Vonage Loses Appeal; Verizon Owed $120 Million 160
Billosaur writes "Things do not look good for Vonage. Yesterday, they lost their request for reconsideration of their settlement with Verizon. This means Vonage owes Verizon $120 million to end the patent lawsuit filed against them. The costs associated with defending the case have cut into Vonage's bottom line, and despite attempts to cut costs by laying off 10% of their workforce, they may be unable to make a payment against their debt come December. According to the settlement, Vonage will pay $117.5 million to Verizon and another $2.5 million dollars to charity. Vonage's shares have dropped 87% since their IPO, now hovering around $1.50 per share."
I've Got Their Number (Score:4, Interesting)
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Anyway - even if Vonage wouldn't be my choice (I'm using Cellip [mysecretary.net]) the whole case looks really bad when it comes to customer advantage. It
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The ATAs, though, don't belong to the customers. They're free from Vonage. If Vonage dies, those locked ATAs will be a waste, but not a cost to the customer (except maybe recycling, unless Vonage pays for that - as they should, because it's Vonage's property they're discarding).
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What I'd like to know, since you seem to know more about LNP, is whether Vonage can sell its blocks of termination numbers to another telco, like maybe Verizon. That seems more likely than Vonage just letting such a valuable asset go without cashing in.
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AFAIK, the gist of the process is that LECs request blocks of TNs from a regulatory body (NANPA or the FCC?) along with justification of why they need the TNs. Further, on a quarterly basis the LECs have to justify their retention of previously-allocated blocks by reporting on TN usage (e.g. those in service, aging, etc.). Also, as service areas grow TNs are added (through allocation of unus
Re:I've Got Their Number (Score:4, Insightful)
So what? Who cares? What the hell is the difference? Verizon had no problem porting some numbers to my preferred provider, nor did some other telcos, like Sprint, from whom I first got the number. Vonage had a problem.
So what does your buzzword complaint have to do with anything? This is a question merely of whether Vonage will let me port a number, the way other telcos do, the way LNP is supposed to work. If anything, you should throw your buzzwords at Vonage, instead of acting like you're some kind of bigshot. All it does is make you look like you don't understand LNP.
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Actually it looks like you don't understand it. Just because it's SIP doesn't mean calls can magically get routed to it, you still have to pay a provider to route it for you. That is what the parent was getting at. It takes a lot more than just an Asterisk server to route DIDs. In other words, you have to be a CLEC to get numbers ported to you.
How would Vonage port your number to your Asterisk server? Surely you must have a POTS line, that's all Vonage has on their end along with an Internet connection of
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I have SIP over my broadband. Which is exactly the same scenario.
These objections are all BS. I want to port my Vonage number out of Vonage, I have the technical equipment available to do it, but Vonage refuses, because "I
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and who woulda thunk it... (Score:3, Funny)
I just hope the commercials go away (Score:1, Funny)
Re:I just hope the commercials go away (Score:4, Funny)
"Boo hoo, boo hoo hoo..."
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Previous art no longer holds up? Awesome (Score:5, Funny)
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Not only is their prior art in my patent (an oxygen related reaction used to generate energy), but you're infringing on my patent by breathing. So either pay up or stop.
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I'm sorry, but I've already patented a method of generating oxygen using carbon dioxide and sunlight, so you'll have to pay me for the oxygen that your patent uses.
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Man this could go on for a bit.
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</badjoke>
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I hereby declare a patent with the following claims:
I think that sums it up nicely.
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The implications of that are hilarious.
(The concept of energy, required for all the components involved in making this post, is the property of NinjaTariq, used with permission.)
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Re:Patent on the wheel. (Score:2)
--
You are too late..
However, in that case, an Australian lawyer was able to sneak the wheel patent through a fast-track application system. The US patent went through the full application procedure.
Refrence;
http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn2178.html [newscientist.com]
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OK to be fair, it shows they put in dibs first.
When are patent portfolios restraint of trade? (Score:5, Insightful)
All that's left are a handful of tiny regionals, and Verizon, AT&T, and QWest. MCI is dead and gone... and buying up patents (or even 'cleanly' filing them) means that these companies can effectively shutout the competition.
Not good.
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Kick a Verizon representative when you get a chance.
