current posts | more recent posts | earlier posts In a cryptic announcement, the USPTO review panelists reviewing an examiner's rejection of Amazon's 1-click patent as obvious, sent it back to the examiner requesting more evidence because it didn't seem obvious to them link here. At first glance, this didn't appear to me to be a very interesting case--but there is a long history to it.
First of all, the patent seems obvious to me--it is simply a macro in which a single key-stroke performs a series of computer functions. The patent, entitled "A Method and System for Placing a Purchase Order Via a Communications Network," was applied for in 1997 and granted two years later link here. A battle started when bookseller Barnes & Noble came up with its own "1-click" ordering system. Amazon sued for infringement and won that fall and won again on appeal. Calls for a boycott were not successful but created a good bit of backlash against software patents. The patent is described in simple terms here.
The real disgrace in this case is that it is still around, ten years later and may still be around ten years from now. [Posted at 10/04/2007 07:33 PM by John Bennett on IP in the News comments(0)] Every once in a while or perhaps more often, the web comes up with something that is really kind of wonderful. Today we have the story of the Garfield Randomizer which takes panels from old Garfield comics and randomly plays them (h/t to Andrew Sullivan link here). Originally, the author posted the results but was told to take them down as they violated somebody's copyright link here. So he now lets you do it yourself by creating a program that randomizes the public collection of panels link here.
Fair use initially may in fact have been violated, depending on what a presiding judge thinks is copyrighted--the art, the characters, or the storyline. But doing it yourself seems to avoid the charge. In any case, what is not in question is that it has drawn a lot of favorable attention to Garfield comics. Google got more than 4,000 hits so far. As one blogger wrote, "We mock because we love. (At least, I do.)" You can't buy publicity like that. And copyright takes another hit, as it should. [Posted at 09/30/2007 09:11 AM by John Bennett on IP in the News comments(0)] PatentlyO reports that the Supreme Court has agreed to hear a case involving the "first sale doctrine of exhaustion", i.e. can a patent holder charge purchasers of a component that has already been licensed to an upstream producer link here. The case involves Korea's LG company which has patents that it licensed to Intel and is now trying to collect as well from purchasers of Intel products embodying the patent. This is an important case that has already drawn the attention of the Associated Press link here and Techdirt link here. [Posted at 09/26/2007 07:45 AM by John Bennett on IP in the News comments(1)] Jeffrey H. Birnbaum writes on the mushrooming of lobbying in response to the proposed law reforming patents link here. He reports that on one side are the tech companies in the self-described Coalition for Patent Fairness (including Intel, Cisco Systems, Apple, Oracle, Microsoft and the maker of the BlackBerry, as well as Verizon and Time Warner) and on the other are the drug companies. The Coalition supports the provision to "limit damages for patent infringements to the actual component in question and not the entire product" while the drug companies want big damages as under the current system in order to make it too expensive to be sued when the case is weak or they don't have the financial resources.
Birnbaum reports that the Coalition feels it is about to win. He fails to address how this affects the rest of the proposed changes in the law not covered in the story. They are more important overall than this provision but may get lost in the wheeling and dealing or sacrificed in the final draft link here. Too bad. This is a truly awful way to make law that affects the welfare of every American consumer in what they pay for purchases and what is available in the market place, i.e.innovation. [Posted at 09/25/2007 02:20 PM by John Bennett on IP in the News comments(0)] Listed under " no conflict of interest here." Talk about a dedicated lobbyist. [Posted at 09/24/2007 06:51 PM by David K. Levine on IP in the News comments(0)] Julian Sanchez has a really interesting discussion of fashion copyrights link here. The Council of Fashion Designers of America "is pushing the Design Piracy Prohibition Act, which would create a special, limited three-year copyright in fashion designs, with penalties of $250,000 or $5 per copy for violations. The bill has been under consideration in the House since last year, and in August it was joined by a Senate version introduced by New York Democrat Chuck Schumer and eight cosponsors."
