Forgent Networks Wins $25M from Sony for JPEG Patent 270
SuperBanana writes "A story at the Imaging Resource reports that Forgent Networks just won a $25m lawsuit against Sony, for unpaid royalties on patents Forgent bought back in 1997 for $65,000(there's a nice return); the lawsuit concerns patents on 'JPEG encoding and decoding', which Sony's cameras supposedly infringe upon. Sony is challenging the ruling. Older Slashdot stories covered this back in 2002 when this first popped up on people's radar screens, mainly when the ISO threatened to revoke JPEG's ISO status unless Forgent stopped throwing its weight around. Supposedly Forgent only has until 2004 to get all it can out of the patent."
Peoples first reaction.. (Score:3, Funny)
"I hope this doesn't change anything about my JPEG pr0n"
Re:Peoples first reaction.. (Score:3, Informative)
Now, St. Clair Intellectual Property Consultants Inc. through the law firm of Robins, Kaplan, Miller & Ciresi has successfully sued Sony claiming that the company's cameras infringe on four patents dating back to as long ago as 1992, which it purchased in 1995. The judgement was nowhere near the staggering $171.4 million dollars in royalties St. Clair felt it was owed
Re:Peoples first reaction.. (Score:2)
*MY* reaction was "Maybe JPEG (and lossy compression)" will finally go away and we can use PNG and lossless JPEG for everything. We've got the hard drive space, and a PNG of a photograph is, in my experience, only about five times larger than a decent-quality JPEG. Bandwidth is cheap. The limiting factor is people throwing movies around, not images. Storage is cheap and plentiful. I don't care *how* much you like yo
Re:Peoples first reaction.. (Score:2)
Hmmm, I bet you don't have any porn. Most people here probably do, and their comments and jokes about porn are not so much immature as they are sad.
Fed up about reading about bad patents (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Fed up about reading about bad patents (Score:2)
Yeah, let's fight back with their own means by developing a new patent system and then applying for a patent on this system...
Re:Fed up about reading about bad patents (Score:5, Insightful)
Though what seems to happen more often is that somebody comes up with something clever, and may or may not patent it. Then somebody else comes along, and either patents the original idea (if not patented) or patents it being used in all kinds of obvious ways (like `doing X ... on a computer' was pretty popular a few years ago.)
Patent reform wouldn't be nearly so important if the patent office could simply follow it's own rules -- i.e. checking for prior art, and disallowing patents on things that are `obvious to the layperson'.
Re:Fed up about reading about bad patents (Score:2)
Agreed. However, JPEG encoding isn't so obvious even now. Yes, it's ubiquitous, but not many of the people who use it could describe how it works internally. The XOR cursor, that's obvious. JPEG compression is much more complicated.
Though looking at the news article in question, none of the patents they list seem to cover JPEG co
Re:Fed up about reading about bad patents (Score:2, Insightful)
I agree. The patent system needs to be changed, not only to prevent bad patents from being awarded, but also to allow (even poor) individuals and small companies to defend and prosecute patent cases and apply for patents. Currently patents are expensive to obtain and use. Patent holders are able to use the cost of court proceedings to punish or frighten
those of whom they disapprove (especially weaker competitors), even if they would not win the case.
Re:Fed up about reading about bad patents (Score:2)
Like what?
Re:Fed up about reading about bad patents (Score:2)
Patents are no longer written in english it would seem, so it's pretty hard to contest something you don't understand.
Software is protected by copyright - it doesn't need patent protection.
If I see a new steam engine, I can deduce how it works by it's shape and structure. If I see a new computer program running (not it's source, obviously) I have very little idea of how it works. Patents should be for things, not abstractions!
Re:Fed up about reading about bad patents (Score:2)
Re:Fed up with kharma whores (Score:2)
What I want to know is how the hell do you force change on the patent system? We know what needs to be done to make it better, but how do we go about it??
Re:Fed up about reading about bad patents (Score:2)
As part of the whole post 911 thing, the US now wants 24 hours notice of the contents of all shipments destined for the US, before they're even loaded onto the ship in the foreign port - so that they, if they decide to, can send a US customs inspector to check on the goods.
This is ofcourse, restraint of trade, but under the guise of anti-terro
Re:Fed up about reading about bad patents (Score:2, Insightful)
Now it's all about how you can find the next loophole to exploit, and profit from it as much as possible before someone else does and the loophole is closed.
