Rambus to Attempt to Collect Royalties on Chipsets 112
Datafage writes "According to this article, RAMBUS is going to go after the manufacturers of all chipsets that interface with RAM, including Intel, AMD, Via, and presumably video chipset manufacturers in their relentless pursuit of royalties for their ill-gotten patents. This begs the question: Will they ever stop?"
Not untill they are stopped (Score:2)
Once they tasted blood... (Score:3)
Something's got to snap... (Score:5)
Do I understand this correctly in that they are taking on an entire industry? This is a do-or-die situation for Rambus now. Either they win their lawsuits, own the entire industry, gain legitimacy and generally make their stockholders cream in their pants, or they lose everything and get laughed out of business. Right now, with the state of patent law, it looks like it could go either way, where in reality, it shouldn't really be a question at all.
AMD (Score:1)
Patents (Score:2)
You patent that.
We patent the same,
in search of fame.
We neglect the consumer,
Greed becomes our leader,
and the people will rebel.
Sounds like they're in trouble... (Score:1)
Even more telling is their SEC statement (Score:5)
They're perfectly aware that nobody else is going to license their chipsets, and they plan on suing anybody and everybody to make money.
What do they have? (Score:2)
Any patent attorneys in the crowd?
TheGeek
Ahhh! Panic, Flail, Flail, Flail.... (Score:1)
intel's reponse (Score:2)
if we are all really that bothered by rambus, perhaps we need to find a way to deflate them. i am reminded of etoy.com's successful campaign against etoys.com.
# cat .sig
Re:What do they have? (Score:1)
Patents are an "if you tell the world how you did it, we'll ensure they pay you for use of that information" type deal.
The other option is keeping everything hush-hush, and trying to be the only one that does something by the others not finding out how.
The latter hasn't been tried for decades
Phil
Re:Even more telling is their SEC statement (Score:2)
Maybe they should read the old classic, "How to Make Friends and Influence People". Or maybe they have read this, and decided that that is the thing NOT to do.
Even Machiavelli (Gates) has more tack that this.
Re:Not untill they are stopped (Score:2)
Here's [semibiznews.com] a link with some more info.
trash talk (Score:2)
This is just another outragous result of the flawed thinking that intellectual monopolies are okay.
Re:Sounds like they're in trouble... (Score:1)
Rambus does not make products. They are an intellectual property corporation that liscenses their ideas and technology to memory manufacturers.
Re:What do they have? (Score:2)
Uh, what? I can think of a dozen examples from any industry off the top of my head: Microsoft undocumented API's, SDMI encryption, race car engines, search engine rankings, Intel's chip designs, Apple's hardware designs, you name it, everybody in business wants to keep their information secret to make money off it.
License fees are how you make money when you're unable to produce your product in sufficient quantities to satisfy consumers while maximizing revenues. If you can make enough products using your existing factories, then you keep the production information secret and just produce it all yourself.
The memory industry is the perfect example. Rambus couldn't afford to build the chip factories necessary to satisfy public demand for its chips. Therefore, they sold licenses to other companies who could afford to build the factories (or already had them). Wham, Rambus is in the memory business without building expensive fabs.
Re: (Score:1)
This is sick (Score:2)
RAMBUS must die. (Score:5)
This is exactly what happens when the staff of a technology company is 50% lawyers. I suspect that this is only the beginning of a era of corporations who produce nothing, design nothing, contribute nothing, but profit from continuous litigiousness, all because of stupid US law and legal practice.
It's a huge blow to progress in general (RAMBUS RAM is a good example). Someone has to stop this kind of thing before dozens of companies are all trying the same thing, wrecking the technology market because of greed.
Re:What do they have? (Score:2)
Trade secrets are still used today.
A patent lawyer once told me that some companies prefer trade secrets to patents. Trade secrets don't expire after N years.
Rambus is retarded (Score:1)
Re:What do they have? (Score:2)
Here's how Intellectual Property goes:
- Copyright (covers source and binary) lasts for 40ish years, and does NOT cover independant rediscovery. (So, company A copyrights something, company B "independantly" rediscovers it, all is okay. This is like MS making SMB and Samba implementing it from scratch.)
- Patent, as was described, you tell the world how you did it, the world has to license that for $$$
. Patents don't allow for independant rediscovery. So if a company gets a software patent (oh, like say Fraunhauffersp?) w/ MP3's) then even if you write your own you have to pay the original company.
