RIM Wins BlackBerry Patent Dispute in UK 75
Guinnessy writes "Research In Motion has won its first patent case against Inpro Licensing. Justice Nicholas Pumfrey rejected a claim by Luxembourg-based Inpro Licensing SARL that it holds a UK patent on the technology used by RIM to transpose images and Internet files onto BlackBerry screens ruling that all the claims at issue were either obvious or lacking in novelty. It is the second European legal victory this year for RIM, following a Munich court's invalidation of a German version of the same patent. The big court case of course is on Feb 24 when a U.S. court will consider whether the BlackBerry service should be halted for infringing patents held by licensing firm NTP."
Now my blackberry won't make me blue (Score:3, Funny)
It sure is obvious... (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:It sure is obvious... (Score:5, Insightful)
True, if you're under 25, in which case you probably believe that information distribution (and indeed the world), was invented in 1980's.
On the fly format translation by in intermediary device was, of course, a new innovation in 1996 as long as you limit the context to "computers on the internet". Broaden the scope to the parent realm of information distribution and such methods have been around for decades and were VERY obvious in 1996.
Prior Art (Score:3, Informative)
The problem with finding prior art is that you need to find one piece of prior art that covers all the aspects of a claim. You can't mosaic them. The prior art we used in trial was the following:
Re:It sure is obvious... (Score:2)
unfortunately I don't have the faintest idea where I put the printouts we were given at the time.
Re:It sure is obvious... (Score:5, Funny)
Because back then we were still trying to figure that "bang the rocks together" thing.
If we had data headed for a device that couldn't handle it, we just threw up our hands. "If God wanted us to see this data on computer screens, "we'd say,"he'd make them in an A4 size." We hired people to hold two phone receivers, one to each ear, so that users on the PBX who had analog phones could talk to the digital phone users.
Re:It sure is obvious... (Score:2)
Re:It sure is obvious... (Score:2)
If by 'innovative' you mean 'old hat', then yes. I mean, what do you think people _did_?
"Sorry, Bob, the data doesn't suit the target device."
"Well, can't we put some sort of extra link in the chain, to, you know, convert it to the right format?"
"WHATTT??? He speaks HERESY! Kill him, my children -- and BURN HIS BODY WITH FIRE!!"
I mean, if you'd said 1986, it would still not have been true, but in 1996 it was even being done on the forkin' WEB ffs!
Kids!
Hmm... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Hmm... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Hmm... (Score:2)
Re:Hmm... (Score:3, Funny)
Whoa, hold the phone! (Score:5, Insightful)
From TFA:
And here I was — silly me — thinking that this sort of thing consituted a "method" and was therefore unpatentable in the UK! From the UKPO's web-site [patent.gov.uk], the following are excuded:
Don't 5, and possible 4, call this whole game into question?
Re:Whoa, hold the phone! (Score:2)
Re:Whoa, hold the phone! (Score:2)
Isn't this precisely what Opera Mini [opera.com] does?
And I wonder if the timing between the ending of this case and the release of Opera Mini [slashdot.org] is any sort of coincidence?
Re:Whoa, hold the phone! (Score:2)
I haven't read InPro's patent, but from the press coverage it seems fairly clear it was an invention. The problem is that it's equally clear it was "obvious", and therefore not patentable (even if there hadn't been any prior art). The patent should never have been granted and the Court was right to throw it out.
Re:Whoa, hold the phone! (Score:2)
Unfortunately the law isn't clear. (Score:2)
For the record, here's the patent in question [espacenet.com].
The problem is that there's a grey area in the law as what constitutes a computer program and what constitutes a piece of hardware that includes some software. The latter is patentable, the former isn't.
In this case the patent claims to be on the proxy server itself (ie the box), but if you read it closely there's nothing special about the box - the pat
Re:Unfortunately the law isn't clear. (Score:2)
Question on Patents (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Question on Patents (Score:1)
Re:Question on Patents (Score:2)
If I invented a "powerful-yet-expensive internal combustion engine" then I think I could live with sharing the wealth. If my creation is worth much at all, then I expect I can still make money from it by licensing the production to another party. And as to getting a fair deal, then again I can make others compete for the rights. And if my creation isn't worth enough for both of these concepts to work, then let the inventor try to produce it themself.
Re:Question on Patents (Score:1)
Re:Question on Patents (Score:2, Interesting)
But you would never get a bunch of corporations to agree on such a thing. For one thing, one of them will have shareholders who DEMAND that they maximise their profits and step forward to licence the technology to get ahead of the pack.