I think it's quite a sign of how sad the situation is when you look at how much favoritisim our government gives to big business, when a business itself does not have a right to vote.
Please don't feed this troll.... (Score:2)
Good (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Good (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Good (Score:2)
Re:Good (Score:3, Informative)
Obviously you never took a statistics class either.
Suppose that you have 100 individuals. 99 of these people have an income of 100 dollars/day. The other one person makes only 50 dollars/d
Re:Good (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Good (Score:2)
I'm sure he's referring to the tech community. I'm yet to meet a techy type or a geek who's apathetic to other techies' needs and feelings.
GNU users are apathetic !
Windows users are pathetic!!
Re:Good (Score:2)
the cows... I mean people dont care unless it affects their pocket directly. I.E. sony asks all sony camera owners to pay up another $5.00 to them to pay for the ruling.
THEN it might get some attention, but I still highly doubt it.
Re:Good (Score:2)
That rather depends on whether you are talking about the data file or the subject matter, doesn't it? ;)
Re:Good (Score:2)
>link and have a picture come up it doesn't
>matter.
Of course, the situation in the article is exactly the sort of thing that might jeapordize the click-and-wank community.
Re:Good (Score:2)
Nothing wakes up the apathetic masses: that's why they're called "apathetic."
Re:Good (Score:2)
I think that would be more well said like this: "Like this ruling, nothing wakes up the apathetic masses.". The masses don't know or care about open standards. The masses don't know or care what JPEG, GIF, PNG, TIFF, etc are. When they surf to CNN.com, they want to see a picture. That is the extent of their caring.
So I do encourage you to dream on. I do as well, but I dream of something other than an appeal from the ap
JPEG 2000? (Score:3, Interesting)
Shows that one should use media that is open and patent free (such as ogg/png/etc) after all...
Re:JPEG 2000? (Score:3, Informative)
No, I don't think so. The Forgent patent covered DCT-based image/video compression schemes (cut up your image into small blocks; apply a discrete cosine transform to each block; quantize the DCT coefficients, allocating little precision to high frequencies; do some sort of entropy coding on the quantized coefficients), i.e. JPEG and MPEG video. JPEG 2000 is wavelet-based and not covered by this patent, though I am somewhat worried by their choice of arithmetic coding as the
Re:JPEG 2000? (Score:2)
PNG can not replace jpeg. png is a lossless compression algorithm. Therefore, for encoding images like photographs, using png will lead to a huge increase in file size. That said, I've noticed that people tend to use jpeg for many things for which png would be better: screenshots for instance. Not only is a screenshot usually smaller in size when encoded using png, it also leaves the text clear while jpeg blurs
Re:JPEG 2000? (Score:2)
Sony's defense (Score:5, Funny)
They claim they couldn't read the "pay royalties" memo because it was a low-quality save and therefore too blurry...
ridiculous (Score:2, Interesting)
The legal system has become the new stock exchange. Bloody Hell. They should all be charged for treason.
matt
I'm confused (Score:5, Interesting)
Unlike GIF [burnallgifs.org], JPEG was established by a standards body (ISO). Now they want to renege on that.
Register [theregister.co.uk] has more info on this one. Weird.
Ownership (Score:5, Insightful)
Just because someone somewhere says "this is standard" it does not revoke patents other individuals or organizations have.
Re:Ownership (Score:3, Insightful)
A deadline (e.g. 1 yr) is set for patent holders who think their patent has been violated in the process. If they don't actively defense their patent in that process, tell them to forget about it.
I know some readers may worry about some companies may start abusing the system. But, this wo
Unfair (Score:2)
I must clearly disclose my patent. The standard organizations do not have to publicly disclose any standards. This isn't fair.
Re:Unfair (Score:2)
In a sense, they are at a special patent pending stage. If you feel your existing patent is being offended, say so. It is a fair go for everyone.
Re:Unfair (Score:2)
If they performed a patent search before setting a standard, this would likely solve the problem, but they don't do it.
Re:Unfair (Score:2)
i'm not a lawyer and yadda yadda.
but the patent afaik the patent isn't 'public' when it's being processed, thus you can't know if something is going to be patented in the near future, and there are ways to delay the patent processing so that you can get even more possible profit from doing a thing like this, iirc the guy that patented car in the usa
Claiming patent right (Score:2)
When you make something it is your job to make sure you aren't using someone elses invention, that they have published, not their job to track you down.
