Wireless Email Patents Vs. Innovation 44
Exactly a year ago Slashdot discussed Geoff Goodfellow's early contributions to wireless email and how they were conspicuously absent from the NTP vs. RIM patent fight. Techdirt points us to another early wireless email innovator, Nicholas Fodor, who recently came to the notice of the NY Times. Techdirt uses Fodor's story to highlight the problems with the US patent system that are by now so obvious to this community.
What's the solution? (Score:2, Insightful)
A good example of how a good idea can go wrong is Digg. It addresses one of the sore spots about Slashdot: the ability for anyone to submit news, and immediately have it viewable by others. It also opens up the comment moderation system to everyone. It's the Digg comment moderation I'd like to consider for t
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If the college members were respected industry people, I believe that it would moderate out any fanboyism, and their opposites.
The NTP patents are at best very marginal an
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enforce a warranty (Score:1)
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I fail to see how your example is relevant to the discussion at hand. Slashdot and Digg are competing Web sites for geek news. They are run by their respective management and editors. It's no
You need to look deeper, Paco. (Score:1)
Yes, but Slashdot takes the stance that the USPTO currently takes: a relatively small group of people making all of the decisions, be it which stories to publish or which pate
Deja Vu (Score:2)
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Re:What's the solution? (Score:5, Interesting)
I've heard of a proposal where you pay a fee each year, but the longer you own the more the fee goes up. So for the first year it's $2, then it doubles from there each year. So if you are actually applying your patent to work, then hopefully your making a profit to cover the fee each year. The fee will eventually become so expensive that most owners of patents will have to stop paying. Once you stop paying the fee it becomes public domain.
This would prevent people from owning multiple patents that they do nothing with (unless you count suing people for using it.)
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The system is not as broken as slashdotters seem to think it is, there is just an incredible amount of ignorance of how it actually
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Other areas of patent work much better because there is a 200 year history of the patents that the PTO itself can draw from. Choosing to patent a new type of invention all of a sudden is just a remarkably BAD idea. All of a sudden you have a land grab going on to claim title to simple things that have been state of the art for years.
Everyone would do well to remember that this problem is an effect of SOMEONE ALTERING THE STATUS QUO.
It's much like copyright in that respect. The
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http://www.uspto.gov/web/offices/ac/qs/ope/fee200
It really as broken as people claim it is.
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The same is true here: http://www.slashdot.org/firehose.pl [slashdot.org] -- although you do have to be logged in to access it.
old is new... (Score:5, Interesting)
I think a large problem with patents is that society as a whole doesn't remember anything past 5 years ago. Kids honestly think that "hotmail" for instance, was the first e-mail provider or most significant, (mostly because they're so young that the oldest computer they touched was a P4 in 2000 or whatever).
That being said I hate crackberries so I'm kinda for RIM getting screwed.
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An I know about the kids not knowing nowadays. I just had a conversat
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I meet him when picking my nephew up from some after school thing a few weeks ago. He wasn't in the same class but was there to walk one of the other kids home. My niece is nephew is friends with whoever he was picking up and thats how I meet him. And of course kids related to you think your superman at whatever you do which sparked the conversation about computers in the first place(I was being bragged about).
I don't know. This guy tries to pass himself off as
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Well don't I feel dated now, I had a hotmail account when it was originally Rocketmail.
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Sadly things like UUCP and what not were before my time, but at least I wasn't naive enough as a kid to think we had invented networked computing.
Raise your hand if you remember a time before cell phones were ubiquitous.
Tom
Should not be able to patent something so general (Score:5, Insightful)
Many in the Linux community look at the Novell-Msft deal for precisely this reason. "I will pretend to beat you, you pretend to cry" and in that process we will create the impression that I am a unbeatable big honcho on the hill.
Re:Should not be able to patent something so gener (Score:2)
Truth be told, even though you or I know the patent is obvious, chances of actually overturning it without a hugely costly legal battle (that even RIM didn't want to play) is low.
Tom
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True, but the idea is to mainly kill off the venture funding for competing services. To compete with RIM the cost of entry into the market is high and it is well nigh impossible without venture funding. With the long shadow of 650 M$ settlement, there wont be big venture funding. Small players will try to invalidate the patent first
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So you can entirely make a market for yourself out of the US of A.
To m
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Part of the whole problem is that even a patent that is obviously invalid is expensive to invalidate however easy. The court system operates under the fiction that the process doesn't intrinsically harm a vindicated defendant (civil or criminal) when in fact it can be ruinous.
Re:Should not be able to patent something so gener (Score:2)
I could convert a desktop PC to receive wireless mail too... I just need to plug it into an UPS, charge the battery, disconnect the wall plug and add an USB WiFi card.
My guess is that RIM used custom wireless protocols for mail instead of tunneling TCP/IP with standard eMail services...
YATC (Score:4, Insightful)
Yet Another Thermodynamic Cycle syndrome is just starting for IT and the center of the problem is not the patent system. The problems are that capitalism is unbridled and there is profit in litigation. I have a difficult time visualizing a patent system reform that will actually improve innovation because it never comes down to who is the inventor, it comes down to who has the resources to hire the most and best lawyers. There really isn't much point in attempting to obtain a patent if you have a good idea or product but don't you don't have a large corporation behind you. Either your idea is crap, you are so far ahead of your time no one will "get it" or a larger company will pick up on the idea. In whichever situation, a patent isn't going to help. I would think generally the type of person that invents anything truly innovative, isn't the type of person that wants to spend their life in a court room and dealing with the legal system.
I believe the Internet will eventually change this. If a good idea is spread very quickly, it reduces to a commodity very quickly. If one company "steals" your idea, many will. My opinion is that unless you want to spend your life in court, it's simpler to just publish your ideas in an open manner and then develop a business model around the sub-components and consulting. This is very similar to the Open Source vs. Proprietary software model. If you have a new idea that has value but you have minimal resources, you cannot show the profit of Microsoft, but you can be Red Hat.
Bucky Fuller (Score:2)
- R. Buckminster Fuller GRUNCH of Giants [reactor-core.org], 1983
Solution (Score:1)
Can't Compete on Products Alone (Score:2)
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Maybe the right solution to this problem is to actually have innovative products of a useful nature. If some jackass can rip off your idea trivially, then it's not really worth that much is it? If what you make takes craft and skill, it won't be trivial to knock off and you'll be able to compete in the market place.
If you actually think about it, patents are anti-capitalistic because it denies people the ability to
Campaign for Ethical Patents (Score:2)
We have three main alternatives:
1. Throw out the entire patent system - this has happened in the pas
Obvious (Score:1)
competion doesn't equate to obvious (Score:1)
Deciding if something is obvious or not is a huge problem for everyone involved in the patent field. Having lots of people working toward the same goal, however, is not a good tes
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