Oracle Fights EpicRealm Patents 56
An anonymous reader writes "Oracle is now fighting EpicRealm's web patents after Safelite settled with EpicRealm, then asked Oracle to pay, as per their software license agreement. EpicRealm's patents are vague and 'describe a technique where a web site updates only part of a website instead of having to rebuild the entire page. That may look a lot like DHTML, but apparently it isn't the same.'"
but...but (Score:5, Funny)
But I patented a technique whereby companies with names starting with 'O' sue companies whose names start with 'E' over patents that are bullshit.
Send me 10,000 moneys now!
Simple Solution (Score:3, Interesting)
If the co. owns an old chevy pickup or a building, they have to pay property tax on it.
TAX THE IP OWNERS based on what THEY CLAIM IT IS WORTH.
The rest of us will get a free ride next April 15.
Re:Simple Solution (Score:1, Interesting)
Also would you allow the trademar or patent go up and down in value? A patent for weblog might not be useful when you file, but the wh
Re:Simple Solution (Score:2)
It's the way government works. One half wants to give it back to those who "paid it" while another wants to give it to those who "didn't pay it". The end result is alot of spending, little or no monay left over to give back and nothing sustantial being addressed in the process.
/, does it, too (Score:2)
Not to mention a crapload of other pages.
AJAX (Score:2)
The true problem with patents (Score:4, Insightful)
Now, of course he knows all relevant patents (or, rather, he is able to look them up). But not everything in this field is patented, and "prior art" is usually not decades old and well known, more often than not you have prior art that's only a few years or months old, hardly known and far from penetrating the market, before someone comes up with the bright idea to file a patent for something that does roughly the same (without, of course, mentioning the general name of the non patented prior art). And there you go. A patent for something you didn't do anything for.
Re:The true problem with patents (Score:5, Insightful)
Chances are if you tack "on the internet" to your patent claim it isn't original or non-obvious. A method of only updating part of a page? You mean like an IFRAME, Javascript and the DOM? Not exactly "new". I did a web programming class on it in 2001.
You'd think though, with the thousands of patents filed daily that we'd have flying cars, microwaves that you can put forks in, better televisions, magic food pills, etc...
Instead we have gas guzzling cars that will end society, microwaves using decades old technology, TV incompatibilities up the wazoo and fake sugar pills sold on SpikeTV at 2am.
Tom
Re:The true problem with patents (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:The true problem with patents (Score:2, Insightful)
They're not patenting only updating part of a webpage. They're patenting a method of only updating part of a webpage. Iframes, Javascript and DOM are 3 completely different methods, and had they not already been used, would have been eligible for separate patents. They (presumably) have a fourth, which may well be original and non-obvious.
Re:The true problem with patents (Score:5, Funny)
Yes, updating part of a web page using JavaScript on the Internet! .
Re:The true problem with patents (Score:2)
Re:The true problem with patents (Score:1, Interesting)
They're called "airplanes", they were invented in 1903
microwaves that you can put forks in
I don't know why you'd want to put a fork in a microwave, but microwavable forks have been around since before microwave ovens. They're called "plastic".
better televisions
Mine is 42 inches diagonal and with a flat screen and a remote control. Lots better than the one I bought in 1977, 27 inches (the biggest they had) curved screen w/ no remote.
magic food pills
Huh? What's that? I take a vitamin pill ev
Re:The true problem with patents (Score:2)
Instead we have gas guzzling cars that will end society, microwaves using decades old technology, TV incompatibilities up the wazoo and fake sugar pills sold on SpikeTV at 2am.
"gas guzzling cars..." => Today's cars are loads more efficient than decades ago. They have more bloat - AC, DVD Systems, power seats, heated seats, a hundred po
Fake sugar pills? (Score:2)
Fake sugar pills? What are they putting in them that is cheaper than sugar?
The real problem (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:The real problem (Score:3, Insightful)
So here we have patent lawyers writing an application for a patent that they most likely don't have a clue about and on other the other side we have people who have the scientific knowledge that cannot understand the legalese. Now waiting in the wings are the patent trolls who don't care so long
Re:The real problem (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:The real problem (Score:2, Insightful)
There are those innocent children and women that do not agree you to be bombed....
Re:The real problem (Score:2)
Re:The real problem (Score:2)
Re:The real problem (Score:2)
Re:The real problem (Score:1)
Re:The real problem (Score:3, Insightful)
Shows why indemnification is bad for open source.. (Score:5, Insightful)
This show why indemnification clauses is bad for open source projects. So including something like Postfix into a Linux distro or a *BSD may very well open you up for litigation in the future under certain conditions.
Re:Shows why indemnification is bad for open sourc (Score:2)
Re:Shows why indemnification is bad for open sourc (Score:2)
Re:Shows why indemnification is bad for open sourc (Score:2)
As far as affording litigation, who can afford litigation? If you're sued, you're screwed. So if you want the business, you write the indemnity clause and cross your fingers that nobody sues you.
