Akamai & Digital Island Patent Clash 75
rf600r writes: "In a NutShell: Akamai does content delivery. Digital Island does content delivery. (DI, however, actually has a network, too. Not just boxes.) In order to effectively deliver content to the end-user from the best server, Akamai uses a 'secret sauce' they say they invented. Digital Island uses a 'secret sauce,' too. Now, Akamai has sued Digital Island saying they stole Akamai's 'secret sauce.' DI responds with a counter-suit saying Akamai actually stole the idea from them. Is it even the same technology? Who knows ...
Are lawsuits becoming standard business practice? (Score:2)
Comment removed (Score:5)
Did anyone else... (Score:1)
Everyone has to pay us royalties to use cash now. And royalties on the royalties. Bwahahahaha.
The really scary part is, I only thought it wasn't a story cause I knew what Akamai was. Throw a couple of bank names in instead and I'd have probably not noticed what it really said for a lot longer.
Sauth patents patenting things. Take that, bitch.
You know.... (Score:1)
I figure about the time that business is done with this self-mutilation that economy will slide right into the hole. If the trends of the turn of the 20th Century are anything to go on, we're seeing it all over again--patents of all sorts will fall out of favor. Methinks that those who don't know history are doomed to repeat it.
Re:Are lawsuits becoming standard business practic (Score:1)
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Re:Cache and location... hmmm... (Score:1)
Of course, I am not 100% certain this is exactly how Akamai does this, but it DOES describe how I would solve the problem (and in fact summerizes a short paper I sent to the IETF about 3 years ago...)
3 years ago is also about the same time that the guys that started Akamai finished thier research into the best way to get this stuff to work seamlessly...
Re:Wow, I need to put my glasses on... (Score:1)
Same old same old (Score:2)
Lee
Re:Cache and location... hmmm... (Score:1)
Re:Cache and location... hmmm... (Score:1)
Re:now (Score:2)
Just because you Open Source your project doesn't mean you are immune from patent infringment claims. In fact, it is widely believed that you may actually be opening yourself up more fully to patent claims (witness NVidia vs 3dfx) because its easier to prove that you are in violation of the bad patent when the source code is easily available to the company that might sue you.
Re:your sig (Score:1)
Re:Whoa (Score:2)
Various comments (Score:1)
The most funny thing about both of the technologies is that both of them are perfoming not as good as possible. For example you can have a look at http://www.terena.nl/conf/wcw/Proceedings/S4/S4-1. pdf - very nice paper that created a few hours long flame war between the authors and the Akamai people during the conference.
What is more interesting for the Open Source people is that Internet 2 team is working on Digital Storage Initiative (should be at http://dsi.internet2.edu/) that is creating the Content Delivery Network for the educational and research organizations. I'm sure that they have already that "secret sauce" so if you have any code (not words) you can try to convince them to work with theirs code.
The other funny thing about the Content Delivery Networks is that you can make them by yourself by integrating your own mirror in the Web Cache meshes (but this can be used mostly in Europe with a huge number of caches already installed).
ai yai yai (Score:1)
--
Peace,
Lord Omlette
ICQ# 77863057
Re:FYI (Score:1)
Re:glorified squid... (Score:1)
My view on this is that once you've calculated a metric there is really no need to go an recalculate it so often, after all the changes in topology are not that frequent, in particular for non-US sites (fundamentally you are at the end of a pipe, often congested, to the USofA). I wonder how much congestion their high-priority ICMP traffic provoked...
Dressing? (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
Re:glorified squid... (Score:1)
Re:Mmmm (Score:1)
Comment removed (Score:5)
Wired says Akamai was first in rewriting URL's (Score:1)
Wired's article (dated August 99) states clearly Akamai and Sandpiper were the first companies to use algorithms for actual rewriting of addresses. The cofounder of Akamai, Danny Lewin wrote the algorithms as part of his thesis and mathematics and patented it.
