Posts Tagged ‘patents’

Intel pays $120M for video patents, software

January 27th, 2012

RealNetworks is selling about 190 patents, 170 patent applications, and its next-generation video encoding technology in the deal, the companies announced Thursday.

Intel called some of the patents “foundational”, indicating its belief that some are important to the ever-hotter area of digital video. Codecs such as H.264 or Google’s VP8 are used to encode and decode video, a task that’s crucial in videoconferencing, gaming, and entertainment. Intel gets RealNetworks’ next-generation codec as part of the deal, and both companies pledged to work together for future development.

“We believe this agreement enhances our ability to continue to offer richer experiences and innovative solutions to end users across a wide spectrum of devices, including through Ultrabook devices, smartphones, and digital media,” said Renee James, general manager of Intel’s Software and Services Group, in a statement.

Intel’s software group has been steadily bulking up over the years, with thousands of employees, but it focuses more on behind-the-scenes software such as game engines and programming tools than branded products ordinary people use. It’s also got a stake in the operating system market through its 2009 acquisition of Wind River, which among other things helps companies build devices with Google’s Android operating system. With Android phone makers and other technology companies engaged in a multitude of patent wars right now, patents have become suddenly more valuable.

On the other side of the deal, RealNetworks gets cold, hard cash. Chief executive Thomas Nielsen said it gives the company an opportunity “to boost investments in new businesses and markets while still protecting our existing business”.

Source:http://www.zdnetasia.com/intel-pays-120m-for-video-patents-software-62303618.htm

Google stopped submitting patents to the USPTO: why?

January 6th, 2012

Software patent wars have always existed: companies fought them (or paid up), sometimes quietly, sometimes making a big fuss. However, something has changed over the last year or so: people started getting directly affected by software patents (ask anybody wanting a Samsung Galaxy Tab in Australia for Christmas 2011…). Lately, two things came to my attention: Google acquired 200 patents from IBM. But, more interestingly: Google hasn’t filed any patents over the last several months.
This can be confirmed by looking at Google’s own patent search.

Why not? This is certainly a very fair question. A slowdown could have been something understandable — a complete halt, however, is definitely more interesting.

Really, how many “processes” can you really patent? Getting a patent through is a long, drawn process which requires tons of paperwork and money. Maybe they just got stuck — it happens to people, and it can happen to companies too. Maybe it just so happened that they reached a point where they just couldn’t make up new ways of implementing auto-completion, or suggesting translations to words.

Reading through Google’s own filed patents, you end up reading a lot of obviousness, a few really obscure things, and not much more. This is something that software patents simply cannot help: with software, what you are really “inventing” is processes, and you cannot really go very far.

The (non-existent) list of patents filed by Google over the last 7 months
So, maybe — and I say maybe — Google is going a different direction: maybe it’s acquiring existing, half-meaningful patents from existing vendors, and the transfer of patents from IBM is only the beginning.

This second hypothesis is the one I like the best: with Microsoft actually making money from Androoid (!), maybe Google is preparing a new strategy in terms of patents — a strategy where filing patents is not the priority.

This is supported by the fact that acquiring existing, granted patents gives Google an immediate weapon to defend themselves from Microsoft — and anybody going after Android for that matter.

Maybe Google is preparing a patent alliance that will effectively defend them — and Android — from the competition’s attacks.

So, why has Google not filed a single patent application to the USPTO for 7 months now? We shall see.

Source:http://www.freesoftwaremagazine.com/articles/google_stopped_submitting_patents_USPTO_why

FOSS dev’s campaign against software patents moves ahead

December 20th, 2011

When it comes to software patents, Melbourne developer Ben Sturmfels is sure of one thing: his campaign to end them in their entirety will succeed in the long run.

But he is also equally sure that there is a very long road to be traversed before this objective is achieved.

Sturmfels (pictured below) has made some progress in his campaign, one which began with the collection of signatures last year to submit to federal parliament.

Though he is a free software advocate, Sturmfels campaign against software patents extends to all genres of software. Patents can affect proprietary software as much as they do free and open source software, he pointed out when I met him recently.

In February, Sturmfels’ petition was accepted by the government’s Petitions Committee, in three batches. “Collecting 1000 signatures on paper is a hard task and a huge one in terms of the amount of paper needed,” he said with a grin.

The signatures were presented to the House on February 21 and 28, and May 28.

altSturmfels and much of the rest of the computer industry was unaware of the response period for a review of patentable subject matter done by the Advisory Council for Intellectual Property last year.

But, acknowledging this, a late submission was allowed and the views of software developers were acknowledged in the ACIP report thus:

“A recent petition to the Minister signed by members of the computer software industry argued that patents are not necessary to encourage innovation in their industry, that the term of a patent (20 years) is too long, and that the cost involved (in avoiding infringing patents, and defending against patent lawsuits) is not viable, particularly for small to medium-sized businesses.”

Following this, Sturmfels was recently invited to testify before a House committee consisting of five MPs. The hearing was held in Melbourne.

