Google and Yahoo Settle Overture Lawsuit 106
An anonymous reader writes "Google and Yahoo have apparently settled their ongoing lawsuit involving patented on-line ad technology owned by Yahoo subsidiary Overture. (U.S. Patent 6,269,361). According to reports, Google will issue 2.7 million common shares to Yahoo in return for a license. Read more about the infringement suit here. This move is expected to lower any potential downsides to Google's upcoming IPO."
Re:My Rights Online? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:My Rights Online? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:My Rights Online? (Score:2)
Re:My Rights Online? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:My Rights Online? (Score:1)
(Wait, maybe it was that... I like my women like I like my dressing; creamy and italian?)
Please mod me down.
Re:My Rights Online? (Score:1)
Re:My Rights Online? (Score:2, Informative)
The fundamental precept of American law is the right. Thus all legal issues in American courts involve rights to some degree or other. All such questions of rights are inherently a question of your rights even if your are not a party to the action.
In this case the question is the right to develop and deploy certain methods of list sorting for use online. That would be your rights, as per above.
So what portion of this is
Re:My Rights Online? (Score:1)
So that it might encompass IT.
KFG
Re:Alternative headline (Score:3, Funny)
Some licence (Score:2)
How many shares are google issuing? What percantage will end up in the hands of yahoo?
Re:Some licence (Score:1, Redundant)
You must be new here.
Re:Some licence (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Some licence (Score:1)
I think it will be good long-term investment as a premier internet blue stock.
Anyway, time will tell.
(for anyone interested I developed few web apps in rebol, check them at my site http:www.wsbears.com/charts.html [wsbears.com], suc
Re:Some licence (Score:2, Informative)
IIRC, Google is issuing about 16 million shares (not including these 2.7) in its IPO, which comprise 7% of all its shares. So percentage-wise, not really all that much.
Re:what percent? (Score:1, Informative)
Shares as cash? (Score:5, Interesting)
My understanding is that if a share is not sold, you don't have a cent yet in your pocket.
The article estimated that would net Yahoo as much as an additional $149 million at the high end of Google's expected IPO price range. However, could (and would) Yahoo sell all shares at the high end price though?
Re:Shares as cash? (Score:5, Informative)
Shares have value, even if a company isn't public. It's simply a little easier to place a value on a public company, since you have so many opinions floating around in the market.
LOL (Score:5, Funny)
Exec 2: "Yeah, but look, this IPO thing is great! Look, it's so easy. I can just create a couple million shares here and and do whatever I..."
Exec 1: "Problem solved."
Re:LOL (Score:2)
Probably they want to give them those non-existing shares.
Don't be (d)evil!
Heh... (Score:2)
It's still a good deal... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:It's still a good deal... (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:It's still a good deal... (Score:1)
Re:It's still a good deal... (Score:1)
A point/counterpoint, both valid near as I can see. I was replying that no one knows (publically yet) what they will do with them. The implied assumption in the parent was that they would retain them, I reject that, as
do only evil (Score:2, Insightful)
infringe on gooogles.com trademark
infringe on froogles.com trademark
infringe on gmail trademark
infringe on overture patent
track all searches via cookies and IP address
make stored information available to govt agencies
Seems like.. (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Seems like.. (Score:5, Insightful)
A) Lost the lawsuit, and/or
B) muddied the IPO waters by fighting at this time.
This was a strategic move by Google.
Odd behavior? (Score:4, Insightful)
First: When you are about to execute an IPO it is usually undesireable to have lawsuits hanging over your business. This is especially true when the suit is over a patent on your primary source of revenue.
Second: Settling lawsuits is common business practice even with suites that you would likely win. The cost of going to court and defending against the suit, not to mention possible damage to your company's image, is usually higher than the settlement's cost. Therefore, the settlement is viewed as a reduction in operating cost.
Finally: This particular settlement costs Google $0.00. They are literally manufacturing the "money" for this settlement. They are paying in stock. Stock that does not yet have a market value. And, any perceived loss on the potential sale of the stock is made up for by adding more stock to the IPO. It works GREAT for Google, from a business perspective.
Re:Odd behavior? (Score:2)
Just because they are not paying cash does not make it any less real.
Re:Odd behavior? (Score:5, Insightful)
That's not really the way it works. You can't issue stock for free. Stock is just a percentage of your company. With more outstanding stock, those IPO shares would be worth, say,
That being said, if you think your shares are going to be overvalued at IPO, then this strategy it works great in the long run. It's the only way a company like AOL could buy a company like Time Warner.
Re:Odd behavior? (Score:4, Interesting)
Your opinion is about as valuable as an accountant's opinion on network security implmentation.
Issues shares cost Google money, which is why Google had to absorb a quarterly charge of $250-$300 million. This will make Google lose money for the quarter - the quarter in which they planned to go public. For your information, in Q3 of 2003, Google only earned $20.4 million.