Re:CNET Article (Score:2)
Akamai said Digital Island is infringing on a patent awarded last month to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. MIT licenses that technology exclusively to Akamai <...>. Digital Island said it believes it isn't infringing on the patent. The company has "patent pending claims for the same inventions claimed by MIT" that predate MIT's patent claim.
DI need to have it implemented/published/writen/whatever one year before Akamai's patent was filed, then thay can nulify Akamai's patent. Any info on exact dates what was implemented when?
Patent system not working. (Score:1)
be obvious. Here we have two companies
independently coming up with same tech (or so
they claim), apparently at roughly the same time.
This to me defines an obvious "invention".
The court should invalidate both patent claims.
'Course pigs will hover over frozen hell before
our system serves the public interest.
The Case For Secret Source - An episode (Score:1)
Just like the KFC's "Colonel Sander's 17 Secret Spices", and Coca Cola's Top Secret Locked-In-The-Vault Formula, this case for "Secret Sauce" smells like another episode for the Mad Magazine's Spy vs. Spy series.
Unfortunately, unlike the Mad Magazine's Spy Vs. Spy serial, there is no White Hat here.
Both sides are suing each others because of patents, and both sides are determined to milk that patent (aka Secret Sauces) to the fullest, and we, the consumers, will end up footing the bills (legal and all other things).
Sad, isn't it?
Sad to see that our tech-sphere has been invaded by the invertibrate-lawyers.
Re:shut the fuck up you troll (Score:1)
Dunno why I'm even bothering, but if you do some simple subtraction, you'd see by user numbers that 'emerson' has been around since basically day one, and Willowick is a newbie.
Different folks. Don't confuse the two.
Thanks.
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Re:The respective press releases (Score:1)
Re:Cache and location... hmmm... (Score:1)
All these packets were addressed to port 1080 - this seems like Akamai may be trying to force my cache to pre-load selected content so they can look good...... but since I'm at the end of a S....l......o.....o......o......w link, that basically saturated my bandwidth, and acted as DoS.
(Yes, SYN packets to 1080 are blocked at the firewall - but these were large data packets - maybe some attempted connection spoofing was involved?)
Liquor
Re:Cache and location... hmmm... (Score:2)
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Another non-functioning site was "uncertainty.microsoft.com." The purpose of that site was not known. -- MSNBC 10-26-1999 on MS crack
Patent Office Interferences (Score:1)
The public has access to issued patent applications and the file associated with the interference (the pleadings, judgement and such) if the interference involves at least one issued patent once the interference is over . Note that interferences are neither short nor fast. Access to pending patent applications involved in the interference is still restricted.
Transalation: Unless Digital Island releases their patent application publically somehow (or the application issues as a patent), there will be no public access to it. At some point the interference proceedings may make it out to the public however since Akami's patent has issued.
Disclaimer: This is not legal advice. Seek competent legal advice. I don't represent you. The opinions herein are my own and not those of my employer or anyone else.
Why? (Score:1)
Re:In other news (Score:1)
This should have been posted to segfault.org (Score:1)
Re:Looks like Akamai is in the clear... (Score:1)
Mmmm (Score:2)
It's a good thing... (Score:2)
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Programming, is like sex.
The Truth (Score:1)
I'll apply for the Making Font Colors Consistant Through Internet Documents Using References to Style Metadata patent next week. ;)
The respective press releases (Score:4)
This story seems a little weak on facts and links, so this might help. Here are the press releases...
Enjoy...
What a crazy world... (Score:2)
Did they steal code? I doubt it... did they have the same idea? Of course! My experience from what little web-scripting I've done has shown that there are only so many ways to keep track of unique user-session content, so I imagine the way they implement the idea is also extremely similar (eg, long long URLs)...
I imagine this was a top-level idea. Today in the US I heard that 60% of kids know what a 'modem' is, and only 23% of executives do.
