eBay guilty Of Patent Infringement, Ordered To Pay 70
theodp writes "Remember that patent infringement lawsuit brought against eBay? A U.S. District Court jury just ordered the online auction house to pay $35 million for infringing on patents for programs and procedures to operate an Internet-based auction."
There's No Way... (Score:3, Insightful)
Maybe this will prove to be the best thing that happened for patent law in recent history. It could lead to some actual productive reforms...
Federal PR (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Federal PR (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Federal PR (Score:1)
Re:Federal PR (Score:1)
Buy a judge! (Score:4, Informative)
Buying a President is easier, I admit. Just give him a "campaign contribution". But so you get your favorite judge on the bench. So what? One they have that lifetime tenure, federal judges tend to quickly develop a nasty sense of independence.
Consider Richard Nixon. He managed to appoint no less than 4 justices to the U.S. Supreme Court. Not one of those justices voted in his favor when his most important case came in front of them [landmarkcases.org].
If you have any actual evidence that Microsoft fixed any of its cases, let's see it. Otherwise, spare us your glib ignorance.
Re:Buy a judge! (Score:1)
Re:Buy a judge! (Score:2)
What eventually saved the day for MS was George W. Bush the election. Which put a Microsoft-friendly guy in charge of anti-trust prosecutions, effectively ending the case. Now who elected this guy? You did. That's true even if you assume the Florida vote was rigged. That s
Re:Buy a judge! (Score:1)
1) I did not make the accusation that Microsoft bought any judges or presidents. You read too much into my comment. I was trying to be funny.
2) I agree with your ideas about politics and I am a politically progressive person.
Re:Buy a judge! (Score:2)
Re:There's No Way... (Score:2)
To goto court they have to expend legal costs (L) they also have a large investment in the patent system via a number of patents (P) and we are talking about a one time 35 million dollar free (X).
If X P + L then it makes sense to simply pay it, and it has the added benefit of making software patent law more rock solid for them to stand on in future cases.
I am guessing that P + L outweight X by a good amount -- add in the benefits of stro
Re:There's No Way... (Score:1)
This is great because, (Score:3, Interesting)
You can boycott Amazon.com all you want. You can make T-Shirts. Post on slashdot....whatever. But until you get a big company with lots of lawyers and money, fighting for what you want, it's never going to happen.
Now, E-bay will probably not want to do away with the entire software patent system (which is the right way to go, in my opinion), but unless you have someone to fight the battle, you're never going to win the war.
Re:This is great because, (Score:1, Offtopic)
"The first states that information conveyed by market prices is necessary to determine how best to use scarce resources in production."
"The second states that a centralized planner can never acquire all of the information that is in the hands of decentralized economic actors, and that prices allow that information to be harnessed by individual deci
Re:This is great because, (Score:2)
That's just the kind of wooley headed thinking that got us into this mess in the first place.
Jury Nullification (Score:4, Informative)
Jury Nullification [greenmac.com]
Re:Jury Nullification (Score:2)
Überinformative (Score:1)
Deja-vu (Score:4, Interesting)
Reading back the original discussion is amazing how many posts were far off the mark and how few were right on the button. For one, I didn't see any among the dozens and dozens I read who even mentioned the "buy it now" aspect of the patent...
Re:Deja-vu (Score:1)
Jurors. (Score:4, Insightful)
From the Article (Score:3, Informative)
Re:From the Article (Score:4, Funny)
One of the others is the "Buy Now" button. How can this be pattented is beyond me, tho (i guess some brick-a-brack behind the scenes (I always wanted to use the "brick-a-brack" expression)).
Re:From the Article (Score:2)
Re:From the Article (Score:2)
Re:From the Article (Score:2, Funny)
And you would have got away with it too, if it hadn't been for those pesky ks.
bric-a-brac [reference.com]
Re:More Frivolous Lawsuits, McDonalds (Score:2)
And remember to check the actual facts of that case when considering it, since it wasn't nearly as frivolous as this (commonly presented but somewhat misleading) summary makes out.
Check your facts (Score:2, Informative)
This was no frivolous lawsuit. For the facts, see this. [atla.org]
Re:Check your facts (Score:3, Insightful)
The facts are very simple. Allowing patents on business processes was a stupid idea. The only beneficiaries are the folks who can file a submarine patent, watch someone else think of it too, and then after they've made the effort to develop the idea, sue them.