Re:Claiming patent right (Score:2)
The patent office has almost 10e+7 patents on file, probably comprising about 10e+8 claims written in a mind-numbingly obfuscated language. I'm sure every developer has the time to sift through all of these every time a clever idea pops into his head.
Let's see... if you spent one minute considering each claim, you'd know your new idea is free and clear a
Re:Claiming patent right (Score:2)
http://www.uspto.gov/
Patent #5 960 411
http://patft.uspto.gov/netacgi/nph-Parser?Sect1
There is a fine line.... (Score:4, Interesting)
Sony was using JPEG in there cameras... that kept the oh so VALUABLE compressed image technology on our systems. If yah sue everyone that uses your tech then your tech will disappear. We have maybe one other image compression tech? oh no wait, we've got a tone.
I'm not an open source junky
There is a fine line... always is for the Sopranos (Score:5, Insightful)
Instead of working hard and being creative, companies (and individuals) have chosen to litigate with crooked lawyers. These lawyers (think Johnny Cochran type) aren't creative, aren't smart, they are simply crooks. It's almost like they advertise and recruit through high profile cases such as this. Juries, Judges, and the public at large are being taken advantage of the same way the mafia takes advantage of an industry or commodity. In this case and cases such as Bezos being able to patent every type of transaction that uses a mouse click, and in most cases, the entire Microsoft Apple/Netscape trials, the judicial systems knowledge of the small details are taken advantage of.
I agree with you, this will have the effect, if successful, of invalidating the technology (JPEG) - a new standard will arise. I am both happy and concerned that it may be Sony though. They have the muscle and marketting/liscensing power to make a new standard adopted very quickly. However, they also tend get all googly eyed when they have the opportunity to make something proprietary and be the SOLE distributer or patent/copyright/license holder.
Re:There is a fine line.... (Score:2)
They are not doing that, they sat on it for over ten years, and now their dipping into the pockets deep enough to pay. Anyway, I'm baffled where this patent came from. Remember this page [gnu.org]? It goes on and on about how gifs are evil because of patents and uses a jpeg for an image.
My patent idea (Score:2, Funny)
Ummm...Forgent? Read Article... (Score:5, Informative)
Wrong headline: this is not Forgent. (Score:5, Informative)
The headline and the text of the Slashdot submission are wrong. Sony paid $16M to Forgent Network some time ago as part of an out-of-court settlement. But this article is about a different company: St. Clair Intellectual Property Consultants Inc. of Grosse Pointe, Mich. That company is the one that has won $25M in court.
Please read the text of the article and the press release appended to it, and you will see a different story than the one given in the Slashdot submission. The press release contains a quote saying: "this lawsuit is similar to out-of-court settlements reached by Forgent Networks and Dallas based law firm [...]" but the two cases are different. They are both bad, but the companies are different.
Not exactly JPEG patents (Score:5, Informative)
Actually, if you read the patents linked from the article, they aren't even patents on JPEG. They make claims on the use of compressed storage formats in digital cameras, such as JPEG.
What digial camera doesn't have the capability to store compressed images? Nobody would buy a camera that wasted memory by storing uncompressed images. Therefore, these are essentially patents on digital cameras!
Re:Not exactly JPEG patents (Score:2)
You are right. A better title for this article would be: "St.Clair wins $25M from Sony for digital camera patent".
Re:Not exactly JPEG patents (Score:2, Informative)
Now that I think about it, the Marineer 4 spacecraft that flew past Mars in 1965 used palette simplification, which can be considered a form of compression. Although the TV image from its cameras produced analog signals, the Marineer images were sent back as digital (binary) data. IIRC, the palette (grey-scale) composed
Unisys (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Unisys (Score:2)
Re:Unisys (Score:2)
Why would they stop being bastards now? The real question is whether there are any other submarines in the water, or if LZW becomes totally free and clear on whatever magical day in June.
Implications for C# (Score:5, Interesting)
Does this not pave the way for MS to enforce patents on anyone implementing their
Also, why is it that people say Java is proprietary, but ISO standards are not? In the JCP, in order to get anything accepted, you must relinquish all patent rights in it. Sounds to me like the JCP is better than ISO of ensuring that a standard is not proprietary.