In the bigger picture, everyone who writes software will ultimately be screwed by software patents and the vultures
EU software patents now back from the Pet Sematary (Score:4, Informative)
See recent links to key articles [slashdot.org] on Slashdot, as well as the latest attempts to spin the issue uncovered [futurezone.orf.at] (alleging double jeu - albeit in "Austrian" only, so far).
Re:EU software patents now back from the Pet Semat (Score:2)
EU software patents now back from the Pet Sematary (Score:1, Informative)
Fear not, English teachers: IMDb says there's even an orthographically correct movie release [imdb.com] (presumably still not quite suitable for classroom viewing though).
"EpicRealm's patents are vague" (Score:4, Insightful)
Dear Oracle. (Score:4, Funny)
All your patents are belong to us. Please pay us money.
Greetings,
EpicRealms
No shit, Sherlock... (Score:5, Interesting)
I was able to do this before DHTML or PHP. It was called a dynamic CGI database script, and it was used for "realtime" CGI/HTML-based chatrooms (I typed something, unless you hit refresh after I typed it you'd have to hit refresh again to get your information that I sent...) The only thing that refreshed was a frame unless some interaction (this was all for a web RPG,) caused a change in other frames of the page. This sounds exactly like what I'm doing, without frames, and hell, you can onyl tell I'm using frames because I alow you to resize the damned windows for your resolution, so you've gotta be able to somewhat see the bars. Had I made this a fixed resolution and frame size, well, more people would play with the page in the upper-left corner of their web browser, but it'd still refresh the particular needed areas without "reloading" the page (since only one/two frame(s) is(are) changing, kinda just like how PHP can make this happen...)
So I've had prior art to begin with, since.. 1997? (That is if I can pull up my old documentation from my old ISP/Provider and get a reliable backlog of files I made/uploaded to what I have backups of on my computer.) It's past 7 years so I guess I'm a couple years late, unless there's some potential extenuating circumstance I can talk about.. oh, wait! Almost any website TO-FUCKING-DAY can do things like that in PHP, Perl, RPG script, or even CGI script. Why are these idiots suing to begin with?!?!? Hello? Is anyone home in the CEO/Shareholder department? Do I need to smack you upside your head to get some rational and logical thought out of you? No - I take that back... we've probably already given potential proof that you and your entire IT department is semi-useless because we've already put your server traffic to a crawl only by looking at your whole site.
Sorry for the rant, guys, but lots of this just screams BULLSHIT to me. I've done this - these guys obviously haven't figured out a way of implementing it - I could make a
Re:No shit, Sherlock... (Score:2)
You do realize that the patent protects the METHOD used, not the end result. You have been doing something that has the same end result, that is not prior art. Unless you used the same method as the patent describe, there is no prior art.
>I was able to do this before DHTML or PHP. It was called a dynamic CGI database
>script, and it was used for "realtime" CGI/HTML-based chatrooms (I typed
>something, unless you hit refresh after I typed it you'd
Re:No shit, Sherlock... (Score:1)
Re:No shit, Sherlock... (Score:2)
Patent is about web servers and page servers (Score:4, Informative)
EpicRealm patent [uspto.gov]
Basically, the patent is about the web server receiving a request, and handing the request off to a page server. The page server finishes the request and responds to the client while the web server continues to handle other requests.
This sounds very similar to many web applications in use today (J2EE, ASP.net, etc.). There are usually a few processes running with J2EE (the one I'm most familiar with). One handles the HTTP requests and then hands it off to another process to dynamically create the web page. The second processes send the generated page back to the HTTP processes, which sends it to the client. In the meantime, the HTTP process could have been handling other HTTP requests.
Re:Patent is about web servers and page servers (Score:3, Informative)
Steve Jobs wasn't initially interested in web-based stuff, so Linus left NeXT and joined ITS with Ted Shelton, Drew Treiger, and me who finished up Linus' demo into a saleable product. Then Steve changed his mind, and decided to reimplement Linus' ideas as WebObjects 1.0-- very bad things happened with regard to EOF licensing (which went from $699 or $750 or so per licensed copy to $25,000)...
Re:Patent is about web servers and page servers (Score:2)
Oracle might not be my favouritest guys in the world, but this one probably ought to go their way.
Re:Patent is about web servers and page servers (Score:2)
AH HAH! The Bubble strikes back!
Re:Patent is about web servers and page servers (Score:2)
Server side Includes (Score:2)
Re:Server side Includes (Score:1)
It is not plain SSI, but SSI+CGI!
What a innovation!
Re:Server side Includes (Score:2)
Re:Server side Includes (Score:2)
Depending on just what feature you want to consider-- SSI's, cgi-bin execution, preforking servers which stick around to handle many requests (FastCGI, WebObjects, and the design of "normal" preforking HTTP servers themselves), integrated modules which can run stuff (mod_perl, mod_cgi, WebRex)--
Just get it over with (Score:1)
other peoples intellectual property (Score:2)
"We can just take Red Hat's intellectual property and make it ours, they just don't have it."
Larry Ellison [itp.net]