Microsoft Applies to Patent RSS in Vista 119
Cyvros wrote in with a link to Wired's Monkey Bites blog, which is featuring a post on Microsoft applying for a patent on RSS. As the article points out, this isn't as crazy as it seems at first blush. From the wording of the application, post author Scott Gilbertson interprets their move as a patent on RSS only within Vista and IE7. From the article: "The big mystery is what Microsoft is planning to do with the patents if they are awarded them. The sad state of patent affairs in the United States has led to several cases of Microsoft being sued for technologies they did arguably invent simply because some else owned a generic patent on them. Of course we have no way of knowing how Microsoft intends to use these patents if they are awarded them. They could represent a defensive move, but they could be offensive as well -- [self-described RSS inventor Dave] Winer may end up being correct. It would be nice to see Microsoft release some information on what they plan to do with these patents, but for now we'll just have to wait and see whether the US Patent and Trademark Office grants them."
Wheel (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:Wheel (Score:5, Interesting)
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Re:Wheel (Score:5, Funny)
That would save the trouble of having to re-invent it.
Linux ? (Score:3, Insightful)
Winer claims to have invented RSS.... (Score:5, Funny)
Aw, but... but..... (Score:5, Insightful)
Why would they turn around and piss everyone off?
WHY??
Oh wait... it's MS. Nevermind. Business as usual.
so hey.. does this mean Firefox will have to exclude that feature in upcoming Vista builds?
I can see it now:
#ifndef _MS_VISTA_
Links.AddLiveBookmark();
#endif
Oh Yeah?! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Oh Yeah?! (Score:5, Funny)
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I'll see your 8.3 naming system and raise you...
I'm going to patent the process of issuing exclusive rights to a new invention with the purpose of allowing an inventor to get his invention produced without competition from companies who would otherwise reverse-engineer and sell the same invention without the R&D overhead.
Guess who I'm gonna sue!
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File_Allocation_Tabl
and unfortunately I am not joking.
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Who has Microsoft actually sued (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Who has Microsoft actually sued (Score:5, Informative)
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Well, of course they didn't sue because desisted. It seems clear to me that the polite request would have a lawsuit if he had not. So the difference is not important.
Free software developers don't have huge amounts of money to defend against lawsuits, so of course patent issues will heavily tend to them desisting before an actual trial is started. That is another reason why patents are so destructive to free software - maybe they
Re:Who has Microsoft actually sued (Score:4, Informative)
Why make this a general debate about Microsoft's patents (or patents in general)? The current patent is very specific, and isn't accurately summarized in TFA anyhow, so debate here may be skewed. The actual patent states specifically, in the "Background" section:
RSS, which stands for Really Simple Syndication, is one type of web content syndication format
i.e. Microsoft is NOT patenting RSS, which is one possible misconception. Secondly, the patent mentions various problems with RSS (various file formats, lack of a single unified reader for the entire desktop), which they intend to fix. So, they may be looking to patent a system that uses RSS or improves it; presumably this would run on Vista, but to say they are "patenting RSS in Vista" seems odd.
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I'm afraid your point does nothing but weaken any justification Microsoft might have had in applying for an RSS-related patent.
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Are you seriously asking him to invent an improvement for RSS on the spot, that would qualify as being patentable, and just announce it here? I'd have to say some kind of "really stupid question" filter would be great... maybe you can begin implementing it?
you're right (Score:2)
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oh yeah, great... microsofts wants to push one single application for syndication (guess who'll be the author of that one program and which operating systems it will run on)
it's the same shit as always - embrace, extend and extinguish... http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Embrace%2C_extend_and _extinguish [wikipedia.org]
Re:Who has Microsoft actually sued (Score:5, Informative)
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IBM would never sue people or use patents again small companies!
,br> (Yes this was ment as a joke)
Re:Who has Microsoft actually sued (Score:5, Insightful)
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they don't have to (Score:1, Flamebait)
Make no mistake about it: Microsoft is using their patents o
Re:they don't have to (Score:4, Insightful)
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No, I'm saying that the small number of lawsuits and threats we know about is only the tip of the iceberg.
Thats just fucking brilliant. Rumsfeldian logic at its best.
By "Rumsfeldian logic", you're apparently referring to your own cynical manipulation of facts and statements.
