Hopes Rise for RIM 143
sbowles writes "U.S. District Court has set Feb 24th as the next date for a hearing to consider a possible injunction against Research in Motion. Despite this, RIM shares are rising on news that the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO), under pressure from crackberry-addicted Congressmen, may be moving to invalidate NTP's patents. As a contingency, RIM has announced that they have a software workaround that will allow service to continue uninterrupted."
Workaround... (Score:3, Interesting)
Invalidation irrelevant (Score:4, Interesting)
They're not making any money from already-sold devices.
And they'll be able to continue selling new ones.
They'll spend a few bucks selling firmware upgrades, if that's even possible.
Or they'll sell "upgraded" devices (maybe at a slim discount) to current customers.
Now, that might invite a class-action lawsuit from Blackberry owners claiming they were defrauded by someone selling pirated IP, but when has that ever cost any company what it was really worth to the class?
At worst, the judge will order RIM to pay a reasonable royalty. Shutting down the network would not be a legal option.
Now, where's my broker's number? I need to text him a buy order....
How is RIM relevant to me? (Score:5, Interesting)
Yes, I know some genius is going to reply "Yes." and probably get modded +5, Funny for it. But I'm serious. I've never seen one of these things in use.
Re:Only /slightly/ off-topic (Score:2, Interesting)
Blackberry = Packet Radio = 1980 (Score:5, Interesting)
Hams have used Packet Radio since 1980. Packet Radio is wireless transmission of ASCII messages, which is what RIM provides via Blackberry receivers. How is this not prior art?
What is packet radio: http://www.choisser.com/packet/part01.html [choisser.com]
Wiki on Packet Radio: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Packet_radio [wikipedia.org]
RIM's hands aren't clean. (Score:4, Interesting)
I don't know much about it, but this guy's comment [slashdot.org] doesn't make RIM look likely to be a good poster boy for patent reform.