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Patents trump competition law (Score:2)
What is happening to Vonage is what happens to every aggressive competitor in a market dominated by incumbents and protected by patents. It does not matter how innovate a
It's ugly.... (Score:2)
Strategies that must be millennia old foisted with seeming deadly precision against upstart enemies.
Peace seems so elusive sometimes, when by rule, those in business must be wary of the competition (in so many forms), supply chain, the ambiguity and vaguery of patent laws and outcomes of litigation, then coupled to a seemingly benign government, employment law, and a the whims of the stock market.
The reason that pharma patents do so well, is because a result
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I also understand monopolies, and the Sherman Anti-trust Act, The 1996 TCA Act, and other legislation.
What I'm alluding to is that if a sufficient number of patent protections amounts to monopolization of an industry-- once a former public trust-- then there's some thing wrong here.
Vonage is a victim, just as many technology companies are victims, of the patent process. Vonage had a chance,but doesn't now. Yesterday on
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Just because you haven't seen more litigation doesn't mean that there won't be a lot of it soon, now that the game is over in this litigation-- successfully for Verizon and a death knell to Vonage. It puts up barriers to entry
not good (Score:2, Interesting)
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the combined costs should be within a few dollars a month of vonage.
Re:not good (Score:4, Informative)
I seriously hope you're joking. The cost for unlimited local-only POTS service (with Verizon, ha ha) is $5 more than what Vonage charges for their premium residential plan, which includes unlimited calling to anywhere in the US and Canada. If I had to tack on a cheap long distance service, my costs would be an additional $30 per month (all my family lives out of state). Add to that Verizon's nutty ideas of what constitutes a local call, and there'll be an addition $10 per month in "regional toll" charges. That means I'd be paying $45 per month more if I went that route. I'd be better off getting their freedom unlimited plan. Oh, and I spend a couple hours a week on the phone with people in Germany. Vonage is only $.04/minute. How much would that be with Verizon?
Sorry, but there's no way shape or form that one of the local monopoly POTS services is going to be within a few dollars of what Vonage customers are paying now. Nobody would have ever switched from their regional incumbent monopoly unless they had significant reason to do so. There was an element of risk involved in trying out VoIP that required sufficient financial incentive to overcome.
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$6 of that is caller ID so if I skipped that it would be $22.
this is in a major metro area with a bell system entity.
more to the topic though, just because vonage is likely to get more expensive or go away doesn't mean all your options are closed. there is still....
* skype
* ditching the land line in favor of cell
* cable modem "triple play" phone service
the incremental costs here can be very low, possibly less than vonage was
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long dx and local-long dx is by ECG which is pennies per minute. even if I spend hundreds of minutes on the phone it's still cheaper than going with one of AT&T's ridiculously expensive calling plans.
local loop is owned by AT&T but has been pac bell, pac tel, and sbc over the years.
caller id is my only splurge. opted out of everything else they offered.
but i've had to stay on top of it. seems like once a yea
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the combined costs should be within a few dollars a month of vonage.
You've got to be kidding.
I pay $14.99/month for the lowest Vonage plan. That includes all my local and long distance calls. That includes voice mail, call waiting, call forwarding, etc etc etc. I have ONE phone number that simultaneously rings my home office, my 'real' office, and my cell phone. I have 3 rings to pick up any of those, otherwise it goes to voic
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if you have the patience, you might consider an asterix box so you can host your own voice mail and do whatever you want with it, without paying a tithe to the telco.
in fact, since voice mail flexibility was such a big advantage for vonage, it makes you wonder if some of the patents weren't about VOIP at all, but about voice mail over IP, or just some very broad voice mail (period) patents.
Re:not good (Score:5, Interesting)
I love getting email when I have a message at home.
I like being able to listen to it online.
I like having all my incoming and outgoing call information available.
I like having forwarding for free.
I like low cost international and free national.
I would probably pay a good bit more for this quality of service. TimeWarner offered less at a higher cost, so forget them...
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Just use a different VoIP provider - preferably one that's small enough that they won't get sued any time soon. SIP service is a commodity market (and one that major corporations use, so it's not going anywhere) - there's nothing special about Vonage except their ad budget.
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Dear Google... (Score:2)
K thx bye.
What precisely are they infringing on? (Score:2)
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Vonage loses every case that goes to trial. Voyage loses every case that goes to an appeal.
Vonage can't win on the facts and it can't win on the law. It is running out of time and it is running out of money.
1.50? (Score:2)
Vonage Stockholders? (Score:3, Interesting)
Seriously, anybody who didn't see Vonage's failure coming before the IPO deserves this. They were an unprofitable company in a saturated market with a product (Voice-Over-IP) that doesn't appeal to most folks.
Sure, $20-25 per month for phone service is a wonderful deal but the major players with rock solid products have similar prices ($30-40 per month). And in effect, they will be de-listed soon and become another ghost in the great halls of technology company who never made it.
Re:Vonage Stockholders? (Score:4, Interesting)
And, really, I've seen lots of people interested in the lower prices and better packages that VoIP has to offer. However what seems to be happening are that cable companies are cleaning up in the VoIP space, because they already have the infrastructure, and can offer packages (TV/Internet/phone) that are actually a good deal.
Vonage, really, was a pretty good business with reasonably satisfied customers. In fact, I imagine they would have stood the test of time were it not for two things: (1) the incumbent monopolies are rich, and (2) patent law gives anyone with enough money the ability to exclude competitors.
Re:Vonage Stockholders? (Score:5, Interesting)
Not that this isn't an attractive situation. If the government forced you to rent your car out for 50% less than it cost you to rent it, would you be happy about the deal? Probably not. What could you do about it? Maybe nothing directly. But if you could find a loophole like requiring renters to have a million dollar liability insurance policy, maybe you wouldn't have to rent it out as much.
Or, if McDonalds had a deal that if you bought 100 hamburgers at a time they would sell them for $0.10 each. So you go there, by 100 hamburgers and set up a stand on the corner reselling them - right in front of McDonalds. And your sign is saying how cheap your "McDonalds" hamburgers are compared to the store behind you. Would McDonalds sell you another 100? Maybe not.
This is the sort of situation that Verizon found itself in. They do not have to support their competitors, but they had to support Vonage. The government and state regulators won't let them stop supporting Vonage directly. So we dust off an old patent and find it can be used to beat up Vonage. If it wasn't for the patent, there would be something else.
Best stick with one of the under-the-radar VOIP providers that just resells some bulk service from Sprint. Lingo is one of those. Cheaper than Vonage and a lot less visible.
Re:Vonage Stockholders? (Score:4, Insightful)
Now, if we are going to say that Verizon ISP is not profitable on it's own, and requires the high margin POTS lines to subsidize it, then we have a classic anti-trust case where a monopoly is using it's monopoly position to control a different industry.
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ILECs that were given monopolies in areas in exchange for precisely the scenario you describe -- opening up their copper to competitors.
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DSL service is a general purpose data connection. The customer can use it for whatever they want. If the customer happens to use their data connection so that they no longer need some other service that the DSL provider sells, that sucks for the DSL provider - but you don't get to sell a general purpose
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You're new here arn't you
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If they're able to sell hamburgers for $0.10 at a profit, the fact that they're selling burgers for much more in their retail stores represe
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I don't understand your comparison. Vonage customers pay a conventional ISP (say, Verizon) for broadband service (e.g. DSL). Are you saying that the government is forcing phone companies to sell DSL at below cost? Please share details, because I'm not getting that deal. Is it only available to Vonage customers? I'll sign up right now.
(Moderators, if cdrguru does not
Your tax dollars hard at work. (Score:2)
Let me rephrase, you waive your right to free choice in all things, and in exchange you receive whatever those you voted for feel that they owe you. Generally its mediocre services (such as justice or medicine), or total and complete abuse (such as prohibitionist laws, feel good propaganda and theft of personal property through armed robbery (confiscation) or fraud (taxes for "necessary services")).
Whenever a company with good service shows up (and V
Re:Vonage Stockholders? (Score:4, Interesting)
IMHO, this little patent spat was Verizon's way of fucking-over a competitor without actually having to compete on merit to do so. (IIRC, the patent is basically a bogus "On teh Intarwebs!" rig-up of existing tech, folks).
Also, up until this lawsuit, Vonage was actually beginning to turn a profit. Not anymore.
That said, I honestly doubt that anyone saw it coming, up until Verizon decided they didn't like the competition anymore.
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Around that time (2004?) I had looked into a few IPO-worthy companies, with Vonage and Under Armour at the top of the list. Vonage was hated, and I wish I had the time to pull up the old articles from the way-back machine... but I'll leave that as an exercise to the reader.
