Northeastern University Sues Google Over Patent 159
kihbord writes to mention that Boston's Northeastern University and Waltham, Mass. based company Jarg have brought suit against Google for apparently infringing on a distributed database system developed by Kenneth Baclawski. "The patent describes a distributed database system that breaks search queries into fragments and distributes them to multiple computers in a network to get faster results. The patent was assigned to Northeastern University, which licensed it exclusively to Jarg, according to the lawsuit, filed last Tuesday with the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Texas."
Solution in the last Slashdot story? (Score:4, Funny)
Bayh-Dole strikes again (Score:4, Informative)
Lawyers Troll the Patent Office? (Score:2)
Guess what they say about lawyers being greedy bastages ain't far off the mark...
Re:Lawyers Troll the Patent Office? (Score:4, Insightful)
Interesting Dates (Score:3, Informative)
FTA, the patent was filed on Dec 2, 1997. From Google's Corporate History [google.com] page, they describe setting up their first data centre in 1998.
Still absolutely ridiculous that this idea was patentable, and that the patent infringement case could happen this late.
Re:Interesting Dates (Score:5, Interesting)
yes, but... (Score:2)
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It was filed on October 5, 1994. December 2, 1997 is the issue date.
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So, if this were applied to patents, if a mom and pop shop in Nowhere, USA was using a patented production process to make bread for their community of 50, i
Oh come on (Score:2, Funny)
Patent In Question & University Patent Portfol (Score:5, Informative)
I congratulated him on the several patents he just acquired. Although I can't say I was very happy about his recent moves.
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Combine with the graduate degree requirement that's slowly coming into practice and a BS/BA doesn't seem to be worth much nowadays.
Re:Patent In Question & University Patent Port (Score:4, Insightful)
The fact is that the patent system has long been designed so that you need money to enjoy its protection, people who are unemployed very rarely have enough money to file a patent and most contracts of employment sign any patent rights over to your employer.
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But the answer will almost always be zero as the patents would be owned by whoever was paying you when you came up with the idea.
It is true that patents are usually assigned to the employer (i.e. the employer holds the IP rights), but the names on the patents are still those of the individual(s) that invented the work. As such, you can list patents on you CV, and as the GP points out, quite a few employers now look at patent authoring as evidence of creativity and thus value it highly.
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Then you see three page mathematics papers being published which mention that the technique discussed is being patented, even if it just involves a couple of matrix-vector equations. And the paper will have around six or eight names as the listed authors.
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Cool. Spread that meme. If more people start thinking that then the patent system will finally get fixed. When you can blame something on an icon of the left wing world (elite, ivory tower professors, for instance) then something gets done about it. Nothing motivates right wingers more, and left wingers are always happy to doubt themselves or eat their own.
Prior art (?) (Score:5, Informative)
Dont be so quick to shout troll (Score:3, Informative)
So , heres how it works :
1. Do research on some area.
2. Get funding from $Federal Agency of choice
3. Make a few students get PhD's doing research on this topic
4. Go to the office of tech licensing on campus and draw up patent
4.a Make sure the exclusive license clause is in the patent
5. ??? -> Form company and sit on board of directors
6. Profit.
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It probably shouldn't as the University probably doesn't maintain a presence there, and Google doesn't directly market its services to that locality. The question of jurisdiction will likely come down to whether Google should be required to exclude business ties to that area.
Honestly, IANAL, but that really seem
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That's what we do with it! (Score:2)
Seriously, isn't this pretty much the definition of a distributed computing job? What the hell do they teach at this school? Punch cards? It's not just patent trolling, it's embarrassingly ignorant.
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And we'll take a job an run it on multiple machines to get a faster answer?
Wrong. That's not what's covered by the patent.
IBM says play chess...
Now, you're more on the right track. Before there was Deep Blue, there was Ken Thompson's Belle. Belle the machine, as versus Belle the program distributed as "/usr/games/chess" on earlier Unix systems, did have a similar architecture compared to the one patented. The query, "What move shall I play next?" was broken up into pieces and handed off to subordinated dedicated computer search chips which searched different portions of the position tree. Unfort
Stop offering services in Marshall Texas (Score:2, Interesting)
If one of those IP addresses tries to access your service, put up a nice, static HTML page declaring that it due to the local court's ignorance of patent issues and the resulting popularity of those courts for patent litigation, it isn't a good business decision to provide services to that area.