Yahoo, however, will increase its stake in Google to 4%. It has already announced that it will likely sell a large percentage; this will make Yahoo's Q3 look great compared to Google's. The sell-off is likely to decrease Google's stock price further, if indeed Google does go public when it had planned. Yahoo will also forever be able to say Google's ad technology is based on theirs.
Lastly, search engine preference change. For a while, Yahoo! was on top. Altavista (now owned by Yahoo!, who also owns Imktomi) was once on top. Google is now the king. Who is to say in a few years, Toema, meta search engines, or even Yahoo! will not be on top?
If you think this is an "excellent busines sstaretgy" or Google, think again!
Re:Seems like.. (Score:2, Interesting)
So instead there are warnings in the prospectus, the unregistered shares buyback offer, the Yahoo dispute, the dislike of Wall Street and the day-trading audience... Keeps the too nervous and too speculation-prone types out of the club. Warren Buffet does the same thing with his $100,000 per share
Yahoo already owned some of Google (Score:5, Interesting)
Things get worse and worse everyday for Google, and to think they had months when the hype was absolutely unreal, yet they failed to capitalize. To quote Richard Russell, the guru market timer: "Google may know the web, but they know nothing about markets".
2.7M *more* shares issued? (Score:2, Insightful)
IP lawyers seems to be hard at work lately (Score:5, Insightful)
The internet is a system that serves, among other things, as a conduit for exchanging ideas. Someone said that the internet never forgets. It is possible that most the newer patents involving software and the web are invalid due to prior art which can be found by searching the net. Someone else may have thought about it and posted it somewhere.
Is there a special place on the net where people can go and post ideas so as to make it impossible for the greedy bastards to patent them?
Re:IP lawyers seems to be hard at work lately (Score:1)
Right here, we all *promise* we wont exploit them or anything
Problem with web based ideas, is that they are public, I believe the GPL is the best protection at present, but even that is being exploited by unscrupulous corps.
Re:IP lawyers seems to be hard at work lately (Score:4, Interesting)
IP law is indicitive of the economy as a whole. When the economy is doing well, people/companies have more money for filing patents/trademark/etc. When the economy is slower, people save more money (less filings), and also are more likely to go after people (attempting to extract money from their techonology.)
If you invented something completely new and revolutionary, such as Bell's telephone, or the Wright brothers' plane, would you want to earn money from it for some time- or let anyone and everyone produce it and make the money (instead of you). Patents provide an incentive to discover and invent new things, and ensure your time, money and efforts don't go to waste.
The problem we have now is that patent offices worldwide are backed up, and often patent examiners are not qualified. For example, up until about 5 years ago, the USPTO would not accept computer science degrees as a qualification for patent agents/examiners- this was left to people with electrical engineering degrees.
At our firm, we have noticed that in the past 3-6 months, the USPTO is less friendly in approving patents- even for things that we believe are new & patentable. The European Patent Office has been rejecting things as well, for technologies that we believe are new & unique.
It is a myth that patents are incentives (Score:2)
It is funny you should say this because some of the most creative geniuses in the history of the world (Isaac Newton, Mozart, Beethoven, Blaise
Re:It is a myth that patents are incentives (Score:5, Interesting)
For the record, patents protect inventions (such as the Flowbee [flowbee.com], and not ideas such as gravity (Newton), metaphysics (Descartes). I imagine that since Pascal was producing adding machines, he likely would've liked protection for his invention. The Wright brothers did not get a patent for flying, or the Bernoulli Effect, they got a patent for a machine that performed these functions. As for Mozart & Beethoven, this is not patent law- it's copyright. And yes, those two were quite wealthy back in their time.
There are people in the third world right now who are laughing at your patent laws. They're selling copies of Windows and MS Office in the streets for pennies on the dollar. Heck, they're laughing at them right here in the US. Music download has become an addictive pasttime for some people.
This is copyright law again, as the underlying issue is protecting an original work of authorship. I agree with you on this part. The copyright holders in the US are doing a terrible job of adapting to new technologies. As for patents in the Third World, like pharaceuticals, that's messed up as well. Drugs are needed in certain areas, and should be available- but companies still need to make money.
Re:It is a myth that patents are incentives (Score:2)
Re:It is a myth that patents are incentives (Score:3, Informative)
If I have software to carry out this Yahoo patent, and rather than execu
Re:It is a myth that patents are incentives (Score:1)
For the record, patents protect inventions (such as the Flowbee, and not ideas such as gravity (Newton), metaphysics (Descartes). I imagine that since Pascal was producing adding machines, he likely would've liked protection for his invention. The Wright brothers did not get a patent for flying, or the Bernoulli Effect, they got a patent for a machine that performed these functions. As for Mozart & Beethoven, this is not patent law- it's copyright. And yes, those two were quite wealthy back in their ti
Bell's telephone? Bzzzzt. Try Antonio Meucci (Score:4, Interesting)
"If you invented something completely new and revolutionary, such as Bell's telephone..."
What a great example from an IP lawyer! The telephone was invented by Antonio Meucci [italianhistorical.org]. He died seven years into a lawsuit with Bell. There's even been a Congress resolution [theage.com.au] admitting he invented it.
Oh the irony.
"Patents provide an incentive to discover and invent new things, and ensure your time, money and efforts don't go to waste."
Try telling that to Meucci.
cLive ;-)
Re:Bell's telephone? Bzzzzt. Try Antonio Meucci (Score:4, Informative)
And I presume you know everything about anything in your field as well? People do make minor mistakes sometimes.
That said, I stand corrected. I guess my knowledge for Jeopardy has been improved. That story is likely not atypical for that era, with all the railroad trusts, etc- money talks. Also, today you have 1 year in the US to file a patent application from the first sale or public disclosure anywhere in the world. Meucci would be out of luck today, as it was a decade before he filed anything.
Not being an expert in 19th century patent law, I can make a few comments about if this happened today.
1- The US is a "first to invent" country, which awards patents to the person able to prove they invented it first. The rest of the world is "first to file."
2- The US now has the Disclosure Document Program [uspto.gov], which will serve as evidence of the date of conception of an invention. You still need to file, and cannot sit on an invention for years. The filing fee is $10.
3- Provisional patent application, which has less statutory disclosure requirements, has a $85 filing fee. Often used for filing a journal article before publication.
Re:IP lawyers seems to be hard at work lately (Score:1)
Um, I don't mean to seem insolent here, but how often is your firm filing patents for things that you don't believe are new and patentable? And by filing these patents, aren't your clients contributing to the overall problem?
Re:IP lawyers seems to be hard at work lately (Score:5, Insightful)
It's interesting that you should bring this up, because so many inventions are as much a product of their time as of a particular inventor. I'd contend that the aeroplane wasn't a particularly unique invention, although it was probably hard to tell at the time due to communication issues. The telephone and the electric light bulb most likely weren't, either. If they hadn't been invented then someone else likely would have invented them within a short span of time.
The Wright Brothers most likely invented their own powered flying device without help, and clearly got the most recognition for it. But there were several other people elsewhere doing exactly the same thing independently. eg. Richard Pearse [wikipedia.org] is one example who arguably flew before the Wright Brothers. There are several others in different parts of the world.
The point isn't so much that someone did it first, but that several people were able to independently do it at the same time. Why should only one inventor or otherwise capable person be able to profit just because they were the first to independently extend what was already known?
Unfortunately I think that's what's happening quite frequently in today's world. It's particularly an issue now that improved communication can mean several people independently invent almost the same thing weeks apart, simply as an extention of existing knowledge and a reaction to something they needed or wanted more than any revolutionary business goal. Yet if the first person happened to file a patent on it, it's too bad for everyone else. They're not allowed to earn without paying up.
Re:IP lawyers seems to be hard at work lately (Score:1)
(for software patents) i have read on several places that no statistical evidence has ever been found supporting the "patents stim
Re:IP lawyers seems to be hard at work lately (Score:3, Interesting)
No you didn't. Patents are all about greed and selfishness. It is a way for an entity to gain a monopoly on a market and keep everybody else out while it is making a killing. Patents are not conducive to good human relations. It is just another facet of the dog-eat-dog nature of our economic and social system. It's a form of our collective madness. It can only lead to chaos and destruction. It's rather sad because it does not have tobe that way.
Re:IP lawyers seems to be hard at work lately (Score:1)
Re:IP lawyers seems to be hard at work lately (Score:1)
Hey!!! I said that! I'm getting my lawyer....
Yahoo Profits from Google IPO?! (Score:1)
The underlying motive... (Score:4, Funny)
I was skeptical at first until I was given a demo of the new technology by one of my old graduate school friends who is working for Google. The tool's interface is similar to Google's current standard search interface (although a verbal UI is under development). The killer feature, the feature that would have made Google search ubiquotous, is the ability to search for physical objects. I simply typed in "my keys" and I was given a reply "Your right pocket", along with a short description of the object, the # of key, use of the keys, and their GPS location. Amazing!
My friend, who for obvious reasons must go unnamed, told me the lawsuit will force google to shut down the project because the only way they could fund it was through context based advertisements (based on the infringing patent). He did however point me to this backdoor [google.com]. I can't promise it will stay up very long... especially with the Slashdot crowd using and abusing it... so check it out while you can.
Patent number (Score:1)
Re:Patent number (Score:2)
If it's Machine Vision, I'd love to correspond with you. I did some work in the early 90's on hardware emulations of physical perception systems.
--
Re:Patent number (incresingly off topic ;-) (Score:1)
Each more offtopic than the last. (Score:2)
Oh, and congrats on the patent!
Good-Google Bad-Yahoo (Score:1)
Aj
out of court, out of mind (Score:2)
So a
Maybe a bigger deal? (Score:1, Informative)
Do you think (Score:1)
is the patent legit (Score:1)
Re:PATENTS FUCKING SUCK (Score:1, Offtopic)
So says the anonymous coward. If you're going to rag on someone/thing, have the balls to put your name behind it.
Re:PATENTS FUCKING SUCK (Score:1)
I think you need to put your crack pipe down and take a giant step away from it.