Apple Sued Over iTunes UI 502
An anonymous reader writes "It apppears that Contois Music Technology is suing Apple Computer over the UI to its iTunes music software. The suit claims patent infringement over a patent owned by Contois."
"Hello again, Peabody here..." -- Mister Peabody
LOL! (Score:4, Informative)
"By reason of Apple's infringing activities, Contois has suffered, and will continue to suffer, substantial damages in an amount yet to be determined," the suit reads. "On information and belief, Apple's infringement has been and continues to be willful."
----
Yeah. And it's only been out for, what 4 and a half years now (Jan 2001)?
Re:LOL! (Score:5, Insightful)
Woah! Those are really neat inventions. Must have required a lot of intellect to bring that intellectual property to paper.
Go patents go!
Re:LOL! (Score:5, Funny)
"Yeah. And it's only been out for, what 4 and a half years now (Jan 2001)?
Longer, actually.
Apple bought SoundJam MP from Casady & Greene, and used it as the basis for iTunes. In fact, early version of iTunes have dialog boxes and controls identical to SoundJam, right down to screen placement when they're opened.
My SoundJam CD has a 1999 copyright date, and the about SoundJam file indicates a 1998 copyright date.
So poor old Contois, your "patents" have been infringed for far longer than you think, at least for 7 years.
And what about the software used by the first portible MP3 player, that surely must have infringed some of your patents, and yet, you did nothing about it, it seems, until 2005.
Indeed, the folks who own and license the rights to USB and FireWire certainly must be liable for SOME damages, what with their reckless aiding and abetting the transfer of bits to and from hard drives and flash RAM in portible MP3 players.
Such sloth on the part of your legal department surely has earned them all a collective bitchslap!
I would replace them all instantly! I hear that the SCO legal team will be looking for work soon.
Six years? I smell laches (Score:5, Informative)
My SoundJam CD has a 1999 copyright date ... you did nothing about it, it seems, until 2005.
"Laches" refers to the doctrine that if a patent holder delays legal action against an alleged infringer for long enough to harm the alleged infringer, the patent holder can't collect damages for infringements that occurred prior to legal action. If the patent holder waits at least six years before suing, the judge will almost always apply laches; in that case, a prevailing patent holder can get an injunction against further infringement but can collect only damages for infringements that occurred between the filing of the lawsuit and the injunction.
Re:LOL! (Score:3, Insightful)
I think RMS should just come up with a succinct "this example demonstrates exactly how the patent system is broken" reply, which /.ers can then copy and paste into their posts as a show of solidarity.
I can't believe the guts of this lawyer (Score:5, Interesting)
1. That a computer program can have buttons to start and stop music.
2. That a computer program can display two or more data fields about that music during play.
There is another claim about controlling a player piano (!), but that seems irrelevant to this case.
The problems I see with this patent are:
1. The claims argued are blatently obvious. It's one step above a patent for displaying and manipulating data on a screen. The only difference is that this adds music! (rolls eyes)
2. Plenty of prior art exists. For example, MIDI and CD players throughout the 90's were capable of "controlling the playback of music" and "displaying two or more data fields about the song". Not to mention MP3 player that existed prior to January 1999.
3. The primary focus of the body of the patent is on player piano control. AFAIK, iTunes does not run player pianos.
4. The patent points to MIDI or a MIDI-like device as the stream being controlled. Digital audio is not a method of controlling a digital instrument, but rather a synthesis of a complete sound environment.
Perhaps the best reform would be to allow for reprocussions against the patent holder should his patent be found to be issued in error or inapplicablE? For example, if the patent holder was forced to pay court costs, he may think twice before initiating a baseless suit.
Re:I can't believe the guts of this lawyer (Score:5, Informative)
Re:I can't believe the guts of this lawyer (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:I can't believe the guts of this lawyer (Score:4, Insightful)
They might have a case for copyright infringement if they can show their ex-employees took the code to Apple. Might even have a case for contract law, if Apple NDA'd to see the software at the trade shows.
But the patent was applied for in 1999. How long has winamp existed? When winamp first came out, how much information did it display on the screen? How long have ID3 tags been around, with Winamp using them to display song name, artist, title... ooops, we've already passed the two fields in the patent! And the buttons, of course the buttons! Buttons are clearly a novel way to control a computer!