Have
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]{
Combinations not valid patents. (Score:2)
I Thought Google was Highly Secret (Score:3, Interesting)
And then there's always the specter of Prior Art raising its unwanted head.
Have these guys ever built such a database system themselves for sale?
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The way I've read this, it seems like a pishing expedition of Google needing to prove that they don't violate the patent, and not that there is yet any proof that they do violate it.
You don't read very well.
The patent was filed in 1994, ie. before internet search engines.
The inventor wrote the book, several of them from the looks of the references, on how to make internet search engines before any existed.
Distributed batch jobs are not what is covered in the patent. They are not how Google implements its search engine either.
Executive summary: Google is almost certainly using technology covered by this patent and will settle out of court, quickly. And yes, Microsoft and Yahoo! are
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Prior BUTT, not prior art (Score:2)
This search method is Ancient (Score:2, Interesting)
Too quick to dismiss Northeastern as a troll (Score:5, Interesting)
The /. posts labeling Northeastern University as a patent troll or claiming that the patent should not have issued have been posted too quickly to be credible assessments of the morality of this suit and the worthiness of the patent. The current Wikipedia definition [wikipedia.org] is that a patent troll is "a person or company that enforces its patents against one or more alleged infringers in a manner considered unduly aggressive or opportunistic." If the patent was obtained through lawful and ethical means, is valid, and is infringed on by Google, then how is it "unduly aggressive or opportunistic" for Northeastern University to enforce the patent?
Some argue that a patent troll is merely a person or company that seeks to enforce a patent but does not practice the patent. Maybe Northeastern University is not practicing the patent. Then again, the mission of most universities seems to be conducting research, not applying and commercializing research. Licensing research to companies that can and will apply and commercialize that research is one way that universities fund additional research. Maybe universities should have to give all of their research away for free. But currently they do not. And it seems unfair to fault Northeastern for exercising its rights while not pushing the scope of its mission.
Given how quickly Northeastern was accused of being a patent troll, and given that there was no discussion about the proper role of universities or any real analysis of the worthiness of the patent (which was filed in 1994...almost 4 years before Google was founded), it seems likely that some people consider a patent troll to be any person who tries to enforce any patent rights.
Maybe Northeastern is acting like a patent troll. And maybe their patent is worthless. But it takes more than a quick glance at the 20-page issued patent or the 6-page complaint against Google to come up with a reasonable assessment of these issues.
Some analysis of the complaint would at least show that it doesn't look like Northeastern really knows the details of Google's search infrastructure:
Then again, Google's code is not open to the world. If it was, more detailed analysis would be possible. How can Northeastern try to get access to the code? By suing and demanding it as part of discovery. Does this make Northeastern a patent troll? Maybe. But the alternative (aside from discarding the patent system altogether, at least for software innovations) is a system that rewards patent infringers who keep their source code inaccessible to patent holders.
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So tell us, what here is worthy of the patent?
Internet Search engines. The professor whose name is on the patent invented them. Really.
If it's simply parallel search
Um no. I know this is /., but did the thought of reading the patent or the article ever occur to you before you wrote that?
/., nearly every one of them contains something clever enough IMO to invalidate 99.9% of the ideas posted here as "prior art". This is clearly one of them.
Out of the patent articles I've seen on
This guy wrote the book on how to make efficient Internet Search engines and patented it before any
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This patent cannot possibly have been obtained through ethical means, since any ethical patent process would never have granted it in the first place.
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Second, actually, NU does place some momentum on turning research discoveries / inventions into real-world use, having built a landmark building on campus in 1998 for just that purpose (the Egan Technology Transfer Center). However, despite noteworthy work in computer science (e.g. this is the second NU prof to appear in a
All software patents are worthless. (Score:2)
Once you realize this, then it becomes clear why NEU is being demonized. It's because they are acting like a demon.
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In the '70s there were those who believed that copyright protection was inappropriate for software, even questioning its basic need:
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I'm sure there were, but speaking as someone who was actually writing software in that era I can assure you they were such a tiny part of the dialog that they can be ignored. This was also the era in which patent protection for software was first seriously discussed, and when Bell Labs donated what turned out to be the first US software patent (the UNIX setuid bit) into the publ
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At least one company [uspto.gov] seems to show an interest in using the patent system to build a niche for itself. And that company seem to produce a lot of innovations [fastcompany.com] that arguably advance the arts and sciences.