Sanchez goes on to say that the stakes for the high-end industry seem to have risen, as the time between first showing and the appearance of cheap knock-offs has shortened to the point that they appear in markets simultaneously. Up-scale mass marketers like Kohl and Target are involved. High-end tastes are beginning to spread throughout the market. As a result, competition is intensifying, creating the pressure for copyright.
However, having said that, it is unclear whether the high end retailers and designers are in fact damaged and thus whether there is any justification for these copyrights.
Moreover, the great problem will be to define what it is that is copyrighted and what then is a violation. How can you sue when the offense isn't clear, even though you can find a lawyer who will try.
In other words, when all is said and done, it sounds pretty dumb.
[Posted at 09/20/2007 09:16 AM by John Bennett on IP in the News comments(0)] Nate Anderson reports that Microsoft has patented a new version of digital watermarks for music in a system that is undetectable and survives "the most common file manipulations" to a standard that meets the RIAA test. The watermark basically tells the viewer who originated the download so that DRM is no longer needed to protect copyrighted material, a modest improvement for buyers of music. If he passed it on, he violated the copyright and can be prosecuted link here.
As I read this story, I wondered whether watermarks could be used for other purposes involving restricted material. This suggest that it has great potential for the violation of privacy. For example, does it allow Big Brother to learn what you are watching or doing on the internet, or video or e-mail? That is the gist of David Lazarus' piece in the LATimes recounting how cable and phone companies which are sending out new privacy terms that would allow them to do just about whatever they wanted with their records of whom you write to or what you watch link here.
He reports that you can opt out of this invasion of privacy, but the means varies from company to company and you may have to do it in writing--it is up to the individual to act. Earlier this month, a federal judge shot down a section of the USA Patriot Act that allowed the government warrantless access to telecom companies' databases, but there is nothing in the privacy policy that would limit the company from giving the information to the government if it decided to, as the phone companies did earlier before the Patriot Act.
Lazarus seems to think that the information will be sold to companies to adjust their advertising, change their programing, or for other commercial purposes. He seems to have missed the possibility that the government might be a recipient.
Incidentally, Lazarus reports the data retention policies are generally far longer than the three-year rule followed by Google after a lot of protest. [Posted at 09/19/2007 08:03 AM by John Bennett on IP in the News comments(5)] Patent troll NTP is back at it again with a new suit against AT&T, Sprint Nextel, T-Mobile, and Verizon Wireless over the same patents that brought a $612.5 million settlement from BlackBerry maker Research In Motion link here and here. The USPTO has already ruled preliminarily that the patents are invalid but NTP has appealed, so the case goes on and NTP can even expand its suits if it can afford more lawyers. If, as in the case of RIM, this threatens a company's continued existence, it will pay up, even if it is quite sure that it will ultimately win its case.
It is another example of justice delayed being justice denied and an indictment of a legal system which grants questionable patents and then allows their use to extort. [Posted at 09/12/2007 06:24 PM by John Bennett on IP in the News comments(2)] Reputation, or more precisely the alleged ownership of one's reputation, is a first cousin of the monopoly formerly known as intellectual property. In a free market with a libertarian legal framework, no one owns his reputation, which is a function of other peoples' subjective opinion. That's why in a free market there would be no such thing as libel and slander.
Tell that to Indonesia's Supreme Court, which overruled a lower court's dismissal of a libel suit against Time magazine by former President Suharto.
In a May 1999 article, Time allegedly libeled Suharto.
Time is now on the hook for $106 billion in "damages," as this
article
says.
[Posted at 09/11/2007 07:45 AM by William Stepp on IP In the News comments(15)] Business models change over time, as recent years' experience has proven. A new one may hopefully be coming to medical publishing. Reed Elsevier, a publisher of medical and scientific journals, is now allowing doctors access to some of its journal articles on the web, paid for by advertising link here. This is good news for the doctors, since they have been forced to pay high subscription prices for the journals, even when the research was based on government grants.
Competition hopefully will force other journal publishers to go the same route, driving down the cost of access. Guess who will benefit (ultimately the consumer?) [Posted at 09/10/2007 06:22 PM by John Bennett on IP in the News comments(0)] current posts | more recent posts | earlier posts
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