- Trade Secrecy (Hide your work, hope no one figures it out)
There's also a special IP law for processors, giving a 10 year patent. Interestingly, software patents are a new thing. It used to be (up until the mid 80's iff I recall) that SW patents weren't allowed. They're still kinda questionable in Canada.
Patents were originally designed to promote innovation. Because they last 17-20 years, they effectively stiffle it in the software industry. Or at least that's my take.
Blah Blah Blah,
Ben
Re:What do they have? (Score:1)
It doesn't always suceed though, which is why we have issues like DeCSS and IE's "encrypted" password caches. Similarly there's good old fashioned reverse engineering of things like the IBM PC BIOS etc.
How much do these lawsuits really make? (Score:1)
I think the answer could be that they are being offered favourable terms to do so. It could be in Rambus' interest to play it like this, because it provides some news which is favourable to shareholders. Of course at the moment there is a particular need for this, with the rumours that Intel might ditch RDRAM.
JEDEC / open standards (Score:3)
What really bugs me is the bit about how Rambus participated in open standards meetings and apparently took part in creating those standards without mentioning its patents to anyone... the Conspiracy Monger in me has a new way to get rich:
Ahh, I see it all so clearly. now, all I need is a terriffic idea, a patent, enough status to be asked to participate on a standards panel, and a team of lawyers.
+++++++++++++++++++++
Spin zone! (Score:1)
Ya right, this is some big ass spin here, he's trying to give Intel a way back. I bet it doesn't work
________
Re:RAMBUS must die. (Score:1)
Re:Once they tasted blood... (Score:1)
In the old days, Life was wild, rich, and largely litigation-free. geeks were real geeks, tech companies were real tech companies and litigators went down the drain... (Sorry Douglas Adams, i just had to...)
Their strategy is obvious. (Score:2)
I hope that these morons get beaten at their own game. There's no nullification quite like having a judge call your company a legion of whining carpetbaggers.
Re:See? There are companies worse than Microsoft! (Score:1)
Re: I can see it now... (Score:1)
Hehe, it's like a chihuahua yapping away at Godzilla. Once that overgrown lizard sees the little cur, STOMP! Rambus pancake!
Re:What do they have? (Score:2)
Actually copyrights last the lifetime of author plus 50 years or something like that, while if a company or corp has it, they only expire after 70 years.
Molog
So Linus, what are we doing tonight?
Hey, they should collect royalties... (Score:1)
Re:JEDEC / open standards (Score:1)
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I see more litigation ahead. (Score:2)
All I can do right now is hope that the combined wrath of Intel, AMD, and VIA will send Rambus into the pits of hell (or maybe the front page of f*ckedcompany.com).
Anyone live near these guys? (Score:3)
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Rambus as Intel puppet? (Score:2)
Re:RAMBUS must die. (Score:1)
Example:
RAMBUS: You owe us royalties on these memory products.
Samsung: Yeah right!
RAMBUS: Yes. This patent says so. Pay up.
Samsung: That patent is bullshit. See you in court, asshole.
RAMBUS: That maybe true, but because of our superior market capitalization we now have more money than God. We will sue you over and over until we win, or you are bankrupt.
Samsung: We can take it.
RAMBUS: I'll bet your shareholders think differently...
Samsung: Who do I make the cheque out to?
Stockholders hate seeing large legal expenses drag down the bottom line on their quarterlies -- most corporations do not budget for it. The fact that Samsung and Elpida have settled puts pressure on the lawyers from Micron and Hyundai to stop wasting money and settle.
Am I missing something? (Score:1)
Re:This is sick (Score:1)
Re: What do they have? (Score:2)
Usually, everybody working in a field is using the same basic physical laws, rules and processes - even in racing engines. The differences are marginal, which of course doesn't mean "unimportant" - especially in racing engines. The same applies to industrial production: using processes patented by sumebody else under license isn't that unusual; companies still make money by performing the process better, cheaper or faster than the competition. How to achieve this "better", "cheaper" or "faster" then is what is kept secret.
In the case of the Rambus patents, this seems to be impossible - it doesn't matter what and how you do it in detail, you have to pay regardless. This is unprecedented - it sounds like somebody getting a patent on fire and then extracting royalties from every manufacturer of internal combustion engines. Or like patenting the wheel...
