All 44 Blackboard Patent Claims Invalidated 130
I Don't Believe in Imaginary Property writes "The US Patent & Trademark Office has invalidated all 44 claims in Blackboard's patent. While this is a non-final action [PDF], which means that Blackboard will be able to appeal, it does represent a win for the Software Freedom Law Center which had requested the reexamination of Blackboard's patent. It is not yet known how this will affect the $3.1M judgment Blackboard won from Desire2Learn."
Hopefully this means my school will drop software (Score:1)
Re:Hopefully this means my school will drop softwa (Score:1, Interesting)
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Professors have logins - they can drag and drop word documents, excel files with grades, or whatever else they want (maps primarily, or related data, in this case.)
And it works fine. Students go to a website, download material, and bam. Done. Files can be uploaded to seperate servers. Takes *Far* less training than teaching *anyone* how to use the mess that was WebCT and now is Blackboard.
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Seems to be about on par with the Diebold voting system in terms of quality. Woe be the day their source code is leaked for the world to see.
Re:Hopefully this means my school will drop softwa (Score:1)
Re:Hopefully this means my school will drop softwa (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Hopefully this means my school will drop softwa (Score:4, Interesting)
1. No Friefox support. It's annoying that I have to actually use IE or something just to access one site.
2. This isn't a problem with Blackboard in an of itself, per se, but because teachers can post assignments there, they often feel the need to not mention homework at all and just expect us to check it nightly. For every class. This is sheer laziness. I'm a full time college student and I also have a part time job almost every night after classes as well as on most weekends. I don't have the time, motivation, or energy to double check for possible assignments every night. And it takes all of 10 seconds to tell a class of an assignment or to at least look for it as they LEAVE class.
3. It's slow and bloated, as mentioned above. Add reason 2 to this and it's an unnecessary waste of time.
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2. This isn't a problem with Blackboard in an of itself, per se, but because teachers can post assignments there, they often feel the need to not mention homework at all and just expect us to check it nightly. For every class. This is sheer laziness. I'm a full time college student and I also have a part time job almost every night after classes as well as on most weekends. I don't have the time, motivation, or energy to double check for possible assignments every night. And it takes all of 10 seconds to tell a class of an assignment or to at least look for it as they LEAVE class.
You should check to see if your school has a policy about assignments that covers this. Swing by the students' association and ask them, or wade through the schools' website.
Where I went to school, there were various rules to safeguard students from these types of unprofessional shenanigans from teachers.
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Either way, it's slow and pathetic.
Re:Hopefully this means my school will drop softwa (Score:2, Informative)
NOT!!!!!!!!!!!!
When students started buying computers with Vista, Blackboard would not play right with them. They had all kinds of issues. It won't even play right with Internet Explorer at our school. I'm just glad I'm not the Blackboard admin.
Note to my college administration:
Ever wonder why the University of Phoenix is so expensive? It's becaus
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Get rid of the USPTO (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Get rid of the USPTO (Score:5, