Chinese DVD Makers Sue Over Royalties 208
Viceice writes "Afterdawn.com and DigiTimes are among many other news outlets reporting that DVD player makers from China are suing the 3C DVD Patent Group over royalties on patents held by the consortium. The suit accuses 3C alliance for price-fixing, unlawful tying of essential and non-essential patents together, group boycott and conspiracy to monopolize. According to the Chinese companies, typically U.S. patent licensing fees for other products are between 3 and 5 percent of the item's wholesale price, compared to the 50 percent for DVD players."
At least they have the guts... (Score:4, Interesting)
I only see this as the chinese companies trying to defend their position, nothing more. They want to be competitive, even more than they already are.
I am with China on this. (Score:1)
Surf the Internet via the robots.txt, it is a lot more fun.
Peace.
Re:At least they have the guts... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:At least they have the guts... (Score:2)
1) I may consider the Chinese government to be evil, but I don't consider the US government to be good. And I question the sanity of anyone who does.
2) An illegal cartel is an illegal cartel no matter the character of the entity pointing that out.
One might question whether it actually IS an "illegal cartel", but you didn't see fit to do that. (And I recognize that "illegal cartel" is my term. I don't remember the exact complaint quoted above. I don't have fine distinctions
Re:At least they have the guts... (Score:2)
They're claiming a patent cost of $20 per player. Think about it; it probably costs no more than $20 to make the damn things and who knows how much cheaper they'll get as they become totally commoditized. It's ridiculous. Pretty soon the majority cost of a computer system
Re:At least they have the guts... (Score:2)
With the current system even when production goes offshore the largest proportion of the benefits still goes to the inventors of the technology.
Is it just me? (Score:4, Insightful)
This is neither surprising nor representative (Score:1, Insightful)
You have to understand:
The CCP isn't a champion of intellectual property freedom.
They are champions of their intellectual property freedom.
There's a big difference there.
Dictatorships are always champions of their own freedom to do what they want, often at the expense of other peoples' freedom to do what they want. The whole China-Versus-Patents thing is just another example of that.
Re:This is neither surprising nor representative (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't like how US patents are abused, but I don't think doing away with patents will fix anything. You'd need a constitutional ammendment to do that anyway.
Re:This is neither surprising nor representative (Score:2)
What people (in the US) fail to understand is how their jobs would totally not be there if patents were abolished. When anyone can copy your design, or make minor changes (it's blue, not
Re:This is neither surprising nor representative (Score:2)
The countries with the cheapest labour still win, except now some rich guy gets richer, the products cost more for the consumers, and the rich guys money gets invested in low-wage countries anyway.
Unless, of course, you're talking about illegal immigrants cleaning the houses of the patent owners for less than minimum wage.
Re:This is neither surprising nor representative (Score:2)
doing away with patents... You'd need a constitutional ammendment to do that anyway.
No, you wouldn't. Nor would you need to ammend the constitution to abolish copyrights.
If you look at the constitution, section 8 says "The Congress shall have Power..." and clause 8 says "To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors t
Takings clause (Score:2)
Nor would you need to ammend the constitution to abolish copyrights.
Some have claimed that the Takings Clause of the Fifth Amendment ("nor shall private property be taken for public use, without just compensation") prohibits abolishing or abridging copyrights in existing works or patents in existing inventions unless the federal government buys the copyrights or patents at market price and PDs them. James v. Campbell, 104 U.S. 356 (1881) [findlaw.com].
Re:Takings clause (Score:2)
Re:Takings clause (Score:2)
Re:Takings clause (Score:2)
Re:Takings clause (Score:2)
The powers given do not come out of thin air. What the copyright owners and patent owners are granted is taken from everyone else. And frankly I dont see we get much compensation for that these days.
Re:Takings clause (Score:2)
First let me make a lesser non-contestable point. The government could abolish copyrights and patents at least in terms of terminating any grant of new ones.
As for existing ones, your link makes a good point but I think it was signifigantly linked to the circumstances. It was in terms of maintaining current law and that the government was not exempt from the existing structure. I would like to point out that some portions of copy rights have at times been "diminished" or "taken a
Re:Counterbalanced within a bill (Score:2)
Hmmm.... interesting theory. I'm not sure if there are any exceptions. However I'd wager that's purely artifact of the fact of constantly expanding copyright rather than by design. Chuckle.
Especially as how the only valid purpose for which congress may grant such rights is for the purpose of promoting progress. If congress is going to make some change that happens to "diminish" copyrights they can't simply decide to seize
Re:This is neither surprising nor representative (Score:4, Insightful)
This is wrong [theglobeandmail.com] on many levels.
The barrier to implementing research in China is much lower than in the rest of the developed world. Not only in an industrial sense, but in almost every field. Check out the foreign investment and developments in Beijing. People who think that China is just another cheap labour base are not taking in the big picture.