How did Rambus ever get these patents? (Score:5)
The rather extreme efforts of Cray Research to balance signal paths in order to allow increased clock speed without loss of signal coherency was also studied.
I don't see anything in the Rambus patent descriptions that don't fall back to common design techniques in use over 10 years ago.
I don't get it. Why isn't Rambus in court on charges of theft or fraud? They claim ownership of design principles that are not only normal practice, but that were created over a decade before their company existed!
Re:Even more telling is their SEC statement (Score:3)
The full statment is:
This release contains forward-looking statements regarding financial results for future periods. Actual results could differ materially. Among the factors which could cause results to differ materially is the possibility that the Pentium 4 and PlayStation2 ramps will be slower than expected, that shipment of Rambus ICs and other licensed products by Rambus licensees will be below forecast, that no additional licenses for SDRAM-compatible ICs will be signed, that prices of RDRAMs will remain high compared to SDRAMs and that litigation and building costs will exceed the Company?s plans.
It's just the disclaimer saying what *could* go wrong, not what is likely to go wrong. (though IMO in this case many of those things are quite likely to happen) So at the very least they aren't willing to publicly admit that they're screwed. Who knows, maybe they even believe it themselves. Sometimes people lie often enough that they start to believe their own lies...
Re:How much do these lawsuits really make? (Score:2)
Re:RAMBUS must die. (Score:3)
What if every significant computer hardware company, including Intel, AMD, VIA, NVidia, Micron, IBM, 3Com, Sony, National Semiconductor, etc. etc. simultaneously launched separate lawsuits against RAMBUS?
"For what cause", you ask? Well, something.... maybe fraud, or deceptive business practicies, or whatever...
The idea would just be to scare the investors so badly that Rambus's stock price would fall through the floor. Rambus probably has more lawyers then engineers on staff, and fighting a dozen lawsuits, plus all the bad PR they would get would make the company very unattractive to investors.
Then Intel (or whoever) could buy up all the stock for cheap, shut them down, and give away free licenses to the patents to all the other companies bringing lawsuits to "settle out of court".
Hey presto, no more RAMBUS problem. The only catch is, this would probably be illegal.
Torrey Hoffman (Azog)
Re:This is sick (Score:1)
Right now its in litigation with two firms claiming it, Intel and Microsoft.
Re:Even more telling is their SEC statement (Score:1)
They might as well have said : "Among the factors which could cause results to differ materially is the possibility that the sun will rise tomorrow and on successive days, that water will continue to be wet, that no new alien life forms are discovered, and that the entire computer industry does not become overnight crack fiends."
Sure, RAMBuS Ink (hope they see this, so my spelling annoys them), we believe you.
Late breaking news... (Score:3)
The company has set its licensing fee to $1 for each DNA string, but offers a quantity rebate and at $10M per individual. The company CEO has been quoted saying "We will protect our IP and will go after any offender". RAMBUS has already asked for a restraining order against 100 million people and will ask the judge to restrain them from using DNA.
When asked the reason for its sudden interest in nuclear technology, a RAMBUS official said: "This is in the line of protecting our IP and making people know we're serious about it. Remember, living free is stealing".
Re:RAMBUS must die. (Score:1)
Mandrake 7.2 and KDE 2 for me? for free?
Re:RAMBUS must die. (Score:3)
The problem isn't with one specific corporation. It is a dreadful interaction between a corporation and a legal situation and could happen with any of them, given the initial sleaziness to produce the Intellectual Property at dispute here.
I could make a case that if Intel owned these patents they would be obligated under fiduciary duty to press them as far as they will go, just like RAMBUS. Perhaps without the desperation (that's from RAMBUS's miserable business case) but with the same basic result.
Intellectual Property simply doesn't mesh with a fast-paced, innovative industry. This is only the beginning. Assuming that the laws aren't radically revamped- I'd have to recommend nobody attempt to work in the field. The future is like this but more so. The only bright side is- for so many useful things (including Linux) you don't actually _need_ new tech and innovation... you can use old kit and make do. This is quite unglamorous- but it's going to be harder and harder to be on the cutting edge technologically, because of legal challenges- I think it will become impossible for private individuals. That's just my personal opinion.
