iPhone Infringes On Sony, Nokia Patents, Says Federal Jury
snydeq writes "A federal jury in Delaware has found Apple's iPhone infringes on three patents held by MobileMedia, a patent-holding company formed by Sony, Nokia and MPEG LA, InfoWorld reports. The jury found that the iPhone directly infringed U.S. patent 6,070,068, which was issued to Sony and covers a method for controlling the connecting state of a call, U.S. patent 6,253,075, which covers call rejection, and U.S. patent 6,427,078, which covers a data processing device. MobileMedia has garnered the unflattering descriptor "patent troll" from some observers. The company, which was formed in 2010, holds some 300 patents in all."
patent 6,070,068, which was issued to Sony and covers a method for controlling the connecting state of a call
patent 6,253,075, which covers call rejection
patent 6,427,078, which covers a data processing device
Some people die at 25 and aren't buried until 75. -Benjamin Franklin
Is so broad as to cover everything like a computer, but smaller.
From the actual patent:
I'm sorry, but that's Von Neumann architecture with some form of camera attached.
Since it starts with the definition of work-station and then simply says it is hand held, it basically is one of those "with a computer" (or in this case cell phone) patents.
I'm not going to go through each of the claims on the patent, but I'm not seeing anything in here that sounds like an invention -- just a description of a small computer with its own display. Which to me, means this patent should have never been granted.
Lost at C:>. Found at C.
Which Sony? They are so schizophrenic they frequently sue themselves.
"A person is smart. People are dumb, panicky dangerous animals and you know it." - K
IncomingNumber := GetIncomingCallNumber();
RejectCall := SearchRejectedNumbersList(IncomingNumber);
If (RejectCall)
RejectIncomingCall();
else
AnswerIncomingCall();
There I just wrote the code to reject incoming calls if the number is in the rejected numbers list. How is this patentable?
Except that I don't think that is what the patent covers at all. First of all, the iPhone does not let you create a filter list that automatically rejects calls. At least not until iOS 6 (and I doubt the lawsuit was filed since the release of iOS 6 and has a judgement). Instead, I think this is a patent covering the ability to tell the cell tower to stop ringing your phone because you're not going to bother answering. That, at the time it was added to cell phones, was certainly novel as far as I know. I had never seen a POTS phone that let you reject a call instead of just muting the ringer. I didn't bother reading the patent, so I could be wrong. But my guess is the patent actually comes from the Erickson side of the house, and not actually from Sony as it existed at the time of the filing.
The rounded corners are a design patent, which, despite it's similar name, is something completely different to a patent.
The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.