A professor was telling me that one of his collegues in China has graduate students willing to work 14 hour days 7 days a week, and lining up at his door to get a position in his lab. Contrast this with the declining number of graduate students (and the lack of funding for) in many fields in North America.
Now that we have globalization these patents really only help the management crust of the corporations. Everything else will get outsourced if it optimizes the finances, barring the so called "federal" corporations who are heavily subsidized by the government. Welcome to the new global community.
Re:This is neither surprising nor representative (Score:2)
Thus far, the only thing China is really good at is copying and making things very cheap.
Like the Japanese used to be?
Re:This is neither surprising nor representative (Score:2)
I'm sorry but until U.S. advertising is talking about new developments instead of appearances there really isn't grounds for complaint..
Re:This is neither surprising nor representative (Score:2)
I remember the same was said of the Japanese in the 70s.
Re:This is neither surprising nor representative (Score:2)
Re:Is it just me? (Score:1)
Appropriately enough, it says that they are interesting times.
Re:Is it just me? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Is it just me? (Score:3, Informative)
Proof? Oh wait this is slashdot. Edison's 1000 patents [rutgers.edu]. So when was the US championing freedom of IP?
Re:Is it just me? (Score:3, Informative)
The US declared independence in 1776. Edison was born in 1847. By the time Edison was patenting things, the US was among the richest countries in the world. It still had a long way to go to where it is today, but it was doing quite well.
Also, the US ignored it's own patents when Edison was around. Edison had patents on the camera which is why Hollywood is on the west coast: they didn
Re:Is it just me? (Score:2)
No, just business as usual. The first rule of capitalism is to use someone else's capital to generate your profits.
Francis Cabot Lowell (Score:5, Interesting)
If you look at the period during which the U.S. began its rise as an international economic power-- not the post-Reconstruction period during which it had already completed that rise, which is where Edison existed-- you see LOTS of examples of stuff like this, over multiple areas of intellectual property. Witness Charles Dickens' desperate attempts to get America's book publishers to actually respect his copyrights...
Re:Francis Cabot Lowell (Score:4, Interesting)
Industrial espionage goes way before that [popula.com].
Quote:
The methods of securing silk and weaving fabrics from it were held secret by the Chinese for nearly two thousand years. Alexander the Great was credited with discovering it in India during the Third Century B.C., though for centuries afterward Westerners could only import this mysterious new fabric. It was among the Chinese a capital offense to reveal the secrets of the trade or to export the eggs from which the worms were hatched, but that didn't stop two priests from smuggling some eggs in the hollows of their bamboo staffs and bringing them to Constantinople in 555 A.D. However, silk continued to be imported from Asia, as silk production in Europe was fraught with disaster and danger. Attempts to raise silkworms consistently failed, due to the difficulty of growing healthy mulberry trees. Even today, while many efforts have been made to produce silk in the United States and Europe, most raw silk still comes from China, Japan, Bengal, and other Asian countries, where labor is cheap, and the requisite Bombyx mori and mulberry leaves are plentiful.
Re:Is it just me? (Score:2)
Say sayonara to english internet and english boot messages, time to buck down and purchase that japaneese dictionary you were eyeing for a while!
Re:Is it just me? (Score:1)
In terms of geopolitical power, Great Britain has been eclipsed, and the U.S. is at it's high water mark. Nevertheless, I think the
Re:Is it just me? (Score:2)
Re:Is it just me? (Score:2)
The only reason you should brush up on your Japanese (besides WANTING to, 'cause while it may not get bigger it ain't going away) is that it will help you learn Chinese.
hahaha (Score:2)
What they are doing is trying to get into the game without playing by the rules.
Once they relly start to peak, you bet your ass they will want very tight IP laws.
Re:Is it just me? (Score:2)
Re:Is it just me? (Score:2)
Wait a minute. The article says:
"DVD player makers from China are suing the 3C DVD Patent Group over royalties on patents held by the consortium."
I keep telling you folks: China is the beta test site for America 2.0. We let them make the mistakes, then we implement what worked over here. If we can get the Chinese to adopt our s
Re:Is it just me? (Score:1)
Without any other context than your question, I'd say it means Linus, the whole EFF, the more enlightened members of IMB's management team, and a handful of Groklaw's more active members must have moved to North Korea.
Re:Is it just me? (Score:1)
The Intellectual Property Law of China (Score:2)
This should be required reading before posting on IP law and China: Ministry of Science and Technology: Laws and Regulations [most.gov.cn]
In Emglish translation:
The Patent Law of the People's Republic of China
Trademark Law of the People's Republic of China
Coyright Law of the People's Republic of China
Technology Contract Law of the People's Republic of China
Product Quality Law of the People's Republic of China
Re:Is it just me? (Score:2)
player I got that was made in China?
