Whose Prior Art Filing Triggered Eolas Reexam? 136
theodp writes "The Eolas patent case history shows another prior art filing was quietly made ten days before the widely-publicized W3C filing and two weeks before Tim Berner-Lee's reexam request. Now Ray Ozzie speculates the earlier filing was one being floated at the time that was jointly signed by a number of other parties who supported W3C member Dave Raggett's prior art, which Microsoft unsuccessfully tried to use in the $521 million Eolas lawsuit. Ozzie also notes that those involved argued for all to stand solidly behind the Raggett prior art and not cite anything else. So who are these other parties, and was it their filing and lobbying that triggered the Eolas reexam?"
Four Words (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Another Harpy dives on Al Gore's corpse (Score:5, Informative)
Go here [dailyhowler.com] and scroll down to "Where does spin come from? Inventing the Internet".
Re:Another Harpy dives on Al Gore's corpse (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Another Harpy dives on Al Gore's corpse (Score:4, Interesting)
Mr. Westinghouse didn't invent anything, or build anything with his own hands. He provided the money to make it possible.
From the definition of initiative: # [adj] serving to set in motion;
Mr. Westinghouse took initiative to create the power grid by setting in motion (via cash) the people to do so.
Gore did about the same with the internet, but he's a politician not a businessman. Thus, he did it with other people's money, not his own.
(And of the 100s of other people who also voted for it, any and all of those that were convinced to vote for it by Gore ADD to his initiative, they don't take away from it.)
Re:Another Harpy dives on Al Gore's corpse (Score:2)
I don't. RTFP. I use "take the initative" which is what he said. "Invent" and "take the initative" are completely separate things.
Re:Another Harpy dives on Al Gore's corpse (Score:2)
Re:Another Harpy dives on Al Gore's corpse (Score:2)
Bullshit!
Westinghouse did invent many things on his own - most notably the airbrake - and he got into the electric power business when Tesla convinced Westinghouse that polyphase AC would be better than compressed air (think air brake) for transmitting the power from Niagra Falls.
Re:Another Harpy dives on Al Gore's corpse (Score:2)
Eh? It was created by the US Military and public universities. Politicians were all over it.
Re:Mine! (Score:4, Funny)
Pay up.
If I hadn't stopped and ... (Score:3, Funny)
This is /. What was I thinking?!?!
I think... (Score:5, Insightful)
On the other hand, maybe that was the ever so famous shadow government. Can't have a thread without conspiracy, can we?
Re:I think... (Score:5, Funny)
Here on Slashdot? No. I think you agree to something like that when you register.
Lawsuit? (Score:2)
Re:Lawsuit? (Score:1)
How big are the chances that it is someone who is involved with FLOSS - Linux in particular - and is in fear, uncertainity and doubt whether Eolas would go after Mozilla (which the mysterious person/company distributes) next?
It was someone from here. (Score:1)
Shows the importance of publicity (Score:5, Insightful)
We all know how poorly the U.S. Patent Office has handled tech patent requests. What can you or I do to help the bad situation? Spread the word. In the Net universe, even the most famous tech god is only an email away.
Re:Shows the importance of publicity (Score:4, Insightful)
Maybe, just maybe, those are some companie involved with FLOSS that will be in trouble financially if Eolas attacks Mozilla and them (as they have distributed it and thusly violated the patent).
Macromedia (Score:3, Insightful)
No proof. Just a hunch.
Re:Shows the importance of publicity (Score:2, Funny)
How did you get my email?
I find the patent (Score:5, Informative)
Re:I find the patent (Score:3, Funny)
The same examiners who thought that 'one-click shopping' envolved a great leap forward in technology and/or business practices.
Re:I find the patent (Score:1, Informative)
What this is all about (Score:5, Informative)
These patents deal with browser plugins - and relate to a lawsuit that Microsoft lost.
Serious Question for L's and IANAL's (Score:5, Interesting)
How hard is it to file file art papers with the patent office? Does the patent office charge for these filings? Can anyone do it? Maybe it's time to generate some boilerplate filings and start attacking some of these bogus patents out there.
Re:Serious Question for L's and IANAL's (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Serious Question for L's and IANAL's (Score:2)
Someone correct me.