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They have the capability to threaten other companies - that's enough for me.
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So, no, there aren't very many lawsuits because even the *DOJ* couldn't change MS's business practices; what chance would you or I have?
what if... (Score:2)
If such a mechanism did exist, a small company could require this to avoid some of the costs of a legal battle without giving tha larger fish an undue advantage.
If both companies are big enough, say, IBM and Microsoft, they could give up such protection and have their own lawyers fight.
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Would that be a quote from those who listen to Ballmer when he makes nebulous comments about "IP" in Linux. I mean sure - it's not like Microsoft has actually sued anyone. But you should look in to indemnification. Not for any particular reason, of course.
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MS has also sued people lots of times for other types of IP infringement including suing 16 year olds for owning a domain name with his name on it.
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Pay your mortgage on time and you won't have to worry about being evicted. If you can't afford to pay your mortgage on time, it doesn't matter whether or not you have a nice mortgage broker who "understands you" or a big bank who looks at you as just so much $$$,
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Patents are Never Defensive (Score:4, Interesting)
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Tech A by company A
Tech B by company B
Now, suppose both companies use both technologies.
Case 1: A has patented, B has released in the wild. A sues B for tech A. B can't do anything.
Case 2: A has patented, B has patented too. A sues B for tech A. B asks them to drop the lawsuit or they'll sue for use of B.
Quite frankly, I've never seen MS abuse any of their patents.
Further clarification (Score:2)
In case 1: A has patented, B has released in the wild. A sues B for tech A. B can't do anything.
What the parent proposes is that B publish the details of tech B. This prevents A from getting a patent on tech B, true, so there is the slight improvement that A can't sue for both tech A and B.
But it has no effect on the patent for tech A.
So getting a patent on tech B is a defensive move.
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I cannot afford to patent it (unless I win a lotto), but if I don't patent it I cannot sue for infringement. Even if I don't CARE to pursue infringement suits, I would lose the ability to collect for damages, right?
I am considering taking all my little snippets of code and macros and formulas and publishing them in a book, providing a book to the Copyright and Trademark office (copyrighting it)
That is not patent for RSS (Score:5, Informative)
I'd mod the main article as -1: Troll if I could. It's just anti-microsoft FUD.
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Wow, just like rss2email [infogami.com]!
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It's just providing a system-wide API for syndicated content, which might be any source, RSS only being one. Not saying it's patentable, of course, just that it is not intended to cover RSS itself.
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Something like that but it is definitely NOT a patent application for RSS itself, the main article is ignorant and written by someone really stupid.
Thank you. Nothing in that patent application says MSFT is making a claim on RSS.
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Sounds like an sort of ODBC for RSS (Score:2, Informative)
Sounds like the proprietary extension of public standards thingy they've been doing for a while. A good or b
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how many directx games get ported? how many opengl games?
Dave is not amused (Score:1, Informative)
http://www.scripting.com/2006/12/23.html#anatomyO
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Why the hullabaloo? (Score:2, Insightful)
MS is patenting their implementation of RSS in IE. Not RSS. If you want to come up with a way of interacting with MS SQL server that is novel, you can patent it. If you want to patent a novel way of attaching a wheel to a car, you may. Remember, it doesn't have to be useful, the best way, or practical, it just has to be novel, or an improvement upon an method.
While I love RSS and all, Winer has a history of being a whiner in this matter when it comes to ATOM and RSS. Almost as bad as Reese Sellin was with
they are patenting RSS API calls .. (Score:2)
It seems that they are patenting API calls that provide RSS functionality to applications. As such the effect of the patent will be to lock out third party developers from using them. After all how many different ways can this be implimented. Do these API calls currently exist in Vista. Are the specs published.
"While I love RSS
I don't understand how you can love a a content format and what relevency does
Patent Interference, Litigation, and 102(b) (Score:4, Informative)
In real patent litigation, the main way to claim invalidity is 102(b). This says that if the work was published in a printed publication, or for sale in this country, more than one year prior to the filing date, then the patent is invalid. There are other grounds for invalidity, such as 103 (obviousness), but because of bad case law, obviousness is a very slight extension to 102(b) (hopefully this will be fixed with KSR v Teleflex, currently before the US Supreme Court). This one-year bar essentially means that as long as I'm within one year of being the first to do it, and I'm the first to file for a patent for it, then I'll win as long as no previous inventors filed for a patent. (We're a first-to-invent system with some caveats; if the first inventor doesn't try to patent it, he can lose his patent rights to a later inventor).