Also, up until this lawsuit, Vonage was actually beginning to turn a profit. Not anymore.
http://finance.yahoo.com/q/is?s=VG&annual
Now, I don't know how they figure their "Selling General and Administrative" liability, but for the last three years this has cost them more than their "Total Revenue" and even though thei
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As a former Verizon customer who is now a Vonage customer, I can tell you that Vonage is definitely a better deal. POTS service through Verizon cost me about $35-$40 on paper when I first signed up, but the price would always creep up to the $40-$50/month range over the next few years. Then I'd call the bastards up, and we'd be back down to $35-$40. Then the process starts all over again.
Once I switched to Vonage, that problem went away, I've been with them for 3 years, and no price increase. I can call al
$2.5 million to charity? (Score:2)
What's with the $2.5 million to charity? Is this a common thing in such lawsuits? And does anyone know what charity/charities?
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What makes you think that none of the other VoIP products 'just work' like Vonage? They just like any other SIP provider.
The non-Vonage provider I use, Galaxy Voice, just sent me a pre-configured ATA box - all I had to do was plug it into power, ethernet, and the phone. If
competition (Score:3, Insightful)
Soooo, looks like... (Score:5, Funny)
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Only if they wind up having to go to jail.
Darn... (Score:2)
Or maybe I can flash it into something useful when Vonage dies?
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Depends on the price. I recently switched from Packet8 to Gizmo Project; after bricking my DTA310 trying to get it working with Gizmo, I ordered one of these [thevoipconnection.com] earlier this week. I already have a WRT54GL (running OpenWRT Kamikaze), so I don't need router functionality in an ATA. I might try unbricking the DTA310 at some point, but that's a low priorit
A couple of questions a party line? (Score:2)
Then I had an idea, that must have been explored already. Would it be possible for someone outside my lan to connect to my lan and then use my vonage (other voip) account to make calls? How about routing incoming calls to other IP's perhaps some kind of system that would greet a caller with please select an extension say 1 to 9 and 1 coul
Brace up for higher bills (Score:2)
Question (Score:2)
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To a person who had a job all that really matters is now they don't have a job. Listing on slashdot every company that had to lay people off would quickly become depressing.
Re:Question (Score:4, Insightful)
In one scenario, somebody else gets your job, in the other nobody gets your job.
Not *this* December (Score:5, Informative)
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Sad to see them go... (Score:3, Interesting)
Alternate VoIP companies thread (Score:2)
Ch 11, but not Ch 7 (Score:2, Interesting)
1. The Vonage name has excellent recognition due to their heavy investment in advertising.
2. Vonage has a paid up license to use the patents required to implement Voip.
3. The various patent holders (Verizon, ATT, one other) should probably go after other Voip providers like Packet 8 who don't have nearly the cash on hand to survive the suits. Therefore, the VOIP consumer marketplac
Damn... (Score:2)
In capitalist barberica, profit gives way to mediocrity!
Did anyone not see this coming? (Score:2)
Nice... (Score:2)
Everyone? (Score:2, Insightful)
I am sure they would disagree that it needs to end.
And they have a much louder voice than you.
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Fixed it for you:
This time it didn't hurt Verizon. Yet.
Next time, Verizon might be the losing defendant. That is, if they haven't provoked such a severe backlash that they're no longer around.
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RE: Verizon... (Score:2)
Seriously, if they want business, such as mine, for example, the sun will go supernova before they get it.
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One less telecom fighting for your dollars means one less competitors and thus less consumer options, even for just internet access.
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you're right though that this puts a lot of others at risk. AFAICT, there is no way to do VOIP-to-normal-phones calls without this.
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So really, there should be a method to gauge effort in trying to get the product out of the door, even if it means actively trying to license it up front, advertising it, trying to get proofs of concepts out...-something-. That way submarine patents and patents just there
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You're focusing on a single symptom and ignoring most of the problem.
Consider this: What if Verizon *is* selling products based on all of these patents, but they're completely different than the products that Vonage is selling? Then the effect that the patents are having is to allow a single company to prevent any sort of innovation in any related field.
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Good for you
Same reason i keep paying for my MMORPG subscription even tho i don't do much anymore, i can afford to and they can use the subscriber numbers so the remaining players can play until the end of time hopefully if they wish
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