The patent as described in the abstract would have been a pretty cool invention. "Control a player piano from your computer!" Too bad the patent lawyers sank their teeth into it and turned it into a steaming pile of crap, knowing that the patent office would accept it anyway. "A computer controlled device" in this language could mean anything from a piano to a pair of speakers.... and imagine that, the music comes out my speakers when I hit play in either iTunes or Winamp!
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Re:I can't believe the guts of this lawyer (Score:3, Insightful)
The iTunes interface seems to be almost a ditto copy of their interface...
What's patented is patented I suppose, but having said that, remember: just because you do something first doesn't mean it's patent-worthy!
Patenting a display of track info? A play button? Please. Where's this "non-obvious" clause that's supposed to be enforced?
Re:I can't believe the guts of this lawyer (Score:5, Insightful)
The patent was granted January 1999. It was actually filed Feb. 13, 1996, so you have to beat that date since that is the priority date and the date from which their 20 year term of protection begins. If you read the claims carefully, it is more than just a simple listing and selection of songs. In order to violate the patent, each and every element of an independent claim has to be present in what is alleged to be infringed upon. It is not as simple as you are making it out to be.
Re:I can't believe the guts of this lawyer (Score:3, Informative)
Sorry, their arguments aren't holding water. And I still don't see any player pianos.
Re:I can't believe the guts of this lawyer (Score:2)
Re:I can't believe the guts of this lawyer (Score:2)
But you've got me on one thing. I just visited iTunes.com (I don't actually own an iPod, they don't play Ogg), and noticed that iTunes software CAN control an external player:
Stream Music Wirelessly to Your Home Stereo. With iTunes and an AirPort Express Base Station, you can stream music wirelessly from your Mac or PC to your home stereo or powered speakers.
This might be a problem...I don't think anyone could argue the iPod
Re:I can't believe the guts of this lawyer (Score:3, Informative)
No, it can't. iTunes can't change the radio station on a stereo. It can't change tracks on a CD that's playing on the stereo. It can't turn the stereo on or off. All that iTunes and Airport Express do is utilize auxilory input jacks, and in order to do so I must first get off my ass, walk over to the stereo, and manually select aux input.
(tig)
Re:I can't believe the guts of this lawyer (Score:4, Insightful)
No, but neither does iTunes. According to their patent, the software must be capable of "b) sending a data stream from the computer to the computer controlled music device in response to step a) for controlling the playing of the selected song;". Or in other words, the external device must respond directly to the stream provided by the computer device.
iTunes does no such thing. It merely downloads the music to the player for storage, control, and later playback by the player. i.e. An iPod cannot be reasonably compared with directly controlling a "player piano".
Re:I can't believe the guts of this lawyer (Score:3, Informative)
Actually, now it does. See the Airport Express [apple.com], which allows you to send a stream of music to a remote device or stereo.
Re:I can't believe the guts of this lawyer (Score:3, Insightful)
Bzzt! You're not controlling the iPod, you're interfacing with its database.
When I push Play/Pause/Skip in iTunes, the song on the iPod is played/paused/skipped.
But you're still not causing the iPod to play the music. You're causing your own computer to stream music from the iPod's database.
The patent is quite clear on this issue. When you press the play button, it must force the player piano to begin playing.
Re:I can't believe the guts of this lawyer (Score:3, Informative)
Re:I can't believe the guts of this lawyer (Score:3, Interesting)
Every claim? (Score:2)
In order to violate the patent, each and every element of an independent claim has to be present in what is alleged to be infringed upon.
That would make their case pretty flimsy:
Re:Every claim? (Score:2)
Re:I can't believe the guts of this lawyer (Score:5, Informative)
The invention resides not in any one of these features per se, but rather in the particular combination of all of them herein disclosed and claimed and it is distinguished from the prior art in this particular combination of all of its structures for the functions specified.
So they admit they haven't invented anything, but they got a patent because of the amazingly innovative combination of those features like choosing a track combined with then playing the track. WOW!!!!!!!!
Re:I can't believe the guts of this lawyer (Score:2)
-Jesse
Re:I can't believe the guts of this lawyer (Score:2)
That's the nature of all inventions though.