In technology, one year is a really long time, so its important that everyone files for patents lest something "obvious" be granted, and your competitor take away all your customers by claiming that your technology infringes their patent. Its way easier to solve this problem before the Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences than it is before a judge and jury who have no technical knowledge whatsoever (and probably try patent cases once in a blue moon). Sure, if you lose in district court, you can always appeal to the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, but by the time the appeal is litigated, you may have lost most of your customers.
Microsoft's doing the smart thing by filing for this patent. Hopefully they'll also do the right thing by not abusing it.
Hmm, I wonder... (Score:3, Funny)
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Dude, you really ought to turn off the 5 way Dolby sound. Or at least face towards the screen.
Why? (Score:1)
Except... (Score:2)
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I think I'll patent the door-knob in my house (Score:2)
Then I could sue all the manufacturers of door-knobs and lightbulbs that I use in my home.... how could they dispute my claims? They don't have a patent for door-knobs "in my home" do they? I could even manufacture a door-knob and install it in my home as proof of concept.... they'd be infringing on m
Oh, the mistery (Score:3, Funny)
The big mystery is what Microsoft is planning to do with the patents if they are awarded them.
Wow. [pause] Wow. I'll take a stab at this one. They'll use it to... mmm... patents, patents... Ah! They'll use them to prohibit some party or parties to manufacture the software which is described in the patents' claims? Can I get a golden star for this one, please? It's long overdue.
They aren't patenting RSS (Score:4, Interesting)
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If only programmers around the world had this idea to do things in one way, instead of many different ways, before...
not Vista/IE7-specific (Score:5, Informative)
You couldn't patent "RSS within Vista/IE7" if you tried. This patent looks like it's trying to cover broadly RSS syndication, RSS aggregation, RSS feed conversion, and object-oriented libraries for working with RSS feeds. The fact that it's beating around the bush and not patenting the RSS format itself is simply patent strategy: Microsoft's lawyers are trying to "build a fence" around RSS, leaving the open core open, but patenting everything around it so that you can't use RSS without infringing on their patents.
Make no mistake: if this patent gets granted, most RSS software will be infringing.
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Of course, it's nothing new. The point is that Microsoft deliberately applied for this patent despite knowing that there is prior art. Furthermore, getting a patent struck down based on prior art is hard, so if this patent gets granted, it is a problem.
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This leaves me baffled, after your thorough analysis.
Firstly, it is not patented; though that's minor.
What I'd like to know, though, is your 'Most'. What is novel in the application ? Is it patentable ? Do you think it is 'nothing new' or 'most not new' ? And no, I am not counting peanuts. That's how patent life is.
MSDN Blog Response (Score:3, Informative)
Microsoft PM Sean Lyndersay posted a response [msdn.com]:
Holy Silme, Batman! (Score:2)
On the not-quite-so-paranoid hand... (Score:2)
Vista RSS .. (Score:2)
Like how so, doesn't this mean no one else can impliment RSS functionality in their applications without violating this patent.
'the APIs are implemented as COM dual interfaces which also makes the APIs useable from scripting languages, managed code as well as native Win32 (C++) code'
was Re:On the not-quite-so-paranoid hand...
How Microsoft Does Patents (Score:2)
The hoo ha over patents with Mono is a good example, and is something that just hasn't been taken into account by
Ulterior motive / cynical conspiracy theory post (Score:3, Insightful)
MS's market dominance will ensure Vista and IE7 will become the majority OS & browser rig over time this patented RSS aggregation / delivery API system will be part of it.
The patent states "the platform can acquire and organize web content, and make such content available for consumption by many different types of applications" so it would be fair to assume that over time more Windows applications will work with the feeds via this mechanism. I'm sure they'll do their utmost to make it nice and easily accessible through development tools, etc.
