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Android Patents The Courts Cellphones GUI Handhelds Input Devices Apple

Samsung: Android's Multitouch Not As Good As Apple's 176

itwbennett writes "Hoping to avoid a sales ban in the Netherlands, Samsung has said that Android's multitouch software doesn't work as well as Apple's. Samsung lawyer Bas Berghuis van Woortman said that while Apple's technology is a 'very nice invention,' the Android system is harder for developers to use. Arguing the bizarre counterpoint, Apple's lawyer Theo Blomme told judge Peter Blok, that the Android multitouch isn't inferior and does so infringe on Apple's patent: 'They suggest that they have a lesser solution, but that is simply not true,' said Blomme."
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Samsung: Android's Multitouch Not As Good As Apple's

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  • by DragonWriter ( 970822 ) on Friday September 07, 2012 @07:21PM (#41268575)

    Doesn't mean anything unless AT&T patented it.

    Prior art -- of the kind that invalidates a patent -- doesn't require that it be patented.

    Recovering for patent infringement (naturally) does require that the invention be patented.

  • by Desler ( 1608317 ) on Friday September 07, 2012 @07:33PM (#41268689)

    First to file does not eliminate prior art as a way to invalidate a patent.

    From here [wikipedia.org]:

    The law will switch U.S. rights to a patent from the present "first-to-invent" system to a "first inventor-to-file" system for patent applications filed on or after March 16, 2013. The law also expands the definition of prior art used in determining patentability. Actions and prior art that bar patentability will include public use, sales, publications, and other disclosures available to the public anywhere in the world as of the filing date, other than publications by the inventor within one year of filing (inventor's "publication-conditioned grace period"), whether or not a third party also files a patent application. The law also notably expands prior art to include foreign offers for sale and public uses.[6]

    In conclusion, YOU FAIL IT.

  • by geekoid ( 135745 ) <dadinportland&yahoo,com> on Friday September 07, 2012 @07:41PM (#41268779) Homepage Journal

    You are the one that needs the lesson:
    http://www.uspto.gov/web/offices/pac/mpep/documents/appxl_35_U_S_C_102.htm [uspto.gov]

    A person shall be entitled to a patent unless -

    (a) the invention was known or used by others in this country, or patented or described in a printed publication in this or a foreign country, before the invention thereof by the applicant for patent

    so this:
    " If you do it and dont patent it doesn't count as prior art."
    is just wrong.

  • by Yaztromo ( 655250 ) on Friday September 07, 2012 @07:42PM (#41268787) Homepage Journal

    Oh, so people have been doing $X for years, and it doesn't matter until someone comes along to claim it all for itself.

    Got it.

    FTFY.

    Unfortunately, particularly in the US this is about how the system works currently. The patent submitter must list any known prior art with their application, but there is little to really prevent them from leaving things out. It is the patent examiners job to also look for prior art, but their view tends to be very narrow (similar but not identical often isn't good enough), and due to (what I understand of) their workload, they don't necessarily due a particularly exhaustive search.

    The end result is that if you're willing to pay for it, you can patent pretty much anything you want. That's why you get craziness like #6,368,227 -- Method of Swinging on a Swing [uspto.gov] (note: not an Apple patent).

    Don't like it? You need to take the patent holder to court, and prove to the court that the patent is either a) frivolous, b) obvious, or c) already exists in the public domain (or is covered by another patent).

    That's the system the US uses (I don't live in the US -- our patent system here in Canada seems somewhat better run, so isn't quite as bad; I have a patent (7,251,809 [uspto.gov]) that was accepted in the US, but rejected here in Canada). If you don't like it, you need to change the system.

    Yaz

  • Samsung is right (Score:4, Informative)

    by bill_mcgonigle ( 4333 ) * on Friday September 07, 2012 @08:50PM (#41269409) Homepage Journal

    Apple's touch is currently better. I find Android systems (including mine) as having much more trouble figuring out what my touches are supposed to do ("how many times do I have to click on this goddamn link?"). The hardware and drivers are OK, as the virtual keyboards usually work fine, but there's something in the runtime that's not quite right yet (as least up to ICS).

    Which just makes the lack of 'undo' in Android that much more insane, because it's not hard to accidentlly whack a big bock of text with an errant multi-touch gesture.

  • by Yaztromo ( 655250 ) on Friday September 07, 2012 @10:42PM (#41270283) Homepage Journal

    (a) the invention was known or used by others in this country, or patented or described in a printed publication in this or a foreign country, before the invention thereof by the applicant for patent

    so this: " If you do it and dont patent it doesn't count as prior art." is just wrong.

    In law yes, but in practice, no.

    As I've already mentioned in this thread, patents are granted all the time where there is amply prior art, either because the patent applicant has hidden the prior art, has made it appear to be different enough to be ignored, or the patent examiner simply isn't aware of it and doesn't find it themselves.

    And unfortunately, one the patent has been approved, you have to take the patent holder to court and prove prior art to get it invalidated.

    So yes, in a perfect world any invention already known and used would invalidate a patent prior to being granted. However, in the world we actually live in, the examiners don't know about every unpatented idea/invention ever devised, and if they're not aware of it, can easily grant a patent to something that has ample prior art. At that point, the only way for it to be undone is to go to court, where the burden of proof will be on you to show that prior art covers the invention at hand.

    Yaz (inventor)

  • by tgibbs ( 83782 ) on Saturday September 08, 2012 @12:50AM (#41270951)

    Apple's patent is not a general patent on multitouch, but on a particular way of implementing multitouch. This is why Samsung can argue that their multitouch does not infringe upon Apple's multitouch, as their algorithm is slightly less convenient for developers. Apple is arguing that the difference is an inconsequential variation on Apple's method.

    So simply showing that somebody else did multi-touch before does not establish prior art. That is not a matter of dispute. To establish prior art, Samsung's would need to show that all of the key features of Apple's way of doing multitouch (or at least, the ones that Samsung is accused of infringing) were anticipated by prior art--such as how the operating system can figure out, from an elliptical area of finger contact that is a substantial fraction of the width of the screen, what specific point on the screen the user is trying to indicate, what screen objects the user intends that touch to be associated with, and what the trajectory of that point is over time, and how that noisy trajectory is interpreted in terms of specific gestures.

  • by Plumpaquatsch ( 2701653 ) on Saturday September 08, 2012 @01:38PM (#41274521) Journal

    I just found this post today:

    AT&T (yeah, them) is the one that invented a grid of colorful icons, half a decade before Apple.

    First of all: neither Apple nor AT&T "invented" "a grid of colorful icons"

    Second: Apple doesn't claim to have "invented" "a grid of colorful icons"

    Third: AT&T's icons don't look like Apple's icons, while Samsung's look like Apple's.

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