggest that you watch your step in future, but I agree that the store should put up a sign - perhaps they hadn't noticed yet?

    The question does not mean "you are not allowed to assign blame".

    I'm also not sure how I can have a "pretend moderate" voice. Either I'm being moderate or I'm not? Do you see me raging and cursing at anyone?

    You're claiming "Apple don't want to pay that price [the licence cost of a FRAND patent]" - but on what grounds? Do you have a citation on that? They were in negotiation with Nokia for years over the value of cross-licenced patents to come to an agreement. There was certainly never any indication that they "didn't want to pay" - they just want to pay what's fair.

    As far as lawsuits with Motorola and Samsung over FRAND patents, well that's where the water gets murky. For some reason both Samsung and Moto seemed totally fine with Apple's payment to use the 3G patents, right up until they needed a stick to beat them with, then all of a sudden "ooh, they are infringing on this patent, and haven't paid for it!". Funny that. I'm not sure how they can only partially have paid to use the 3G patents. If they have not paid for one, then they must also be in violation of all of them. Apple uses pretty standard 3G radios and chipsets - if it took Samsung 5 years to determine that there was one patent that Apple didn't pay for (given that they've been licensing their part of the 3G pool for years) then I have to wonder what on earth they were doing for all that time? Surely not holding one back that they could use in the event they got sued? How blameless of them! The alternative is extreme incompetence on Samsung's part. I'm not sure what's worse.

    The 3G patent pool does not require that "you put patents in the pool" in order to licence what is currently in there (and this is what we're discussing here). If it did then the 3G standard would be meaningless, since the patent pool would continue to grow. What happens to older devices if new "essential" patents are added to the pool? The 3G FRAND patents are set the way they are to ensure interoperability across all the different cellular manufacturers, otherwise there would be chaos. The pool is static, containing the patents necessary for the standard to work.

    Just for completeness, I am aware that different licence conditions are possible for FRAND patent pools, but that in general they are used when an industry standard is involved, so they tend not to grow (in terms of patents) once the standard is set, unless that standard is extended.