Even mechanical ones. Almost everything can be described as some combination of the mechanical primitives we call "classical simple machines": wheels, levers, inclined planes, etc.
Re:I can't believe the guts of this lawyer (Score:3, Insightful)
That's exactly how patents work. A patent can be simply a (purportedly novel) integration of existing technology, and many are just that. A patent gives you absolutely no right to any technologies it employs. The only right a patent grants is a right to exclude. For example, I could discover that a combination of Wonder Drug A and Wonder Drug B cures cancer. Say WDA
Re:I can't believe the guts of this lawyer (Score:2)
Re:I can't believe the guts of this lawyer (Score:2)
Re:I can't believe the guts of this lawyer (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm not a patent lawyer either, but I'd like to point out that "rediculous" is not a disqualifying characteristic for a patent.
But not on a computer. Those MIDI and CD players throughout the 90s would have also been patentable (and I'm sure they're
Re:I can't believe the guts of this lawyer (Score:2)
In the end it's the lawyers that win. What guts? Either way the case turns out the lawyers gat paid.
The winner of this one is obvious. The Lawyers. The loosers are anyone who has to pay for the lawyers.
Corporations preclude competition on the cheap. (Score:3, Insightful)
If you were Apple, you would not fight this in court. Settling out of court, paying a patent license fee, or cross-licensing are all far less expensive than fighting this in court and, therefore, much more attractive ways to deal with this nuisance. Each of these outcomes individually or collectively are more likely to occur than seeing this through to the end in court.
Remember one of the examples we learned about in RMS' discussion of the problem with software patents [gnu.org] (transcript [cam.ac.uk]): Briefly, Paul Heckel
Re:Corporations preclude competition on the cheap. (Score:3, Insightful)
2. Legal battles are not always expensive. Most large corporations keep lawyers on staff anyway, so it never hurts to see if you can get the judge to make a speedy decision. If the case shows signs of dragging out and costing the company huge amounts of money, *then* a settlement can always be reconsidered. If the other party doesn't want to settle (which is almost never the case in a bas
Bullshit patent. (Score:3, Insightful)
Hmm (Score:5, Insightful)
This my friends is why we don't like software patents.
Re:Hmm (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Hmm (Score:2, Interesting)
Except that WinAMP was released in 1997 and the patent was filed in 1999. Not to mention the original MP3 Player, WinPlay3 [sonicspot.com], which had been released several years prior. There's nothing wrong with the current patent system, just that the existing rules need to be better enforced. The attempts to invalidate patents through a review process ar
Re:Hmm (Score:2)
The patent was filed in 1996. RTFPF.
Re:Hmm (Score:5, Informative)
I wouldn't agree. "Computer Controlled" specifically means that the parent computer is the interface to which the attached device responds. The patent even goes into great detail of this interface and calls the device a "player piano". An iPod, OTOH, is an independent device. It is in no way "controlled" by the host computer, but merely interfaces for file transfers. There is currently no method by which an iPod can begin play by "pressing the play button on the computer interface." (in the patent, look it up) Rather, the user must interface directly with the iPod to access the downloaded database.
Re:Hmm (Score:2)
Patents need to be published for public comments upon submission. This is the only feasible way to deal with incompetent patent examiners.
Live by sword.... (Score:2, Interesting)
Good ! (Score:5, Insightful)
Maybe if enough big companies get shafted through patent lawsuits they may consider working to get rid of software patents.
But then again....
Re:Good ! (Score:5, Insightful)
Their thinking is that if we get MORE software patents, the costs will offset and we win.
It's fundamentally just an arms race, where the one with the biggest wallet wins and consumers always lose.
Re:Good ! (Score:2, Insightful)
Apple, Microsoft, and other established businesses can afford the lawyers, the fee, and/or the extra programming time. Lawsuits like this are just one of the costs of doing business.
For established companies an out-of-control patent system is useful, despite the costs. It helps block competition by increasi
Tell me again... (Score:2)
Re:Tell me again... (Score:2)
I would support software patents for specialized complex algorithms like data compressions, encrtyption, and other back end information which other people can make a competing product, but not with the same algorithem. But for things like interface Patents are pritty silly because they are often created whenever the needs arises and no genious is needed to create it just happends to do what they need it to do.