Re:Answer here (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Serious Question for L's and IANAL's (Score:2)
Re:Serious Question for L's and IANAL's (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.uspto.gov/web/forms/sb0042.pdf [uspto.gov]
There are several ways to file prior art depending on the status of the application, but this is likely what you are looking for. This filing, known as a "501", is free. It is unlikely that the PTO will decide to reexamine a patent on their own volition(known as sua sponte). Usually you have to file a request for a reexamination. The fee is about $9,000, plus the cost of counsel.
If you'd like to do some light reading on this kind of filing, it was created under Title 37 of the Code of Federal Regulations, rule 1.501 (cited as 37 C.F.R. 1.501). You can find a reference in the United States Code at 35 U.S.C. 301 (the law) and in the Manual of Patent Examining Procedure (MPEP), the book the patent examiners use, at MPEP 2202. All of these resources are on the web, but check that you are looking at the latest revision (Feb 2003, 8th edition, first revision). These are all available at the USPTO website.
This isn't intended to be legal advice, and this doesn't mean that I am accepting you as a client. If you are planning to try and take down a major patent (or do much of anything with the USPTO) you really ought to seek qualified representation. I'm not a lawyer, but I am a member of the patent bar (basically I have a license to file for patents).
Re:Serious Question for L's and IANAL's (Score:5, Interesting)
Wait, maybe that's the plan. It's like software companies intentionally putting bugs in their programs, then charging you even more to fix them and with upgrades. The patent office gets paid to grant a patent, and then gets paid again to revoke it. It's either sloppy workmanship or intentional deceipt.
If a bad patent is granted, what can the "little" guy do? The options are to have it reviewed or to violate it and risk have it go to court. Either way, it's expensive.
In other words, a patent law DOS attack (Score:5, Informative)
Hi!
Or, we're abusing the patent process to jerk around a competitor. Or we're abusing the process to defeat the nefarious schemes of companies we despise [oracle.com]. Or maybe we're senior citizens that have adopted filing patent claims as a hobby....
Once upon a time patents cost very little--and the actual costs of the USPTO (like lots of parts of the U.S. government) were borne by the average taxpayer. In the 1970s and following the government moved toward "user fees"--charging the recipients of a federal program for its costs. Thus visitors to most national parks pay a fee, cruise ship operators pay a fee for Coast Guard inspections, and children pay an annual fee to participate in 4-H. This is the same thing: the people who do business with the USPTO help fund its operation. And the cost structure deters people (hopefully) from clogging it unnecessarily.
Re:In other words, a patent law DOS attack (Score:2)
The
Re:Serious Question for L's and IANAL's (Score:2)
Moreover, if you're going to have a patent system, put the onus of proving that the patent is valid on the one filing it, not on the government.
Re:Serious Question for L's and IANAL's (Score:3, Insightful)
Really? Then would you mind explaining it to the rest of us?
I for one do NOT understand why it's so freakin' expensive to file a patent. It seems to me that this defeats the very purpose of patents. I mean, if I as a (hypothetical) independent inventor invent something new, but can't afford to file the patent, how is the patent system helping?
Right now, due to the costs involved, the patent system only helps th
Re:Serious Question for L's and IANAL's (Score:4, Informative)
True, this isn't what happens now apparently because they are swamped (something like a max of 8 hours allowed per patent review). So, in theory, they shouldn't be so expensive because not as much work is put into each one.
Re:Serious Question for L's and IANAL's (Score:2)
So, if I get this correctly, "Anonymous Coward" is a member of the patent bar, but is concerned enough that someone would somehow think that an informative posting on slashdot is going to be interpreted as accepting the entire Slashdot readership as clients.
To me, this is about as silly as "Warning: Do Not Spray In Eyes" on a can of deodorant.
Re:Serious Question for L's and IANAL's (Score:2)
Re:Serious Question for L's and IANAL's (Score:1, Interesting)
shown that there was prior art that could easily
have been found and the USPTO was essentially
asleep on the job, you should get that refunded.
But it's unlikely to happen.
Re:Serious Question for L's and IANAL's (Score:1)
Thus, I am pretty sure that you cannot file prior art at the PTO. It would simply be impractical and ultimately pointless as you would still be responsible for anything that wouldn't be filed with them.
Re:Serious Question for L's and IANAL's (Score:4, Interesting)
It sounds like it is possible for an ordinary person to contest patents. Of course the patent attys and other's who have a lot to lose will say all sorts of scary reasons why not, but here's a couple thoughts that I have on the subject...
