Sued For Using HTTPS: Companies In Crypto Patent Fight (theregister.co.uk)
yoink! writes: According to an article in The Register, corporations big and small are coming under legal fire from CryptoPeak. The Company holds U.S. Patent 6,202,150, which describes "auto-escrowable and auto-certifiable cryptosystems" and has claimed that the Elliptic Curve Cryptography methods/implementations used as part of the HTTPS protocol violates their intellectual property. Naturally, reasonable people disagree.
In 1991, NeXTStep had ECC encryption for E-mail in version 3.0 (called FastECC.) If there were a patent made then, it definitely would be expired by now.
What a bunch of patent trolling twats.
"methods and devices to manipulate and store data encoded into electronic devices by means of electromagnetic field gradients"
and
"methods and devices to enable the interaction between users and electronic devices by means of electromagnetic field gradients".
and
"methods and devices to harass individuals and companies by filing, claiming and legally enforce trivial methods and devices as patentable intellectual properties"
Then we're done.
Sent as ripples into the electromagnetic field. No single photon has been harmed in the process.
The patent troll responsible for this nonsense, specifically the primary manager of the entity known as CryptoPeak Solutions, LLC is operated by a fellow named Nicolas Joseph Labbit, who happens to be the sole member of a "law firm" known as The Labbit Law Firm in Longview, Texas. Just thought some folks might be interested in knowing a little more about the charming young man behind this gross abuse of the legal system. HTH. -PCP
Surely there is a boatload of prior art on this one.
Yes, but it's more expensive to find it and take it to court than it is just to pay up.
That's kinda the whole point of an extortion racket.
While I'm totally against personal death penalty, there should be a corporate death penalty, where a company is completely disbanded: its assets (yeah, the investor's and bank's too!) are confiscated and put towards public good. Naturally just for a particularly outrageous behaviour, but patent trolls seem to fit the bill.
This way investors would have to make sure they check the moral side of their investment (and not only the financial).
I'm not a believer in the Invisible Hand, mind you -- but lobbyism, nepotism and too much corporate power is obstructing the few good things it *could* reasonably do.