Source:http://www.itwire.com/opinion-and-analysis/open-sauce/51902-foss-devs-campaign-against-software-patents-moves-ahead

Software Patents: Good Idea or Got to Go?

December 30th, 2010

This week, Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen revised a lawsuit accusing nearly everyone on the Internet of patent infringement. The lawsuit involves Android, AOL, Facebook, Flickr, Google, eBay, Netflix and other companies that Allen feels infringed on several of his patents including, “Alerting Users to Items of Current Interest.” Allen and his legal team have even begun to call out each company by creating a presentation displaying exactly how each site infringes upon his patented ideas and programs.
Learn more about the suit and cast your vote after the break.
It can be a big deal when a company wins a patent for a certain technology, from Apple’s huge multitouch patents to those, like Amazon’s dual-screen patent that could threaten the competition (namely, the Nook). But when companies patent broader ideas and subsequently go after other companies for using them, it puts a huge damper on the spirit of innovation. I mean, a patent that claims ownership of “Alerting Users to Items of Current Interest” seems ridiculous, no?
What do you think? Do these sorts of patents actually serve an understandable purpose, or are they just a ridiculous way to attempt to claim ownership of a broad idea that could potentially improve many companies and services?

Source:-http://www.geeksugar.com/Software-Patents-Good-Idea-13014742

Devs petition to abolish software patents

August 2nd, 2010

Open source luminaries Andrew Tridgell and Jonathan Oxer were among 402 signatories of a grassroots petition urging the Government to abolish software patents in Australia.

Inked on 19 July, the open letter to Innovation Minister Kim Carr brought together free software enthusiasts who claimed “software patents are dangerous and costly to business and the community”.

According to the letter’s author, Ben Sturmfels of Software Freedom Labs, patents were not only unnecessary, but also “actively discouraged” innovation in the software industry.

“For small to medium-sized developers, it is neither viable to search for and read software patents, nor to defend against patent lawsuits,” he wrote. “The need to do so discourages innovation.”

Sturmfels aimed to collect 500 signatures – a target he described as impressive, but achievable – before delivering the letter to Minister Carr this month.

So far, the letter has been signed by Samba developer Tridgell, Debian developer Oxer, Melbourne-based software engineer Alex Fraser, Victorian web developer Kathy Reid, and Australian Privacy Foundation chair Roger Clarke.

“[Having software patents abolished] won’t be easy, but I think it’s a very important thing to do,” Sturmfels told iTnews.

“Software people like myself tend not to tell their political representatives what they think. Given the support we’ve had though, it’s clear many from all over Australia care deeply about the issue.”

Source:-http://www.itnews.com.au/News/221688,devs-petition-to-abolish-software-patents.aspx

Paul kedrosky software patents need to be abolished

July 8th, 2010

The U.S. Supreme Court just blinked. In the landmark Bilski v. Kappos decision announced yesterday, the Court had a chance to right a patent wrong. It didn’t. Instead, in a cautious and internally contradictory decision, it further fuzzified the mess that is the U.S. patent system — and it will have sad consequences for innovation in this country. It was terrible timing for a loss of legal nerve.

For all the attention given this case’s decision — and some patent law blogs had turned its release into something like the final episode of LOST, complete with countdown — the underlying case was easily decided. It had to do with whether the plaintiff could patent a method for assessing and trading energy risk. This sort of vague nonsense is an easy lob to the high court, with Justices applauding one another for agreeing that trading energy risk shouldn’t be patented.

If it was so easy, why was there so much interest? Because Bilski really stood for a much broader and more important issue. The real questions had to do with what limitations, if any, should be placed on a dangerously mutating U.S. patent system as it moves from its roots in materials, machines and the like into software, and into the very ways of doing business itself, like in Bilski. Patents have increasingly been granted in implausible areas never imagined by the framers of the U.S. Constitution or the legislators who drafted the Patent Act of 1952, like sending information over the Internet, or online courses, or even basic computer science concepts that have been around for 30 years or more.

These expanded patents in the area of software and business methods are 99.9% nonsense. They fail the classic patenting criteria of being novel, useful, and non-obvious. They are also mostly contrary to the later interpretive overlay of passing the “machine or transformation” test, in which you might have been able to patent a new machine but you couldn’t patent an idea or algorithm, such as how you shopped for the machine.

Far from encouraging innovation and advancement in the “useful arts,” as the Constitution originally envisioned and Congress wanted, software and business method patents have become a quasi-legal poison pill. Sometime it’s from patents obtained years after application via circuitous paths and bankrupt companies, and sometimes it’s straight-up planned extortion. Either way, these “patent trolls” lurk in the shadows, waiting for someone to unknowingly infringe. Then they sue in patent-plaintiff-friendly jurisdictions (of which there are ranked lists – we kid you not), forcing defendants, often small, unsophisticated companies, to settle rather than face the cost and uncertainty that defines litigating a patent case against a well-capitalized troll.