Innovating and seeking patent rights may be completely independent. Sure, there are potential strategies [informationweek.com] that might leverage the patent system. But, like any business strategy, how can anyone be sure success comes from the strategy or from other factors. You never know for sure that success was in spite o
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You admit that you can't create any kind of causal link between Google's patent portfolio and their business model, and if you're going to argue that it's not their active use of the technologies that they have invented but the fact that they've patented them that has made them successful, you know perfectly well what kind of response you'll get.
it is hard to prove that a strategic tool, such as so
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wait (Score:2)
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I would say that the primary way NEU and all the other private universities contribute back to the community is by offering scholarships to underprivileged American students. Thereby those students (and their children) are e
Yuck. Glad I left that school. (Score:3, Interesting)
That's not to say that NEU didn't/doesn't have some strong departments, nor do I mean to disparage anyone who is presently working their ass off there. I just didn't see it. This article strengthens my opinion of NEU as essentially "for profit" and not "for education".
Software patents (Score:2)
Perhaps whatever protection offered by the law for software should be more similar to a copyright. Many smart people can solve a particular difficult problem, and
Prior art? (Score:3, Informative)
One such example is Teradata [wikipedia.org], which had the database tables partitioned among many CPUs (done automatically on insert), each with its storage.
A query would be split automatically to all the CPUs, and each would fetch and return the rows matching the criteria in its part of the table.
The results are then combined from all CPUs and returned back to the application.
Later the CPUs were just emulated in software, as hardware became more powerful.
Prior art then
NCR Teradata might be prior art? (Score:2)
So its likely this professor saw, heard, or smelled the process at some conference. Or from one of his grad students. Then painted proceeded to paint a Matisse abstract paten
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Alan.
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Good luck with your work post AA.
Then you remembering using Teradata in the 1998 timeframe does demonstrate that the professor is an idea grabber. Again, Teradata had to have been planned long before 1
So if they aren't a patent troll... (Score:2)
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I mean, back when i ran a heavy Nutch/Lucene system the basic idea of balancing a query volume is to distribute the load. This is akin to patenting putting in a 4 lane highway so you can handle traffic a 1 lane highway couldn't.
Re:Just another patent troll... (Score:4, Informative)
The patent was for taking a single request, breaking it up into subrequests, then distributing the subrequests amongst multiple servers and then gluing the results back together.
So to make the required car analogy, its like taking a shopping list, breaking it up by area of town that the store is in, then deploying a separate car to each area and meeting back at home.
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How is this different from any parallel divide-and-conquer algorithm?
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Prior Art? (Score:5, Interesting)
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well at least not for any judge in texas... wait northeastern is in ma, google is in ca, why is this case in texas?
That particular court is renowned (notorious?) for being very patent-troll-friendly. Another case of jurisdiction shopping.
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Don't be so damn cynical! Obviously Northeastern just wants to play fair by moving the disupute to a neutral venue.
You, sir, have a future in PR.
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Is that a polite way of saying "you're going to hell?"
I said PR, not marketing. ;)
Re:Prior Art? (Score:4, Interesting)
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Re:We need a solution to the madness (Score:5, Insightful)
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A patent troll is someone who never intends to develop a patent but just sits on patents with the only purpose to sue those who infringe. In this case, the professor did not sit on the patent; he licensed it to Jarg, which is a company with real products.
Re:We need a solution to the madness (Score:5, Insightful)
Looks like a patent troll, sounds like a patent troll, smells like a patent troll. They're not going to be able to claim damages for lost profits. The only difference between these people and a typical dedicated patent troll IP firm is that they don't employ their own lawyers and they make some shitty, unrelated product that really has no relevance to this case.
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has got to be about as obvious as can be.
Soon they will be suing the people who came up with RPC,
because it breaks the same patent.
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Nonsense. It is clear you have not actually read the patent, as you have no clue at all what it covers.
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A: they try hard to make sure you don't get what the patent is about
B: it is just too tedious.
You have read the patent, I presume. Obvious?
Or what is it really about? What is patentable
in there, please?