Treatife on the Value of Ideaf (Score:3, Insightful)
What you will learn by the time you get to be an old geek is that you can't eat ideas. Even if you have a nearly endless supply of ideas, putting bread on the table with them requires a whole bunch of things you probably aren't as richly supplied with:
* Dedication
* Vision
* Experience/Judgement
* Cunning
* Persuasiveness
* Guts
* Capital
Basically, what I'm saying is that ideas are like the air we breath: essential, but economically speaking, n
It's about time we throw the baby out with the (Score:5, Insightful)
If the child is a brat, you discipline the child. If the child tries to stab you to death for disciplining it, you put the child in a mental ward for safe observation and help. If when the child (or in this case patent industry) is mature and tries it again, society prescribes the death penalty (in the US). Why shouldn't the patent system be any different?
The big IT corporations don't need patents to maintain their control because they are in a unique position to crush upstarts that few industries have. They industry as a whole has proven that they can't use them responsibly and the very fact that a hobbyist can turn their hobby into a business means that patents are bad. I'm sorry, but the ends justify the means here. Patent holders have time and again proven that milking their work and not innovating is their real goal, at least in IT. It's time that the entire system be flushed out and simplified.
Re:It's about time we throw the baby out with the (Score:2, Insightful)
Because the system is run by the governemnt, which is run by the corporations, which make profits off of the patents.
It's like not giving the baby a death penalty because having the baby makes you eligible for welfare.
government efficiency (Score:2)
Corporations do profoundly influence government, but they don't run it. Much of what government does, it does on its own. No viable corporation would run an operation so inefficiently as the government of the United States.
-kgj
Re:It's about time we throw the baby out with the (Score:3, Interesting)
We individual citizens are but the lowlings in a feudal system. Corporations and goverment organizastions are the lords. It may sound a bit dramatic since many of us lead pretty good lives, but it is only because we are grudgingly allowed to, it is no longer an inalienable righ
Sweet! (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Sweet! (Score:2)
Re:Sweet! (Score:2)
It was a joke. Did you see that "exibit", complete with a funny drawing of Liberace? I just found that "proof" hilarious.
Patent Text (Score:5, Insightful)
Abstract
A computer system and method for controlling a media playing device. The system provides a user interface for allowing a user access to media pieces stored in a media database. The interface is also for controlling a media playing device, like a player piano or movie playing video device, that is coupled to the computer to play the accessed or selected piece of media. In one embodiment there is a computer interface that allows a user to display only music that relates to a selected category, like jazz or classical music. Another embodiment allows the user to direct the media playing device to automatically play selected music pieces that are related to a selected music category. Another embodiment allows a user to direct the media playing device to automatically play selected music pieces that are related to the selected music composer or artist."
My only question is: Where are the lawsuits against Microsoft's WMP, Realplayer, the Microsoft XBox Media Player, MusicMatch, etc?
iTunes has been out for over 4 years, and just now there's a lawsuit? I understand it takes time to find a lawyer that will accept a case, but *4* years? Hmmm, right at the height of popularity too, kinda amazing how it worked out like that...
Re:Patent Text (Score:3, Interesting)
side by side image of the patented player & it (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:side by side image of the patented player & (Score:3, Informative)
Re:side by side image of the patented player & (Score:3, Insightful)
So does that mean that if you ever see something presented at a developer's conference, say SIGGRAPH, then you are automatically prevented from ever using any information that you saw there? This would mean that you would never be able to develop 2D or 3D image processing software ever again for having attended SIGGRAPH because some slimeball would have a patent on something that was presented a
Isn't this ironic.... (Score:2)
Funny, WMP and Musicmatch allow this functionality, among others. I wonder why they weren't sued....
Smells fishy to me. Targetting the big kahuna rather than the concept.... I don't like it one bit. Yet another lawsuit that reeks of collusion.
I spoke of tit-for-tat earlier in the day. Here is another fine example of tit [thinksecret.com]-for-tat [appleinsider.com].
1995 Prior Art? Project Jukebox (Score:5, Interesting)
http://www.soton.ac.uk/~newrep/vol13/no4news.html [soton.ac.uk]
Scroll down to the article "Jukebox is a sound success"
Does anyone have any more details about this? Does it cover the same claims as the Contois patent?