Re:trash talk (Score:2)
Patents are meant to protect the inventor against pilfering (usually much bigger) competitors. If MegaCorp Inc. wants to make use of Joe Bloe's process of extracting logic from
Nothing is perfect but as it stands today, patents remain the single proven method for introducing competitive ideas into society. In fact, merely the fact that someone holds a patent on something is inducement for someone else to come up with something better. Until you come up with something better, "patents are wrong right down to the concept" is moronic drivel.
If RAMBUS can demonstrate their claims, then RAMBUS _should_ be awarded royalties. Why the fuck not? Are you such a fan of intel/nvidia/whatever that you believe they should get that money instead? I personally dont care where the money goes but I feel a lot better if _all_ deserving parties get their share.
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Intel slap them down? (Score:1)
Besides, Intel's lawyers are great big boys and girls who want what's best for Intel. And what's best for Intel? How about stopping AMD's surge in market share until they get the P4 working?
Given that, here's how the scenario plays out
[puts on Great Karnak turban]
Rev. Bob "Bob" Crispen
beginning of the end (Score:1)
Wouldn't it be interesting if major companies were to get together and create a new standard, leaving Rambus out in the cold?
For all we know, this may be the beginning of the end for SDRAM.
"The good thing about Alzheimer's is that you can hide your own Easter eggs."
Memo from Intel HQ (Score:1)
Re:intel's reponse (Score:1)
What percentage of the recent "Intel missteps" have been directly linked to the fact that Rambus doesn't perform as advertized, and hence wasn't adopted as advertized? MTH problems (and board recalls), Timna cancellation, you name it.
I suspect most of us are in the same boat. Yeah, we know it was our management's fault for falling for Rambus' hype, but when they're directly taking aim at a rather profitable part of our core business... If the board is as ticked as the employees are, I wouldn't be surprised to see a rather eviscerating legal reaction. Normally, business isn't personal, but our Rambus-inspired missteps have cost just about everyone a large sum, in terms of eroded stock price, and hence option value.
Re:What do they have? (Score:2)
Actually, it's more like they identified all those companies who were successfully producing (or soon to be producing) DDR memory chips, made sure that their patents were written in such a way so that those other companies would be violating them, then went after them with every lawyer they could purchase using their absurdly high capitalization. Their "attempt" at creating their own memory technology fell flat on its face, so now they're trying to survive by being a parasite on everyone else who has already done the hard work (WITHOUT Rambus's help).
You mean they're in the business of making money by lawsuit - they probably don't even need their engineers anymore, except as "expert witnesses".
they're all playing the same game (Score:2)
by the way,
> They accuse Rambus of subverting the Joint
> Electron Device Engineering Council (JEDEC)
> process when the company kept its patents on
> SDRAM secret while attending JEDEC meetings
> intended to establish an open industry standard.
Can anyone throw more light on this? I haven't hear the jedec part before. Sounds tangential to the patent question, at best, but it's worthy of Bismarck, or at least Nixon, if true.
Re:See? There are companies worse than Microsoft! (Score:2)
it doesn't matter (Score:1)
Re:observation (Score:1)
--
Bush's assertion: there ought to be limits to freedom
I think it would be great... (Score:2)
Not so different from Qualcomm (Score:2)
They're not the only one. For example, Qualcomm is doing the same thing [ebnonline.com], with considerable success.
And arguably Qualcomm's patents were issued in the face of prior art as well; CDMA had been used in military communications for some time. The U.S. isn't about to "fix" this, since it's a place that U.S. companies have an edge. Welcome to 21st century high-tech big business.
And by the way, Taco, "beg the question" doesn't mean "invite the question". If you had taken a philosophy course at Hope College you would know that :).
--Seen
Re:RAMBUS must die. (Score:1)
I thought about that and looked up the stock information on Rambus [yahoo.com]. Of particular interest is their SEC [yahoo.com] report. Right now their stock price is good, but in reality they are losing money, and that probably explains a lot about the continuous lawsuits. Their own report says they have enough cash for 12 months of operations. RAMBUS needs to keep having people pay it royalties to stay alive. I suppose if a lot of the memory makers refuse to pay, get injunctions to back that up, then drag out the case for a couple of years they could really put the hurt-lock on the RAMBUS, perhaps even drive it out of business.
Re:Am I missing something? (Score:1)
Re:How did Rambus ever get these patents? (Score:2)
They have a close look on what the big gamers are doing, besides they are not just outsiders but people trying to create also their own computer memory device. I wonder if, in base of projects and their insiders knowledge, they filled the right patent claim in the righ moment. As these designs take years to come out to market then it will be understandable how we are seeing a timeline discrepancy between patent fillings and the when such devices came into market. At least one thing that troubles me is that they have claims on such a thing like RDRAM which started rotting while green. Maybe they patented it too early to avoid concurrency?
