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"Patent Troll" Closes Controversial Podcast Patent Deal With SanDisk

wabrandsma writes "James Logan's patent company, Personal Audio, has closed a licensing agreement with SanDisk. The company says that now 'between a third and two thirds of all mp3 audio players' are made by companies to which its patents have been licensed, including LG, Samsung, HTC, Motorola, Blackberry and Amazon. The Electronic Frontier Foundation wants to fight Personal Audio's podcasting patent at the US Patent and Trademark Office. About 30,000 dollars, was brought in earlier this year through crowdfunding to fight the case. Logan took part in a question-and-answer session here In June."

3 of 65 comments (clear)

  1. The bogus patent in question by oldhack · · Score: 5, Informative
    This bit, gleaned from the linked slashdot interview, sums it up:

    Can you explain? by trcooper

    Can you explain, in terms I could tell the average person, how your patent is novel enough that anyone who wants to distribute audio over the internet should license it from you? I'd appreciate it if you could address how the distributions of podcasts today widely differs from downloading audio files in 1995 and how your patent help change this.

    Logan: Trcooper, this is one of those of questions that could get me in a boatload of troubleâ"with my lawyer, that is. Any comments I make regarding the claims and how they are different from previous systems, can and will be used against me in court. So Iâ(TM)ll have to take a pass on this one.

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    1. Re:The bogus patent in question by sacrabos · · Score: 3, Informative

      Isn't part of the Patent Application being that you outline exactly why your invention is novel enough from previous systems?

  2. Re:Patentability Originally Req'd a Physical Model by kamapuaa · · Score: 3, Informative

    Well to be fair, New Zealand doesn't have a software industry.
    The patent system encourages innovation, it just needs to be run intelligently.

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