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Come to think about it (Score:1)
Re:CNET Article (Score:1)
For those who dont want to cut & paste
And a link (Score:1)
--meredith
Ok, so what is is that they invented? (Score:2)
Re:It's a good thing... (Score:1)
Since when did knowing-what-you're-talking-about became a requirement for commenting?
Or posting?
They could've cut the Slashdot database in half if THAT was the case...
Here's the Secret Sauce... (Score:1)
now (Score:1)
--
Peace,
Lord Omlette
ICQ# 77863057
Yeah, good job, guys (Score:1)
Who knows, indeed. This is typical of Slashdot's cathedral method of story selection, as compared to kuro5hin's [kuro5hin.org] bazaar method. Many eyes make all bugs shallow, and all that. I'm surprised ESR hasn't picked up on this yet.
Cache and location... hmmm... (Score:2)
And for the record, I have not seen any data or information from either side of this lawsuit. But shouldn't be too hard to implement anyway. Proxy server anyone? [freshmeat.net]
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Another non-functioning site was "uncertainty.microsoft.com." The purpose of that site was not known. -- MSNBC 10-26-1999 on MS crack
'Secret sauce' (Score:1)
Anything more technical than that obviously would have gone over the heads of slashdot readers, huh?
damnit (Score:1)
about McDonald's. My bad.
MIT (licensed to Akamai) Patent info (Score:1)
Here is the info on the patent in question, served up by IBM's patent server: US 06108703 [ibm.com]
Link to Akamai patent - not the same idea (Score:4)
Digital Island press release [digitalisland.com]
I would post the link to Digital Island's patent, but neither their press release nor the news stories I've seen contain the patent number. A search for "Digital Island" or "Sandpiper" on patents.uspto.gov turns up nothing. Any ideas?
Note that these claims are not for the same thing. Akamai's patent, titled "Global Hosting Service", covers something which is basically their FreeFlow service, down to very specific details. It talks about modifying a site's pages to point at Akamai, using DNS to direct users at the optimal host for them, specific methods of redundancy for web and DNS servers, specific algorithms for overflowing between regions in case of overload (use of a "min-cost multicommodity flow algorithm"), and so forth. While I'm not keen on software patents in general, this seems like one of the less sinister ones; it is nonobvious and highly specific, not a patent-the-world sort of thing.
Digital Island has been doing content delivery for a while, and as they've been outperformed by Akamai, the workings of their service have been getting closer and closer to what Akamai is doing; Akamai argues that they've gotten to the point of basically copying. I have no idea whether their claim has merit; maybe someone who is more familiar with these services could comment.
DI's infringement suit is based on a patent on "fingerprinting" content to check for freshness. I don't know what their patent claim is; my only guesses seem like pretty obvious things, like checking MD5 hashes for web content against those in a cache. But it's clearly a very small part of a content delivery system, and not at all the same thing that Akamai's patent covers.
DI also claims to have preexisting patent-pending claims for the same thing Akamai has patented, but since it's not an actual patent, I'm not sure how to examine this for myself.
Re:Cache and location... hmmm... (Score:1)
Your explination requires special software running at the contents original source, and it would take too long to find the initial connection. That's not how Akamai works.
Score -1: Redundant. (Score:1)
That's a common misconception about patents (Score:1)
In the US, patents grant a 20-year monopoly to the person who can prove they thought of something first*. Say you and I don't know each other, I invent something, and you invent it the next day. I then get a patent. By law, I can sue you for patent infringement if you're still using your invention. I can sue you, even though you were just as inventive than me. All that matters is that I was a day earlier.
There's usually no pejorative undercurrent to patent infringement cases, actually. Patent infringement cases are usually just coldblooded strategic marketing in action.
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* Yeah, yeah, this is simplified -- in the US, there are also tons of rules about whether you kept it s3kr1t enough, whether someone else can prove they did it first, etc etc.