MS are setting themselves up as a vital link in the RSS supply chain; the toll bridge troll as it were. With sufficient install base and support by Windows applications there are lots of things Microsoft could do. This being
1. Microsoft don't own the RSS format and can't dictate how it's run. After a while of this mechanism being in place a new patented and big media friendly format could be introduced and promoted to the detriment of RSS. To the applications using the mechanism, and thus the end users, all this is transparent. MS then have a format they can control.
2. They could throw lawyers at anyone who produced a similar system for other operating systems.
3. They could add to this mechanism a way to make some feeds chargeable through a standard payment system.
Re:Ulterior motive / cynical conspiracy theory pos (Score:2)
It is *not* a patent. Yet.
The decription is irrelevant, still you bold a passage from there.
Your 'evil ones' are spot on, though. Nothing to do with being on
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It is *not* a patent. Yet."
I shouldn't feed the trolls but I'm bored! Surely whether it's a patent yet or not is irrelevent. The points I made were based on the possibility that it could become one. Admittedly I used 'the patent' rather than 'the patent application' but given the way USPTO seem to rubber stamp anything these days it may as well be a patent. You admit as much with the 'yet' so it seems to me though you're bein
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Plus, your first sentence started off analytically, and you finished by pointing o
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How is this for your financial incentive: Not getting sued 5 years from now because some nutjob managed to get a patent granted for some basic RSS functionality. (see Eolas vs Microsoft)
Some clarification about the matter (Score:3, Interesting)
"Second of all, from my reading anyway, Microsoft is not patenting RSS, but RSS within Vista/IE7. Of course I'm not a patent lawyer, I could be wrong about that."
I am very unclear what makes the author of the blog think this ? I read the claims - and that is what counts in a patent, only - and can't find anything that points to Vista. The only technical feature the claims talk about is the feature mentioned mainly in claim 10: reading RSS by an application that generically cannot read it. That is meant with the plurality of applications in claim 1.
Therefore what the patent proposes is *not* to patent RSS, but to patent the rocket-science-like concept of getting the RSS as is (that is, again, *not* patenting it), and miraculously translate it ('API') to be used in other applications.
To me, the patent is written very clearly and rather concisely. If you now read the blog again, alas, it doesn't really hit the problem and the consequences right between the eyes.
The question are basically two:
1. For patentability, it must be made sure, that nobody has proposed to use RSS for a plurality of 'drains', applications, that do not natively 'speak' RSS, before the filing date, June 21, 2005.
2. For business reasons, one needs to evaluate the value of a patent that prevents others from using RSS for other applications; like importing it into a media player. Obviously, there is a nice stranglehold that the patent offers to the owner against competitors.
And let me add some more remarks here for Slashdot raeders:
Sure, the whole thing is probably crap. As much crap as the Slashdot title "Microsoft Applies to Patent RSS in Vista". AFAIK, there are browsers (claim 19), media players (claim 20) and e-mail (claim 18) in non-Microsoft products as well
Dave Winer is wrong just as well; there is no single attack on RSS in the patent. Anyone who just reads RSS in an RSS-reader will be able to do so in future. But beware the patent is granted (and I bet the dimwits in USPTO will grant it), and you write and sell an application that extracts RSS feeds into a set of hierachical folders (claim 8), that reside on the machine and are queried by a browser, media player or e-mail client; and you'll be tossed.
Actually, the only thing that I personally find 'clever' in this application (and I am *not* an RSS person), is the setup of these hierarchical folders. Because one can mirror RSS-content locally, any content, within topical folders, and then query these folders for content; like media player for latest on movies (and then offer the movie through your media player); browser for news (and then offer the news feeds contained in the RSS); and so forth.
The end of BP&J (Score:1)
If things keep going like this they'll end up patenting peanut butter and jelly sandwiches! [itworld.com]
Patent Law (Score:1)
1) You can't patent something that is already in the public domain (as Vista is)
2) You can't patent something that is already in the public domain (as RSS is)
So how the heck do they expect to be able to patent an application of two specific items?
Oh
Has anyone REALLY read the patent applcation? (Score:2, Insightful)
How's this for a conspiracy theory?
Some key points from the patent, severely stripped:
1.
Prior Work ?? (Score:1)
From reading the patent it seems to me Magpierrs is prior work.
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I'll have ketchup, and relish, and... oh hell, just make it all-dressed please.
Wake up, & smell the prison-coffee (Score:2)
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