Re:1995 Prior Art? Project Jukebox (Score:4, Funny)
Open and Shut Case (Score:3, Funny)
Then again I also voted to acquit Michael Jackson...
Re:Open and Shut Case (Score:2, Informative)
So they can't be the same if one is Frank Mills and the other is Liberace.
Sound logic isn't it?
Part of the basis... (Score:3, Insightful)
The implication is that they saw his app and were so entralled at his genious to organize music by Genere, then artist, and finally album, that they quit their jobs, convinced Apple to hire them, and then applied such unique cataloging skills to iTunes.
Re:Part of the basis... (Score:2, Funny)
Yeah, because you know that no one had ever thought of organizing music by genre, or much less ARTIST, before then!
Re:Part of the basis... (Score:2)
The implication is that they saw his app and were so entralled at his genious to organize music by Genere, then artist, and finally album, that they quit their jobs, convinced Apple to hire them, and then applied such unique cataloging skills to iTunes.
What I'd like to see is Apple's barracud...err, lawyers say is "How do you know those peo
Re:Part of the basis... (Score:2)
Similar... (Score:5, Funny)
But I do have to admit that the two referenced images look eerily similar
-c
Of course (Score:5, Insightful)
Contois is seeking a trial by jury.
Re:Of course (Score:3, Funny)
I can't...that's not in the dictionary.
yawn (Score:2)
Why did they wait so long to sue? They want in on the money!
Estoppel (Score:2)
-Don.
biting the hand that feeds you (Score:4, Insightful)
Apple is getting its just deserts from supporting the software patent system.
Prior Art?? (Score:5, Informative)
Okay Here is the deal. iTunes is based on a MP3 player application Apple bought from Casady & Greene called Soundjam MP. Apple bought this app in 2001 and re-designed it into iTunes. Casady & Greene first released Sound Jam MP Two years before Apple bought them. So that would put the desing of the app at about the same time the patent was issued.
Just to clarify my above facts a little bit, Casady & Greene published SoundJam they weren't the developers. So it looks like the individuals that may or may not have been privy to the deep dark secrets of this patent originally cam from the SoundJam developer team.
now by no means was SoundJam the first MP3 player on the market, so there is going to be prior art all over this.
I'm not getting this one... (Score:5, Informative)
It is a feature of the invention to provide a computer user interface. The interface is for providing a user access to media pieces stored in a media database. The interface is also for controlling a media playing device, like a player piano or movie playing video device, that is coupled to the computer to play the accesses or selected piece of media.
It is another feature of the invention to provide a computer interface that allows a user to display only music that relates to a selected category, like jazz or classical. Where the user is then able to direct the media playing device to automatically play the selected music pieces related to the selected music categories.
A further feature of the invention is to provide a computer interface that allows a user to display music selections that are related only to a selected composer, like Duke Ellington or Gershwin. Where the user is then able to direct the media playing device to automatically play the selected music pieces related to the selected music composer.
Another feature of the invention is to provide a computer interface that allows a user to display only music that is related to a selected artist, like Dave Contois, or your own personal recordings. Where the user is then able to direct the media playing device to automatically play the selected music pieces related to the selected music artist.
Another feature of the invention is to provide a computer interface that allows a user to display only music that is related to a selected song or music piece, like Alexander's Rag Time Band or Andante & Rondo Capriciosso, Op. 14. Where the user is then able to direct the media playing device to automatically play the selected music piece.
A feature of the invention is also to provide a computer system that can access others media recording data bases from other sources like internet or world wide web.
It goes on and on like this. But this is the kicker:
The invention resides not in any one of these features per se, but rather in the particular combination of all of them herein disclosed and claimed and it is distinguished from the prior art in this particular combination of all of its structures for the functions specified.
(Emphasis mine)
Now, that annoys me, because they basically admit that there is tons of prior art for this stuff, and what makes their patent special is that it combines it all. Which would be fine, for example in the case of a "player piano" as they describe. But the iPod/iTunes system hardly describes a computer controlling a media player device to playback media. I would argue the controls for the iPod are , on the iPod itself. All iTunes does it supply music for download and transfer those songs, which are not then played automatically as they so many times describe, but rather are played when selected, and only after the player is disconnected from the computer, i.e. not controlled by the computer.