The costs associated with this are immense, as is the innovation penalty. Software companies now must file defensive patents just to make sure that they are not later submarined by useless patents originating with patent attorneys themselves or at failed software companies. We have officially exited economics and entered Kafka’s courts.

Startups are always on the financial edge with it taking very little to scare an investor or acquirer away. Patent protection is not an option when the time from engineering, to launch, to success or failure, is often a matter of months. Predatory patent trolls can stop all this innovation cold, preventing startups from obtaining capital, or forcing funded companies into protracted legal licensing battles over “inventions” that should never have been allowed patent protection in the first place. Why are we putting these roadblocks in the way of software startups, one of the most important job-creating engines in our economy? The mind boggles.

In its Bilski decision, the Court nervously flitted about, footnoting away like a post-modern novelist. It upheld the lower court ruling, agreeing that risk trading isn’t patentable, but balked at saying anything more about patenting principles and ideas, while agreeing that maybe it should … you know, someday. It worried nervously about the “unanticipated consequences” of saying more, an embarrassing abdication of responsibility in the face of an economic and legal system desperate for clarity and guidance. It even partially undercut its own “machine and transformation” rule, before reaffirming it, sort of, in an another attached opinion. It throws the mess back into the hands of a dysfunctional U.S. Patent Office, the patent trolls, and the lawyers.

Post-Bilski we are back to business as usual, with software patents a tax on innovation. Yes, yes, patents still may have some utility in areas like materials, biotechnology, and clean technology. When the timeline is long, the up-front capital costs are high, and the payoff is large, one can argue that patents encourage innovation. But the same is not true in fast-moving areas like software and business methods, where businesses are about rapid iteration with low capital intensity and prodigious speciation.

It didn’t have to be this way. The Court missed an opportunity to provide invention clarity when this innovation-hungry economy needs it most. Instead, it muddied things, cited the same precedents that caused the problem, and essentially told those of us in the real business of creating software innovation and jobs, “Good luck with that” The Supreme Court could and should have done much, much better.

Source:-http://www.investingcontrarian.com/financial-news-network/paul-kedrosky-software-patents-need-to-be-abolished/

Court renders a mixed verdict on software patents

June 30th, 2010

he Supreme Court finally issued a decision in the Bilski case on Monday. For those troubled by the problems surrounding software patents, the opinion will be disappointing, because it does not resolve those problems. But it would be a mistake to view the opinion as a victory for the proponents of expanding software patents. In fact, there are some aspects of the opinion that auger well for the future.

To be sure, the Court did not establish a definite limitation on software patents. From listening to the oral argument of the case, I got the impression that the Court understood that its decision would have an impact on software patents, and it seemed possible that it would address the issue. It’s disappointing that it didn’t do so.

But the Court’s silence shouldn’t be interpreted too broadly. The issue before the court concerned a business method patent, rather than a software patent. The Court’s traditional jurisprudence calls for deciding only the case before it on narrow grounds, rather than speaking to related legal issues. Here it followed the traditional methodology, and addressed only the issue of business method patents. Its discussion of that issue should not be understood as any kind of approval of software patents.

In fact, there are several points in the Court’s discussion of business method patents that are positive. The Court didn’t entirely reject the Federal Circuit’s machine-or-transformation test. This test has been used by some lower federal courts to reject some software patents. Although the Bilski Court found that the test was not the exclusive test of patentable subject matter, it also found that it was a “useful and important clue, an investigative tool for determining whether some claimed inventions are processes under Section 101.”

The Court also made clear that the Federal Circuit’s pre-Bilski approach is no longer valid. Justice Kennedy’s majority opinion made explicit that the Court was not endorsing the “useful, concrete, and tangible result test” of State Street, and the Justice Stevens’s concurring opinion stated that following that test would be “a grave mistake.” Thus the Federal Circuit’s test that contributed to opening the floodgates on software patents is no longer operative.

Even more encouraging, the rationale for invalidating the Bilski patent is one that could easily be applied to void some software patents. The Court found the business method patent at issue was an unpatentable abstract idea. It reaffirmed the validity of its prior case law rejecting attempts to patent abstract ideas, including mathematical algorithms. As Ben Klemens has explained in Math You Can’t Use, software is properly viewed as consisting entirely of algorithms.

Finally, the Court took note of the purpose and function of patent law in a way that could be important in a future case. Justice Stevens (joined by Justices Ginsburg, Breyer, and Sotomayor), acknowledged that patents were not always necessary to encourage innovation. He wrote that business innovation does not entail the high costs and risks of some other types of innovation. Citing James Bessen and Michael Meurer, Stevens noted the business methods are made of intangible steps and involve problems of vagueness. He acknowledged that business method patents could stifle competition and hinder innovation.

Each of these points apply to software patents. As explained in Red Hat’s amicus brief to the Court, there is abundant evidence that the existing system does not at all work to encourage software innovation, but rather discourages it. The Bilski decision does not fix the problem, but it points toward the possibility of a solution in a future case.

Source:-http://localtechwire.com/business/local_tech_wire/news/blogpost/7872890/

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