If the Chinese win a reprieve from the WTO,
maybe my next DVD player wil be free - just
bundled with a movie 3-pack from MGM
Re:Is it just me? (Score:2)
I don't understand; the US isn't "the greatest champion of intellectual property freedoms".
Re:Is it just me? (Score:2)
Which, funnily enough, simply puts them 100 years behind the USA.
China will be the death of the patent hegemony (Score:3, Insightful)
We've already seen this with the Red Dragon chip; this DVD thing may be the next big crack in the wall. Once Chinese industry is unburdened by patents, the rest of the world is going to have some other way to compete than government-granted monopolies on ideas in order to keep up.
Re:China will be the death of the patent hegemony (Score:2)
yes and no (Score:2)
so if china gets cut off and dvd players can't be made inexpensively elsewhere, people will have a choice for dvd players: pay more or go without.
eric
Re:China will be the death of the patent hegemony (Score:2)
Red dragon chip? (Score:2)
Course, I could be wrong. I mean it could be running Duke Nukem as we speak.
Re:China will be the death of the patent hegemony (Score:2)
Because when your economic growth is structurally dependent on export revenues, you don't want to give the governments of your markets an engraved invitation to shut down trade. And since respecting patents is a GATT/WTO obligation, ignoring them would be such an act.
China exports most to the US and Japan. The patents it would be ignoring would be mostly US and Japanese patents. US and Japanese corporations would be really, really ticked
Re:China will be the death of the patent hegemony (Score:2)
One may really question what positive contribution the US makes to the world economy, and whether that balences what it costs the world economy to support it. If China decided that it was too expensive to support the dollar, they could start demanding to be paid in, e
Re:China will be the death of the patent hegemony (Score:2)
Once the Chinese refuses to be part of the patent process then no western nation will do business with them. There products will be outlawed and there export business will crumble. Any incentive for research in China will pretty much disappear since anything they develop will be considered up for grabs by the other nations. If they do respect other nations patents no one will respect theirs.
So it will not happen. China will go through the courts and work with
Re:China will be the death of the patent hegemony (Score:2)
"murderous? No. China has not invaded another country for the last 200 years. It has not massacred it's indigenous populations."
Perhaps you should go visit Tibet sometime.
Re:China will be the death of the patent hegemony (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: Communism.
China is closer to Facism than Communism at the moment, though there are elections at the local level and national politics are like an oligarchy. The whole 'economic equality and state ownership of labor' has gone out the window in the past ten years. Everything is on sale there now. Communism is dead in China.
Re:China will be the death of the patent hegemony (Score:2, Informative)
Give me a break. Ask any Tibetan and they will tell you what the Chinese mean when they say "the Peaceful Liberation of Tibet."
China invaded Tibet in 1950 and remains an occupying force today.
Re:China will be the death of the patent hegemony (Score:3, Informative)
Uh, you're so ignorant. China invaded India in 1962. Before you post things in future perhaps you should get your facts straight.
& Vietnam too (Score:2)
Still his point still stands - you know that the US has been invoved in a average of one war a year since it's foundation, most of which the US started.
Incidently the US has higher incarceration rates & executes more people per capita than China.
cheaper DVD players (Score:1, Funny)
Re:cheaper DVD players (Score:2)
This was moderated as funny, but don't laugh too much. Technically there's nothing stopping DVD players from costing the same amount as a low-end chinese discman knockoff.
It's a fixed amount, not a percentage (Score:5, Insightful)
Maybe part of the reason the 3C is charging a flat fee is to prevent Chinese companies from severely undercutting their own offerings. They do have the patents on some DVD stuff, and I'm sure it's more than just worthless software patents. When you get a patent, part of the rights that you get is to prevent other people form using them, or making them pay a price of your choosing to use it.
Re:It's a fixed amount, not a percentage (Score:5, Informative)
Re:It's a fixed amount, not a percentage (Score:3, Insightful)
When was the last time a court made anti-trust trump "intellectual property"?
Re:It's a fixed amount, not a percentage (Score:1)
Right, useless code (css) and a logo (how creative!).
Amazing stuff, I wish I could come up with things like that. Hang on... I can.
Re:It's a fixed amount, not a percentage (Score:2)
MPEG4 is newer technology. Keep in mind that all the technology for consumer hardware like satellite receivers and DVD players was developed about ten years ago now. You may be used to using DivX to encode MPEG4 on your PC, but that is only because you can download the codec-of-the-week in 15 minutes. DVDs all had to use lowest-common-denominator technology that couldn't be upgraded - so they had to use what was chea
Re:It's a fixed amount, not a percentage (Score:1)
Maybe part of the reason the 3C is charging a flat fee is to prevent Chinese companies from severely undercutting their own offerings.