Re:Implications for C# (Score:2)
What we need is a system where standards becomes fully free, free to use, free of patent claims, etc.
Re:Implications for C# (Score:2)
However, you are free to implement any of them from what I can tell. SUN doesn't want people to use their logo or claim compatiblity until you have been certified, bu
Re:Implications for C# (Score:2)
Re:Implications for C# (Score:2)
2004 (Score:3, Insightful)
So what? They can still dedicate the next 20 years suing people who violated their patent before 2004.
learn your lessons NOW people (Score:4, Insightful)
MP3. Get it through your heads, people. Using these patent-encumbered tech only comes back to bite you where it hurts -- 5 years down a committed tech track. PNG, OGG,
duh (Score:3, Insightful)
maybe tomorrow someone will pop up with a patent that covers the compression that zLib uses (g'bye PNG).
who would you yell at then?
-c
Re:duh (Score:2)
Bottom line, you can't trust that a 'friendly' company won't end up selling its 'friendly' patents to a 3rd party which doesn't feel like being so friendly any more.
Don't use any patented code, whatsoever, for any reason, unless there is a legal basis for believing that the patent will not be used against you. Don't trust the goodwill of a company.
Re:duh (Score:2)
The entire point is that you may not KNOW if there's a patent involved or not. Sure, there's not a publicly known patent involved with PNG or OGG. That LZW patent (which affected GIF) was really well known now wasn't it?
As the prior poster said - what if it's discovered that part of OGG or PNG or whatever is patented? Then you're just as SOL as you are now.
And while I support going to less encumbered standards (such as OGG or PNG), the reality is that the entire patent system needs to b
And the next problem... (Score:2)
The bottom line is, you can never be sure that a program or standard is free from p
Re:duh (Score:2)
That isn't likely since the compression method was published at least 26 years ago. I only say "isn't likely" since many bogus re-patents have probably slipped through.
Re:learn your lessons NOW people (Score:2)
I wouldn't say it's impossible, either. Especially when you consider some of extremly broad software patents that have made it, such as the JPEG one.
Patents are not doing anything close to the original intended function, unless that was to provide a revenue stream for worthless companies that can't make a buck on their own merits.
Re:learn your lessons NOW people (Score:2)
My point is that oft times patent encumbered tech is the only tech available for that application. If the choices that are available today, were available 5 years ago, I have no doubt that most developers would've made the 'right' choice.
I agree that using patented technology has its drawbacks, but if there's nothing else around, it's what you will use.
Why is this so bad? If I develop a
What next? (Score:3, Funny)
2004 (Score:3, Insightful)
This means that you shoudl not be USING the patented technology UNTIL the patent expires.
Does anyone know EXACTLY what's covered? JPEG is huge and has many optional peices. If someone tells me what bits are patented I will start looking at public code to see what can be changed to preserve functionality while still providing JPEG access.
I can hear their attorneys now. (Score:3, Funny)
Looking for prior art (translation from patentese) (Score:2)
Re:Looking for prior art (translation from patente (Score:2)
Re: No, the first Mavica debuted in 1981 (Score:2)
1. Patent digital car equipped with a removable digital media capable of storing route and diagnostic data in one of several user selectable formats
2. #1 with an option for letting the user select the compression ratio or other compression algorithm parameters.
3. #1 with the removable media being a floppy disk.
The CCD has always been solid state, and in fact Sony's first Mavica [digicamhistory.com] unit dates back to 1981. It had removable media. To be able to patent any sort of digital data capture dev
Re: No, the first Mavica debuted in 1981 (Score:2)
What format did this first Mavica use? The patent is not on the addition of compression - it's on letting the user select the use of a standard format common on Macs (PICT) or on PCs (I think it was PCX at the time) depending on what machine the user was expecting to read the pictures on.
Yes, it's a lame patent, but it was novel and nonobvious at the time.
Just another reason to throw money at Xiph (Score:2)
When it comes to intellectual property.. (Score:2)
Re:jpeg alternative? (Score:4, Informative)
We've been using PNG for the past 3 years for our projects without any problems or hitches.
Take a look at the PNG Home Site [libpng.org]
Re:jpeg alternative? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:jpeg alternative? (Score:2)
While for say, web graphics PNG may be as good as JPEG, The compression ratio for JPEG is in general much much better for natural images (eg photos). If the patent issue turns out to become very nasty, we may have to adopt the next one (JPEG2000). Situation is similar to the gif->png story.