The ITMS certainly uses their method of selecting media (just like every other media player on the planet), but does not do so to select which songs to automatically play on an attached media device - merely to decide which songs to buy, or in the case of the iTunes software, which songs to transfer. Buying, transferring and playing are different. The patent is for playing.
Personally, I think software patents are ridiculous, but if they want to sue for infringement, it better at least be a match. They only mention the internet (or a remote database) tangentially in their patent, and don't even provide an example. I'm say Apple can take them to court and win.
follow the money.. (Score:2)
I wonder if REAL or MS has "invested" anything in this company recently?
The only reason SCO could hold out as long as it did was with money from MS.
Prior Use (Score:2)
As a side point, I worked with Tim Wasko on the Vendor System (used by TypeOnCall, SoftwareDispatch...) before 1995 and a LOT of the UIs
What about Apple's patent? (Score:2, Interesting)
This only shows what most of us already know (Score:2)
Paris Hilton (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Paris Hilton (Score:3, Funny)
Design patents and infringement (Score:5, Interesting)
Design patents prohibit a third-party from making, selling or using a product of the protected design. To infringe a design patent, the infringing container and the container shape shown in the design patent must look alike to the eye of the ordinary observer.
In Gorham v. White (1871), the Supreme Court set the standard for design patent infringement:
"If, in the eye of an ordinary observer, giving such attention as a purchaser usually gives, two designs are substantially the same, if the resemblance is such as to deceive such an observer, inducing him to purchase one supposing it to be the other, the first one patented is infringed by the other."
Just having similar functions and a vaguely similar appearance is not sufficient, as shown by the amusing "Colida v. Sharp Electronics and Audiovox" (Fed. Cir. March 9, 2005):
http://patentlaw.typepad.com/patent/2005/03/desig
The functional features described in a design patent are not particularly relevant. (They would be in a functional patent, of course.) To infringe on a design patent, the infringing product has to look so much like his sketch that the infringing product would deceive the customer into thinking it was the patented product.
An example of a product which might be found to infringe on a well-known design patent might be:
http://www2.luxpro.com.tw/e_575d.htm [luxpro.com.tw]
Almost 30 years of prior art? (Score:5, Informative)
So that's what it's called. This user interface predates the Macintosh, in fact it predates the Xerox Star office system that inspired the Macintosh. It comes from the Smalltalk [pdx.edu] class [ucsb.edu] browser [gatech.edu].
You know, I was using something that infringed... (Score:3, Interesting)
SIDPlayer and SID Symphony on the Commodore 64.
The 64 could control a MDI device, it could transfer MIDI data from one device to another via it's serial line, it could even move digital music from the C64 to a portible music player (A Walkman cassette player) via the sound out port and a patch cable.
Sounds like a WHOLE lot of WAY prior art to me.
I'm blown away (Score:3, Funny)
One skilled in the art will recognize that it is not essential to have the computer system separate from the media playing device. It is conceivable to have the computer system physically incorporated in part or in whole into the media playing device.
It is noted that the embodiment of the invention discusses the use of a standard known computer, where in fact all components of the computer can be replaced with any new advancing technologies, like holographics or voice activated systems and still not depart from the intent of the invention of allowing easier user access to the underlying media data base information.
The preferred embodiment of the invention discusses the control of only a single media playing device, like a player piano. However, one skilled in the art would easily understand how to simultaneously control several media playing devices with the same control system in view of this disclosure. For example, the coordination of the control of a player piano along with a music video is contemplated.
Although this embodiment focuses upon the application of the software to control a player piano or video player, one skilled in the art will realize that this software interface could be used on any media playing device where a user needs to select what media item is to be played from a vast media data base. For example, it is contemplated to operate an electric guitar, a computer controlled multimedia system, a pipe organ, a television, a movie video player, or a computer screen.
Wow. So the player doesn't even have to be outside of the computer. So, iTunes, Zinf (Freeamp), Winamp, Windows Media Player, XMMS, Amarok, RhythmBox, GStreamer, well, just about every media player infringes. Even the holographic, voice-activated system that controls 73 copies of Winamp over the net infringes. Heck, if I use an interface to control playback of something on my computer screen, it infringes (assuming a filesystem counts as a database, which it should). I'm sure several million software writers would be interested to know about this. After reading the whole patent, I'm not really sure what, exactly, if anything, they are patenting. I know it has to do with media, and playback, and maybe something about automatic, but beyond that, I'm lost. Is it on a computer? How about an iPod? Does a stereo count? Is it over the internet? Are the interface and the player seperate, or not? What is a player? Is it a screen, a TV, a Playstation, a pair of speakers, or none (or all) of those?