Re:RAMBUS must die. (Score:2)
But as another reply to my first comment said, even if they go out of business, their patent portfolio will probably end up purchased by some other company which might try to do the same aggressive things with it. But if it was a large, non-desparate company, like IBM, things would probably be better than they are now.
Of course the best solution is to reform patent law. And copyright law while we are at it...
However, I think reform of intellectual property laws is unlikely to happen any time soon. I've seen predictions that due to the closeness of the election and the distribution of seats in congress, not much is likely to get done for the next four years. Also, the US has signed world wide copyright treaty and trade legislation laws which might make changes difficult here - a really good reform of patent law might violate some treaty or something.
Under those circumstances, I think the best short term solution would be for Rambus to die and for IBM to buy their patents.
Torrey Hoffman (Azog)
Rambus is ASKING Intel to buy them out (Score:2)
When this is all said and done, Intel is going to end up buying out Rambus and releasing all the Rambus specs royality free. Why? The reason for this is obviously that if RDRAM suddently gets cheaper and more redily avaliable Intel has a lot to gain in the form of chipset and processor sales. Especially when their the only ones working with Rambus right now
--
Re:observation (Score:1)
-----------------------
Question: (Score:1)
How high a court would be needed to order a review of the USPO?
----
Expropriation (Score:2)
The expropriation of Rambus's patents is a perfectly viable option. Just as individuals had to give up their junk at a fair price during World War II so that war production could proceed, and just as farmers must often part with land today so that public works may proceed (dams, roads, whatever), Rambus could be forcibly divested of its patents so that the evolution of computer hardware can proceed with proper regard to technical merit, which is ultimately in everybody's interest. The only legitimate obstacle I foresee is that the relevant people in the US government lack the cojones to do it; they would have to move resolutely and unapologetically, but they will not. (Before dismissing that last statement, you should take a moment to read the Wired story on the Microsoft antitrust trial [wired.com].)
Fight Micron/Infineon/etc. ;) (Score:1)
"I'll never again buy your RAM is you don't kick RAMBUS' ass in the court!"
Might work
Re:RAMBUS must die. (Score:1)
If every U.S. IC manufacturer pays royalties, effectively they still compete with each other on the same terms.
The really big loser in this is the U.S. economy. Do you think they put up with this kind of crap in China?
RAMBUS: Watch Your Backs (Score:1)
I know the man who invented the miniature stepping motor, which is the basis of every quartz analog clock and watch on the planet. He also invented the digital electronic watch. His name is John Hall and he lives in California.
"Executives" at the Japanese company Casio tried more than once to kill him, rather than pay him production royalties on his inventions. The closest attempt was a near-escape from being run down by a truck in Washington, DC.
The people who run RAMBUS had better watch their backs.
This is boilerplate (Score:1)
Re:How did Rambus ever get these patents? (Score:1)
Parallel to Goats (Score:1)
***
Twisted patents... (Score:1)
(Nothing greedy, just a couple a million quid will do...say 10 million.)
On the other hand it's gotta be JUST patent law: sensible, fair and in the interest of everybody. To me patenting a chip design is fine. Licensing it is fine, provided it is generally done in a way to improve life for users - this means no nasty discrimination, Intel and Rambus. Ultimately the patent must expire within a reasonable length of time - this will ensure reasonable licensing fees ultimately.
OTOH, licensing methods of interfacing to a product? Hmmm. Bad karma.
Elgon
Re:Expropriation (Score:1)
If it would happen in Soviet Union or China though , Rambus members/owners would already be convicted and work as tree loggers in the Far East
This is absurd! (Score:1)
Re:What do they have? (Score:1)
Unless you're in both the music industry and the USA, where the Satellite Broadcasting Act of 1998 specifies that:
* Authors do not own their own work if they are using a music publishing company [the phrasing is a little minced there, but that's pretty much about it].
* Copyright does not expire. Ever.
Re:they're all playing the same game (Score:1)
The short version is that RAMBUS got on meetings of the JEDEC group designing next generation RAM technologies. The result was supposed to be open and patent-free (or at least royalty free) to the members. Unfortunatelly RAMBUS sprinkled in some ideas for which they had patents pending (or patented something they learned in these meetings after they left JEDEC, it's still unclear to which happened). The patents were granted and now we have this mess.