You might not think they are stupid, but most of them have more care about the short term profits than the long term.
Re:Question on Patents (Score:1)
I don't personally think withdrawing the monopoly incentive would make much difference, but if it did, I reckon it would only remove the crappiest innovators from the market.
Real inventors invent because they love it, not because they have a patent incentive anyway. Sure big corps need patent-incentive, but they still have it, just no monopoly
Re:Question on Patents (Score:1, Informative)
For an individual inventor, the patent laws lets them invent something and then shop around for a comapny to develop/market the pro
Re:Question on Patents (Score:1)
Currently there are patent pendings. If you file for say something like a pre-patent which allows you time to build at least a rough prototype or proof that you aren't just patenting for patents sake. Now you must produce something to warrent the patent, with proof of idea already filed should someone try to take it. Essentially I think it is what a patent should be with now having to produce something to get the full prot
Re:Question on Patents (Score:2)
Re:Question on Patents (Score:1)
One way for individual inventors to get around the necessary manufacturing infrastructure is to simply license it. This helps the system because a
Re:Question on Patents (Score:2)
-OR-
Too simplistic?
The belly of the bureaucracy (Score:1, Interesting)
But really, can anyone fathom what actually goes on inside the USPTO? One assumes there must be people there who are fighting the incompetence and denying patents, only to be disciplined or fired, but I can't think of any examples of that. I just don't see how the USPTO could a) keep qualified people out or b) keep the qualified people inside from denying patents without using some k
Re:The belly of the bureaucracy (Score:2, Insightful)
Sad as it is, most people value employment over principles.
Re:The belly of the bureaucracy (Score:1)
Unrelated to NTP Vs. RIM... next? (Score:1)
Re:Unrelated to NTP Vs. RIM... next? (Score:2)
Re:Unrelated to NTP Vs. RIM... next? (Score:2)
Re:Unrelated to NTP Vs. RIM... next? (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:One major check on the system (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:One major check on the system (Score:2)
Re:One major check on the system (Score:5, Insightful)
And while your at it, completely destroy a reason and the means for individuals to invent and patent?
Re:One major check on the system (Score:3, Insightful)
Patents were created to provide incentives to creating new products (although they aren't necessary, as any economist worth his salt will be able to explain); they were created to promote innovation. A company that sits on its patents waiting to sue someone who infringes on them is doing nothing but stifling innovation. Th
Re:One major check on the system (Score:2)
I was moreso referring to the GP's first line, Make it so that a company without any R&D division cannot file or own patents, than what I actually quoted. I real
Re:Ok in the UK (Score:5, Insightful)
Why? The FP seems to take that stance as well, but I consider it really not very true.
Although the US may count as the biggest market for RIM, they have plenty of other markets now that have invalidated the offending patents. And most importantly, as a Canadian company, The US has no power to force RIM out of business (just out of the US).
If US courts thoroughly spank RIM, it will hurt them, a lot. But not quite the death-blow many people seem to consider it. The world doesn't end at the US border.
Re:Ok in the UK (Score:2)
I'd be willing to guarantee though that a large subsection of Blackberry users are here and if things go badly and RIM is forced out of the US, there will be serious business repercussions. True, perhaps not a fatal blow, but bound to hurt in the long run, at least until they can get 1% of the Chinese population to buy one.
Of course business leaders in the US won't let it happen; so much of their communications network is tied into th
Re:Ok in the UK (Score:2)
Isn't the US in some sort of WIPO-type agreement with Canada to honor each other's patents... or something?
Part of the new-world-order-global-conspiracy-coverup-controll ed-by-aliens thing I thought.
Re:Ok in the UK (Score:1)
Patents are an evil and savor in their own (Score:1)
counter sue (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:counter sue (Score:1)
in short, it's not worth anyone's time to counter-sue, a
NTP vs. RIM (Score:2)
Maybe they will learn... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Maybe they will learn... (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:Maybe they will learn... (Score:1)
I'm rooting for NTP in this fight. (Score:3, Insightful)
But the primary reason for my position is the hope that NTP will succeed in obtaining the injunction to shut down RIM's operation in the US. Only then will the discomfiture of millions of Blackberry owners raise a big enough stink to force Congress into a reevaluation of the wisdom of allowing software patents at all.
Judge Pumfrey is on our side (Score:2)