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Jarg learned of the alleged infringement from a Boston-area lawyer who thought Google's search technology resembled that covered by the patent, said Jarg's president, Michael Belanger, according to a reportin Saturday's Boston Globe newspaper.
Whether or not Jarg is a patent troll or not, I don't know. They do appear to sell a related product. That lawyer, however, has "ambulance chaser" written all over him.
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So who gets to be the "expert witness" that proclaim that this obvious to them so that the patent can be revoked? Most of the "eperts on internet search technology" are either
- employed by Google (and thus have a conflict-of interest) or
- employed by one of Google's competitors (and thus have just as much of a conflict but a less obvious one).
Reality is that there's a lot of things that are "obvious" in hindsight -- but who gets to say so? Was this obvious to
Re:We need a solution to the madness (Score:5, Insightful)
Dividing the search up among multiple machines if one
machine is not enough is pretty obvious. And not just
in hindsight.
"but who gets to say so?"
I see the problem, but I don't think we should allow that
as an excuse for such things.
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It's already been done : IBM [siliconvalley.com] apparently filed this patent in April 2006. It was reported on /. but I can't seem to find the story right now.
http://yro.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=07/10/20/1031236 [slashdot.org]
Truth is stranger than fiction, and all that...
Aye, I thought it was hard to tell if they were serious, or if it was a bit of lawyer humor. The real question is, is it their intention to hit up the patent trolls for licensing fees whenever they use this "technology" (thereby getting in on the action), or to refuse to license it, so nobody (except themselves) can do it?
Sadly, prior art is to be found in all the idiotically-redundant "Duhhhh... I'm patenting patent trolling!" comments that have be
Re:University with Patents? (Score:4, Informative)
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Except Uni's are completely free to ignore everyone else's patents in the course of their research, have access to all scientific software at much much cheaper "academic" rates, and can pay grad students slave wages ($15,000 per year for a 3000 hour work week is well below the Federal minimum wage). So while they behave in many ways like corporations, they have a number of government-issued advantages in the competition. Who'd have thunk it, the government
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No. The experimental use exception is very small in the U.S. Universities are not allowed to just use anyone's patented process/thing. You say "Uni" though so I am thinking you aren't in the U.S.
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Technically, yeah, using patented materials & processes in the course of basic research at US universities may not be officially sanctioned, but it is the standard way of doing business. Of course, resulting materials may not be patentable, in which case it's usually "clean-roomed" to make sure there's a patentable paper trail before official documents get sent to the
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Certainly not from commercial entities, they know full well their academic discounts are given for the same reason the crack dealer gives the first rock for free. But for software that's written by government entities, paid for by my tax dollars, should be available to all taxpayers at the same rate.
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Right. As usual on Slashdot, everything must be black and white. It's not as if universities could seek to profit from their inventions, AND educate people and give back to society. Also, since making a profit makes you evil, they are obviously not trying to use the money to improve their programs and stretch their limited budgets.
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Research Grants (Score:3, Informative)
Generally speaking no, students do not pay for much/most research, at least not directly. There are of course lots of exceptions but research is typically paid for by grants (government and/or corporate) or various wealthy benefactors. A surprisingly large part of being a successful university researcher is being able to bring in the money to conduct your research. C
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(1) Cut back on staff and close departments - Not a valid proposition when there is demand for such staff.
(2) Take on more students and create new courses - The reputation of the university may suffer if the quality of teaching/resources go down - students now compare departments in terms of staff/student ratios, student/computer ratios, Internet bandwidth, co
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If you have ever been in East Texas before, you'll quickly understand the humor in that comment.
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The patent claims stress "non-relational" databases, but at the very bottom there is a poorly worded sentence that appears to claim any related distributed database technology as being under the patent.
My prediction is that Google will have to settle this one and quickly.
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to block all Northeastern University and Jarg IP addresses from using Google. Their students and faculty will revolt.
In other words, you suggest that Google reduces itself to the same moral level as the patent trolls, and in the process sacrifice its reputation of fair and objective domestic search results?? Great idea!
/., but Google would lose revenue and users. What would happen between the time when Google filters the ~15,000 students from using their product, and the time NEU changes its ways? Lost revenue from all those would-be searches that can't happen. Plu
Not only would that make *amazing* headlines here at