Re:Even more telling is their SEC statement (Score:1)
Re:Not so different from Qualcomm (Score:1)
and how is he misusing that statement anyways? beg the question does mean invite the question...interpreted vernacular language evolutionary practices; Ipso Facto.
Re:Spin zone! (Score:1)
________
Logically right but morally wrong (Score:1)
It makes perfect sense. RAMBUS figures out it can bring people to court over patents it has filed. It figures "I can do it so I'd be stupid not to".
But wait a minute.
When we start bringing people to court because we can, we start loosing touch with the fact that going to court is serious business. We should only do it AS A LAST RECOURSE. I don't see RAMBUS running around trying to accomodate people here. Going to court is their FIRST option.
Furthermore it brings out a very serious question: While it is logically right to go to court, it's definetely morally wrong - everyone else has been sharing information on memory interfaces through an open standard.
Is this the business way of the new millenium?
Should countries sign peace treaties while preparing their guns?
Should I sue my neighbour before he sues me?
And it does make me wonder what kind of government I have when I know all too well that RAMBUS and INTEL have been lobbying sucessfully for so long
Obi Wan Celeri
"If you look at it in a fractal way, everything is related, no matter how far and how different"
Re:Not untill they are stopped (Score:1)
Rambus (Score:1)
Re:Once they tasted blood... (Score:1)
next they'll go after software... (Score:3)
LINUX companies will get away with $5 per copy sold commercially. Microsoft will have to pay $100 per copy for Windows ME because of the huge memory footprint required to boot.
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Re:Late breaking news... (Score:2)
--
Misty water color memories of US Patents (Score:1)
The proof is in the pudding ... (Score:1)
http://www.rambus.com/general/careers/career_00
They also have a developers section
Re:Not so different from Qualcomm (Score:1)
Re:Late breaking news... (Score:2)
Unfortunatly they were unavailable for comment after serveral bio-labs sent them samples to prevent patent infringment
Re:Late breaking news... (Score:2)
Actually RNA is responsible for protin sythtesis rather than cell devision. Anyway better to patent ATP, in sufficently broad terms to cover ADP and DNA. You'd also get higher royalties, per person, than 10M USD even if you started at 0.01 USD per molecule.
The poodle that attacks the bear. (Score:2)
I would imagine that some of these companies <cough>Intel</cough> have pretty decent patent portfolios themselves. But other companies tend to keep them for defensive purposes only. I'm willing to bet that Intel probably has a handful of patents that Rambus is violating.
At the very least, Intel can probably dig up a couple of patents that Rambus appears to be violating, and take Rambus to court over them, and drive Rambus into the ground due to court costs alone.
Re:trash talk (Score:1)
However that's not how patents work for the most part in many industries. Ok, so in theory that's not a fault of patents, but a fault of the examineers and/or the system surrounding them, but that's still not an excuse.
Also, you make the age-old claim that patents protect the little inventor from being screwed over by MegaCorp Inc. While credible on the surface that's not how it works in practice either.
In practice MegaCorp owns thousands of patents covering a shitload of obvious things. So many that as an independent software-developer it's pretty damn hard to write a program *without* by accident using some patented technology. And the fact that many of these patents are probably invalid and would be overturned if challenged doesn't help you much -- it's a sad fact that Joe Inventor probably can't afford to go after IBM (or Rambus) and challenge a few of thier patents, even if he's rigth.
Re:I think it would be great... (Score:1)
- Steeltoe
Re: the one revolutionary idea (Score:1)
Re:they're all playing the same game (Score:2)
> Electron Device Engineering Council (JEDEC)
> process when the company kept its patents on
> SDRAM secret while attending JEDEC meetings
> intended to establish an open industry standard.
Can anyone throw more light on this? I haven't hear the jedec part before. Sounds tangential to the patent question, at best, but it's worthy of Bismarck, or at least Nixon, if true.
JEDEC's patent policy is that if a participating company holds IP which covering a proposed standard, the company
Rambus actually went quite a bit beyond this, though, since it appears that what they did was attend the meetings, where they found the direction that the industry was going. At that point, they went back and rewrote some abandoned patent applications to cover the proposed SDRAMs.