1. The Scientologists tried to scare off their critics by throwing high dollar lawyers at them. Some of the critics countered very successfully by acting as their own lawyers and filing and handling their own cases. Seems to me that this tactic will work with the patent office since anyone should be able to represent themselves. What can the patent office do to you anyway for trying to use the system?
2. A while back the FCC had it's whole fee structure thrown out when it was declaired unconstitutional and discrimatory. I think the main reason was that it discriminated in favor of large businesses. Seems to me that the patent office is in the same boat today. Maybe a class action suit against the patent office fee structure is due.
3. No one really has come out and said if there is a fee for filing a prior art claim against an existing patent. Is there?
Re:Serious Question for L's and IANAL's (Score:2)
Re:Serious Question for L's and IANAL's (Score:1)
--3. No one really has come out and said if there is a fee for filing a prior art claim against an existing patent. Is there?--
I believe $90,000 is the amount that you have to come up with.
Re:Serious Question for L's and IANAL's (Score:3, Informative)
No, it costs nothing to file prior art. But they're not going to re-examine the patent just because you tell them of prior art. You have to pay them $9,000 for a re-examination.
Re:Serious Question for L's and IANAL's (Score:1, Interesting)
tkwww perhaps (Score:5, Interesting)
Announcing tkWWW Version 0.5 Alpha (Score:4, Informative)
Author: Joseph C. Wang (joe@athena.mit.edu)
tkWWW is a Tk interface to (WWW), which lets you send embedded buttons,
scrollbars, etc in hypertext written for WWW.
The Tk browser has the following advantages.
1. Since the entire user interface is written in an interpreted
language, it should be very easy to make modifications and extensions
to the system.
2. tkWWW can be configured with the "htext" widget which makes it is
possible to imbed Tk code into hypertext or with the "text" widget
which makes it possible to display multi-fonts. In the next few
months, there will be a new revision of tK which will allow imbeded
tK code with the "text" widget and support for the tkWWW "htext" widget
will be discontinued.
A quick Google returns some more info:
http://www.mit.edu/afs/athena/course/other/cdsd
http://public.planetmirror.com/pub/hpfreeware/T
http://www.funet.fi/pub/languages/tcl/harbor/ex
Eolas...i hated that elf too (Score:4, Funny)
Why only the Raggett citation? (Score:5, Interesting)
apparently, be too confusing for the patent office to handle. It
doesn't sound like the typical lawyer thing to do (which is to use
a shotgun approach). This is weird to me, and I would like to understand.
Re:Why only the Raggett citation? (Score:3, Insightful)
I don't understand why Microsoft does not support FFII [ffii.org] in Europe to get rid off patent legislation. Patents on software are so harmful. Nobody needs them except the patent attorneys who want to make profit.
software is well protected by copyright (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:software is well protected by copyright (Score:2)
Re:software is well protected by copyright (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:software is well protected by copyright (Score:3, Insightful)
On top of that, if making a prototype was technically impossible, then, imo the true innovation involved is in overcoming those technical barriers - conceptualizing is important but it's better protected by trade secret and/or copyrights than by patents.
Re:Why only the Raggett citation? (Score:1)
The most likely reason for citing just one prior art reference is so that the others can be held in reserve for subsequent court battles.
I'm not a lawyer blah blah blah, but I'm pretty sure that the courts will give great deferrence to the patent office's determination once they've evaluated the prior art reference. Thus, that reference would be somewhat tainted by having the PTO make a decision on it.
(For absolutely no valid reason, the courts presume that the PTO does its job. A patent holder only needs
Re:Why only the Raggett citation? (Score:1)
got ya beat Re:I patented everything! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:I patented everything! (Score:5, Funny)
A thing or process, that, either by explicit activation or automatically, performs with a probability less or equal to one, any intended or unintended action, covering a range of usefulnesses from zero to absolutely, where action is meant to include the trivial action, i.e. not changing its own state or the state of the environment at all nor hindering its own state or the state of its environment to change.
The value of a patent (Score:5, Insightful)
It's getting to the point where I'm starting to think it would be better to just outlaw patents. The abuses are getting ridiculous, and the Patent Office is not doing its job.
Posted by: Jim on February 9, 2004 12:43 PM
I think it's getting to the point where a U.S. patent is losing its value. When I hear about some IP being patented, it no longer means what it once meant. So, for example, when someone says "We have several patents on this" I yawn--even when the patents are non-software related.