Cry me a river, unfair competition ? It's curious how association of workers for workers rights is an unfair competition in a "free labor" (read cheap) market BUT chineses actually offering real competition (= sale price competition, competition to seize pro
Re:It's a fixed amount, not a percentage (Score:2)
Shouldn't they be whining about it, though? DVD players have gotten a whole lot cheaper than they were when they were first introduced. They used to be $300 or more, but now they're just $40, and
Re:It's a fixed amount, not a percentage (Score:2)
The DVD forum is in no way shape or form preventing anyone from making DVD players, anyone can make a DVD player or application, as long as they pay the $20 a unit fee. Within that fee they are allowed use of the various decoders, along with using the DVD logo.
Re:It's a fixed amount, not a percentage (Score:4, Insightful)
Don't forget that we are more dependant on China for their manufacturing capacity. If China was to embargo us and dump their dollar reserves, it might put a crimp in their booming economy, but it could very well induce an inflationary spiral and depression in the USA.
Our economy is highly leveraged and vulnerable, their's is not.
Both of us have enough nukes to obliterate each other, so saber rattling will only go so far.
Re:It's a fixed amount, not a percentage (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:It's a fixed amount, not a percentage (Score:2)
Re:It's a fixed amount, not a percentage (Score:2)
Re:It's a fixed amount, not a percentage (Score:2)
It doesn't affect most third world countries because US patent law doesn't apply. It only applies to DVD players being sold in countries where it does apply.
Re:It's a fixed amount, not a percentage (Score:2)
Well, according to http://www.china-embassy.org/eng/gyzg/t179428.htm , the average income has gone up 2.5 times.
Assuming that their cost of living has stayed level, I'd every single person who's income has gone up 100% can afford a 40$ DVD player. Because their costs have stayed the same but their disposable income has grown.
So what would that be, hundreds of millions of Chinese?
Good time for them to sue (Score:1)
Those poor companies... (Score:2)
CSS Anyone? (Score:4, Insightful)
Another creepy twist of fate... (Score:3, Insightful)
A Chinese company pushing for consumer rights.
Re:Another creepy twist of fate... (Score:1)
50 % (Score:2)
That's just ridiculous. Just another form of price fixing monopolies.
It's not a US technology (Score:4, Informative)
You cannot build a CD or DVD device without licensing technology from Japan. Or even a VCR, as Go Video found. American companies no longer own the key consumer electronics technologies.
Re:It's not a US technology (Score:1)
Pioneer is NOT a US company (Score:2)
Re:It's not a US technology (Score:5, Informative)
No, but it has everything to do with the US patents.
The defendants are the US branches of these companies. And the legalities are up to US courts.
If the court rules that the fees much be reduced, then all DVD players sold in the US can pay those reduced fees. The fees might remain massively high in Japan, but that doesn't matter for DVD players in the US.
Re:It's not a US technology (Score:2)
The technologies weren't "outsourced" there, nor was the development of the technology: They were invented there. The CD-ROM was created by Sony and Philips (Japan + Netherlands).
They think they can win. I'm shocked! (Score:1)
Re:They think they can win. I'm shocked! (Score:2)
Both sides can afford good lawyers, and appearantly a good lawyer can tie things up forever.
This is a sign that China is caving on patents (Score:2)
By going to court over the issue, these companies are tacitly accepting the western-style patent regime that the USA is trying to force on the rest of the world.
This new acceptance is probably part of the fallout of the Secretary of Commerce, Donald Evans's recent trip to Beijing. [xinhuanet.com] As was the recent arrest of bittorrent user in HK. [slashdot.org]
Re:This is a sign that China is caving on patents (Score:2)
Video Game question (Score:2)
Re:Video Game question (Score:2)
So very likely the reason why the XBox is at $150 is that it is selling enough at that price, it is expensive to make and Microsoft doesn't want to lose more on ha
China should conspire and fuck them over. (Score:2)
Chinese companies can't export infringing players (Score:2)
Ok go China! but what I don't understand is why more manufactures don't make un-licensed DVD players?
The customs departments of North American and European companies would stop patent-infringing players at the border.
China Syndrome (Score:2)
Re:China Syndrome (Score:2)
Re:China Syndrome (Score:2)
Laugh Riot (Score:2)
The article assumes that Chinese DVD makers are paying licensing fees on their current products. I've read that many don't pay or are way behind in their payments. That's part of the reason that their products are so cheap.
This May Be (Score:2)
Excellent news (Score:2)
Re:Slitty Eyed Gooks! (Score:1, Flamebait)
Re:Foriegn courts (Score:2)
Anyone else ever feel like we're getting the raw deal, their complaints tend to get reasonably addressed, but ours tend to get thrown out the window , espcially in china.
With spam this is true, but as far as child porn it's not. China's gone one further and made all porn illegal online at least. I remember an article, posted on /. I think, recently telling how China was cracking down on those who viewed porn