The $35M verdict is probably peanuts for EBay, but that doesn't lessen the wrongfulness. This is how you kill inventiveness and creativity: By allowing leech
Re:Check your facts (Score:2)
I happen to agree that pate
Re:Check your facts (Score:2)
Re:Check your facts (Score:2)
The patent being defended in this case was filed November 7, 1995. (see the patent application [uspto.gov])
eBay went into business in September 1995. (see company overview [ebay.com])
Yet, somehow, the jury found no evidence of prior art, and that the company that was in business before the patent was filed violated the patent?
Moreover, eBay "does not allow an avenue to allow participants to speculate on the price of collectable[sic] or used goods in an electronic market place." This was one
Re:More Frivolous Lawsuits, McDonalds (Score:2)
Who is the jerk moderator who made this comment flamebait? He simply made a point and then gave an example of a really frivilous lawsuit? If I had mod points, I would mod this dude back up. I mean it's no +5, but why should he get modded down? What crap!
Re:More Frivolous Lawsuits, McDonalds (Score:1)
New Business Model . . . (Score:4, Insightful)
From the Article:
"Woolston said he is 'walking on sunshine' over of the favorable verdict. The former technology expert for the CIA has prevailed in patent violation cases with other Internet companies before, including GoTo.com, now Overture Services. He enforced his patents with online car seller AutoTrader.com, which offers auctions as part of its service. He's also in the midst of a patent dispute with Priceline.com." [Emphasis mine]
When companies sue, lawyers profit. Looks like a profitable e-commerce business model now exists where the e-commerce business is sued for violating questionable patents. What we really need is for the US Supreme Court to overrule the previous ruling that business practices are patentable. This would ease the burden on the USPTO and quash these law suits.
Re:New Business Model . . . (Score:1)
I agree with your comment that business methods should not be patentable, though the bash against lawyers seems to have nothing to do with the issue o
Re:New Business Model . . . (Score:2, Insightful)
A common theme on slashdot. It's bad for lawyers to get paid for what they do.
Here's some others I'm sure we'll see someday:
"When cars break down, mechanics profit."
"When bodies break down, doctors profit."
"When people want homes, realtors profit."
"When people want cars, dealers profit."
"When nerds want to be entertained, CmdrTaco profits."
The gory details (Score:5, Informative)
Beating to the punch... (Score:3, Insightful)
Odds are none of these companies getting these ridiculous patents thought that someone might beat them to the punch!
If someone is gonna benefit and make mucho $$$ might as well be that little guy.
I'm suprised that the big ass companies haven't flip-flopped, "Software patents are a bad idea".
Oh yeah now they are, sure.
Complete and utter bull crap (Score:2, Informative)
If you patented that... (Score:1)
tough luck.
Re:If you patented that... (Score:1)
Re:Complete and utter bull crap (Score:1)
unfortunately that is government (Score:1)
Re:unfortunately that is government (Score:1)
Re:unfortunately that is government (Score:1)
Jury power (Score:1)
50's tech kitsch (Score:2)
This supposedly patentable idea seems to be of the same variety. It's not a old fashioned auction (where people accidentaly bid on things with hilarious results), no siree, it's a computerized auction: of the future!!!!!
The first patent (Score:2)
At the auction date, perspective participants log onto the consignment node auction mode locally or through the consignment node network and await the first good to be auctioned. It is understood that in the best mode of the invention the participant will have a data terminal with a digital to analog converter such as a "sound blaster" and speaker, the digital to analog capability may be used in the auction mode to bring the aural
Re:The first patent (Score:1)
December 24, 1993 M:tG auction [google.com]
It's easy to find others which show the proxy bidding feature and there may well be other features with prior art.
Software Patents Rock! Pay Up EBay! (Score:1)
Patents ... I have one! I disagree. (Score:2)
While I have no problem with getting a patent on a product or process that is truly new, I have a great deal of difficulty accepting the "do X on a computer" where X is a current/old practice.
I also have problems with many of the "algorithm" patents as in many cases this is tantamount to patenting a fact. (historically you could not patent the discovery of a fact, ie Newton could not have pate
What were these people smoking? (Score:1)
Each of these two patents appears to have exactly one claim which could even remotely be considered broad enough to be applicable to eBay.
Most of the independent claims are cluttered with enough extraneous and hoary specifics to make them just laughably inapplicable.
When you get further down to the broadened independent claims without so many specifics, it still doesn
Patenting of goals, not technology (Score:1)
BTW, perhaps if ebay made their site nearly identical to the prior art of auction systems, they would have an easier time.
cash register (Score:1)