It _does_ get better: Scoop. (Score:1)
In conclusion, maybe all the Slashdot editors have been so drunk, they have hired minions of horny monkeys to approve story submissions. Can it get any worse? Hopefully, only better..
Discussion sites based on the Scoop engine [kuro5hin.org] let the users pick the stories. Kuro5hin [kuro5hin.org] is the most popular Scoop site.
<O
( \
XGNOME vs. KDE: the game! [8m.com]
Solution to too many lawsuits (Score:1)
Secret Sauce... hmmm... (Score:1)
No big deal. No point of patenting such an evidence.
Re:who cares squid cache was out first. (Score:1)
Ah, the beauty of OpenSource... (Score:2)
I hope they both are forced to put the code out for us to laugh at.
Re:It's a good thing... (Score:1)
Then I guess that there is nothing wrong with the story. I stand corrected.
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Programming, is like sex.
Whoa (Score:1)
While I'm at it, does anyone know what exactly te patent(s) in question are for? To be honest, I'm too lazy to go look them up. Aren't they the companies that help Yahoo, etc. work more quickly?
Re:The Truth (Score:3)
No... patents serve the purpose of seeing who is willing to go through the BS to patent an obvious idea that others may have had for decades. They also serve the purpose of showing how clueless the USPO is - by issuing patents on techniques that have been in use for decades.
If not stopped, software and "business idea" patents are going to kill the entreprenurial goose that has laid the golden eggs for the US economy!
Patents were considered so important to innovation that they are provided for in the US Constitution, a pretty short document. But patents issued by an incompetent bureaucracy to those who are copying ideas in use for ages, or to those who patent things that are trivially obvious, violent the intent of the constitution.
There has been a gold rush for patent seekers since the US Supreme court ruled that well known business methods, implemented in software, can be patented. People have been patenting every idea that has been in use for ages, at the expense of the rest of us who are not clued in to this or don't have the time, money or sociopathy to join in this greedfest. The odds are that if you are doing any programming for any sort of business, you are in violation of patents of all sorts.
IT IS RIDICULOUS!
I wonder... (Score:1)
Wow, I need to put my glasses on... (Score:2)
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Need more secret sauce! (Score:1)
Put the mayonaise out in the sun!
Re:Whoa (Score:1)
Let the patent applications wars begin! (Score:2)
Under the U.S. patent offices law, you are given a specific time to challenge a patent. Since DI's application predates Akamai's, they might be given a chance.
Re:Whoa (Score:1)
Easy, you heat it in the can and drink it. Failing that you use a fork, fish out the lumps (veggies, chicken, small children...) then drink the rest. So what if there is no spoon! I doubt the matrix has stopped human ingenuity. Or fingers.
Oh, and to keep this vaguely on topic, in relation to the story, if 3 bands can come up with the same song title in one year (The power of Love, 1984-85) I'm sure these 2 jackoff companies could have the same idea. They're out to make a quick buck. Fucking dickheads. Oh wait, that's standard .com mentality, I stand corrected...
Re:I wonder... (Score:1)
Inktomi's 'solution' is a confidence trick played on the foolish and unwary. The only way it can work is if you can get EVERY edge device on every network you have customer's on to go through your redirect switches!
Looks like Akamai is in the clear... (Score:1)
What happens... (Score:1)
In other news (Score:4)
Recently, Slashdot.com has been posting stories with malformed links, links pointing to the incorrect address, and stories misgarbled to the point where the reader cannot click through to a web page or understand the entire article. Meanwhile, many readers have been submitting news articles about free domain names, new anti spam legislation, and even the popular "Microsoft Plan to Take Over the World. "
Thankfully, several readers were able to quickly post links to today's story.
In conclusion, maybe all the Slashdot editors have been so drunk, they have hired minions of horny monkeys to approve story submissions. Can it get any worse? Hopefully, only better..
Re:Ah, the beauty of OpenSource... (Score:2)