I though patents were for implementations, not abstract, all-encompassing ideas...
In other news, 5 year-old Sally Jones was sued by Steven Olson of St. Paul, MN, after being observed in her backyard swinging in a way [uspto.gov] such that she infringed on his patent. He is claiming damages of over $1 million.
iTunes history (Score:3, Informative)
No Infringement Here (Score:5, Informative)
A quick reading of independent claim 1 pretty much eliminates any question of infringment, i.e., there is none. It reads:
"1. A computer user interface menu selection process for allowing the user to select music to be played on a music device controlled by a computer
When last I checked, the iPod was not controlled, i.e., told to play a song, by the computer hosting the iTunes software. Without that step, the patent is not infringed. Period.
I want to point out one more thing. The patent in question is not a design patent, but a utility patent. Design patents have identifiers that always begin with "D" and they pertain only to the appearance of something, not to what the patented thing does.
How is that solid? Music not in database (Score:2)
On the whole it seems like a really lame patent and hopefully will be stripped from them.
Re:How is that solid? Music not in database (Score:3, Insightful)
Furthermore the bit about playing music in certain categories is very unlike playlists.
But a lot like the iTunes Music Store.
Re:How is that solid? Music not in database (Score:3, Informative)
Read abstract (Score:4, Insightful)
The system provides a user interface for allowing a user access to media pieces stored in a media database
I don't think you can seriously refer to a directory as a "media database". They might have something if they had sued based on the iPod. To me that wordind in the abstract indicates intent and kills the claim.
Re:How is that solid? Music not in database (Score:2)
You haven't discovered "smart playlists" yet then have you? Instead of manually selecting songs, you can do things like, "play all songs rated 4 stars or more; from categories containing the word folk and downtempo but not death-metal; which haven't been played in the last 2 weeks; and have been played more than 10 times." You make it is as broad or narrow as you want, from a single category to a highly selectiv
Re:IANAL but ... (Score:5, Insightful)
If you have a 100 disc CD changer and write a computer program to allow you to choose and begin playing selections from that changer, you violate this patent.
Here's the first claim from the patent:
1. A computer user interface menu selection process for allowing the user to select music to be played on a music device controlled by a computer, comprising the steps of:
a) simultaneously displaying on a display device, at least two individual data fields selected from music categories, composers, artists, and songs;
b) selecting at least one item from at least one of the data fields;
c) in response to step b), redisplaying all data fields not having an item selected therefrom with data related only to the at least one item selected in step b), and simultaneously maintaining all items originally displayed in the data fields with at lest one item selected therefrom;
d) selecting an item in the songs data field in response to step c), and
e) playing the selected song item from step d) on the computer responsive music device.
Now come on. If you are going to use a computer for connecting to a music device, how obvious is a user interface that categorizes the data? 90% of what a computer does when it isn't playing games is categorizing data!
Re:IANAL but ... (Score:3, Informative)
Also, iTunes was based on SoundJam, which Apple purchased. That goes back a couple years more.
There is no case here.
(IANAL... and glad of it.)
Re:revolutionary (Score:2)
Re:revolutionary (Score:2)
On another note... could somone find a reason to mod bladx up? I've looked at his posting history. It looks like he's gotten a couple mods with a bug up their butt to mod him down early in his posting history. Now he's stuck with a -1 karma for no good reason.
If you are one of those mods, please use this opportunity to mod me into oblivion instead. Thanks.
Re:Uhh.. Prior Art? (Score:2)
Re:What a farce (Score:2)
RTFA.
Re:Are you joking me? (Score:5, Insightful)
This is no joke; it's real, and it's why more needs to be done to stop software patents. If they're not stopped, there will be more and more lawsuits just like this one. If there are enough of these lawsuits, they will have a dramatically negative impact on the economy, because wealth will be flowing from those who are being productive to those who are really nothing more than leaches.
Software already enjoys the protection of copyright, it does not need patent protection as well.