BTM
Re:The value of a patent (Score:2)
Patents are a total joke. The only reason everyone is not suing everyone over patents is that no reasonably large companies are going to sue each other because of the surity of mutually assured destruction (i.e.: any reasonably large company can use there patents to bankcrupt any other), and no indivi
Patents suck because lawsuits require gobs o' cash (Score:5, Interesting)
The inventor of the Weed Whacker was some lone man somewhere in the US. He patented his device and made a sizeable sum of money from it. Demand was huge, and he just started out.
Well, legend has it Sears made their own weed whacker without obtaining rights to it and sold that to many eager customers who couldn't obtain the original weed whacker. The original inventor sued. Sears tied the case up in the courts until the inventory eventually had to give up because he ran out of money. His income dried up because sears essentially stole his sales.
I welcome corrections to this story, but it's when companies with huge amounts of money can kill lawsuits by making someone else spend what little money they have, that you realize that it's the legal process that is killing patents.
Comment removed (Score:5, Informative)
I know I am late... (Score:2, Funny)
Could it be ... MicroSoft?!? (Score:3, Interesting)
Think about it though: what sort of place would Microsoft be in with regards to the anti-trust/browser issue if they could no longer support "open standards" media formats in the browser (not that they couldn't, but they can use this as an excuse not to)? They would end up locking-in websites to support the Microsoft-only formats, and make IE the "browser of record" (If nothing else, the FUD factor would come to bear.)
Everyone seems to hate MicroSoft enough to overlook their apparent incompetence in the courtroom and in the cubicle. Could they really be gaming the system instead? Already they have led to the most obvious prior art going overlooked by the patent office (with the support of even the w3c!). Just why didn't MicroSoft fire their law firm over this?
Or, do you think that it would not be in MicroSoft's character to risk barrels of cash and get involved as an anonymous agent to cause havoc in the open standards battle? (Hmmmmm... maybe he has a point....)
Re:Ally McBeal (Score:1)
Now I could understand it if he had to sign a NDA if the technique in question was unpatented and a 'business secret'.
Re:Ally McBeal (Score:2)
Here's the patent number (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Here's the patent number (Score:3, Funny)
1) Design machine.
2) ???
3) Prophet.
The whole patent path was a mess... (Score:1)
Re:The whole patent path was a mess... (Score:2, Interesting)
Reexamination -- Here's the Deal (Score:4, Informative)
Litigation is difficult because the Patent Act provides that an issued patent is presumed to be valid. This means that the Court views all evidence through the "clear and convincing" standard of evidence (the civil law equivalent of "beyond a reasonable doubt"), and under very strict evidentiary rules (where testimonial evidence of prior uses is irrelevant unless corroborated by evidence that existed before the critical date of the patent. Moreover, exceptional (probably undue) deference is given to validity decisions made by the USPTO regarding art actually considered.
Reexamination can be done two different ways, inter partes (2 party) or ex partes (1 party). Ex partes reexam means that a petition is filed with the USPTO, citing the art and explaining why it raises a "substantial new question of patentability." (SNQP). If the PTO finds SNQP, they issue a reexam order, and the patent is examined in view of the new art forthwith and at expedited speed. No claims are presumed valid, and all art found by the examiner is fair game -- in short, it is treated by the USPTO as it was before the patent had issued. It's a "do-over," if you will, this time armed with SNQP art.
Upside of ex parte is that you are finished after you submitted the art. The downside is that you are finished after you submit the art -- you can't quibble again as the patentee argues for patentability, introduces new claims and such. You are out of the game from there on in -- it is just like initial prosecution all over again.
That's what inter partes is for. You get to "play along" with the applicant, sniping at him and arguing why both his arguments and new claims are invalid. You get to make a case, settled by the examiner, for invalidity. If you win, you can kill the patent.
The downside is that if you don't kill it, a patent that rises from reexamination, phoenix-like, may be weakened with possibly narrower claims, but is much, Much, MUCH stronger, because none of the art evaluated is going to be usable against subsequent claims. If the new claims are not so narrowed as to avoid infringement, you are pretty much left defenseless on validity grounds after the, now very angry, patentee sues your ass for infringement.
Now there is much more than I have indicated, the foregoing is super-simplified and, for that reason, not correct. if you are interested in submitting a petition for reexamination, by all means speak to an attorney before doing so.
On the other hand, this is an excellent low-cost way to kill patents in appropriate circumstances.
precisely (Score:2, Insightful)