Re:jpeg alternative? (Score:5, Informative)
They both have their uses. For image storage, PNGs are better as they are lossless, but for transmission over slow links a lossy JPGs is much more effective.
Gifs/pngs are better suited for drawn images with a small variation in detail, where jpeg is better for photographs or other images with high detail.
And PNG support in IE is horrible. In a recent project I worked on recently I had to convert most of the PNGs to GIFs because IE did not support transparency correctly, let alone the alpha channel. Things were wonderful in Mozilla, whereas in IE they were horrible with lots of jagged edges and I did not know why at the time. Then I realised it was the alpha channel that Mozilla blended the image correctly with the background, and in IE it was a mess. I had to make various gifs with different color backgrounds to achieve the same effect in IE.
The project I am talking about is in here [sertorio.ipv.pt]. You can use login test, password test to see what I am talking about, namely the icons on the table after login. It's in portuguese but you shouldn't have many problems with that I hope.
Regards,
pedro
Re:jpeg alternative? (Score:2)
But I agree, the engineers over at M$ should fix the alphachannel stuff for PNG (etc) asap.
Re:jpeg alternative? (Score:2)
Re:jpeg alternative? (Score:2)
Re:jpeg alternative? (Score:3, Informative)
This is ill-informed rubbish and should not have been modded up to its current level of 5. PNG is a replacement for GIF, not a replacement for JPEG. JPEG is a lossy compression scheme intended for photographic images, which can achieve extremely high compression ratios. PNG is a lossless scheme applicable to any kind of image. For photos, you can easily get a factor of 40 compression with JPEG on an image where PNG would give you a fac
Re:jpeg alternative? (Score:2)
They can't sue ALL of us before 2004, and there are still a lot of deep pockets for them to get to.
Too bad Sony doesn't have a patent on registering ridiculous patents and suing only the people you think you'll get the most money out of.
These people have the same scruples as spammers. They think that just because
Re:Enough already (Score:3, Interesting)
> them to have got out of it already?
It's a return of 384 times their investment (38400%) but even so...
An interviewer once asked multi-billionaire J. Paul Getty "You're a very rich man. How much is enough?"
He smiled and answered quietly, "Just a little bit more."
Re:Enough already (Score:2, Insightful)
Anyways this is probly even further off topic, but what really is the point to amassing monitary wealth? It seems to me that wealth should be given back to the community to try and make it a better place. The path bettering oneself is not through money but through what is inside. You must give up external wealth to gain internal wealt
Re:Enough already (Score:2)
(I know it's not feasible, but it's interesting to t
Re:Enough already (Score:2)
Most of your economic theories break down at the very high end anyway - it's not like the wealth woulnd't be created if they didn't get it, it'd be just be redistributed.
Here's another though experiment: How about, instead of paying stock dividends, any profits generated by a company had to be funneled into bonuses for all the employees?
Re:Enough already (Score:2)
Re:Enough already (Score:2)
"It's a little like taking your best point-scorer out of the ball game."
Actually, its very different. In a ballgame, that scorer is on your side, and they help you win (at the expense of the other team). In the economy, everyone is more or less competing, so that one person's obscene greed comes at the expense of everyone else.
That alone is not an argument to take them out of the game, however. It's to the economy's benefit that some people are richer than others, but how
Re:Enough already (Score:2)
My favourite quote (Score:2)
Re:Enough already...money=reproductive success. (Score:2)
Or as Batman said:
"Chicks dig the car."
Getting as much material wealth as possible will help your kids reproduce and help carry on your genes for a long time.
IMHO, the effect is partially mitigated by modern society 'cause it keeps rich guys in check and such. But if contraception and prevailing notions of monogamy didn't exist...and hell, stratified society, rich guys would have a lot more children. Just look at late 19th century mormons. Average # o
Re:FUCK PATIENTS (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Where? (Score:2)
Re:Where? (Score:2)
Re:HOLY BULLSHIT (Score:2)
First of all, it's spelled copyright. Second, you can't copyright ideas. That's what patents are for. Third, as absurd an idea it may seem today to say that someone invented the digital camera, the patent was filed back in 1990. It may seem obvious now, but the standard is whether it was obvious at the time it was invented. You can bet that Sony tried their damndest (probably s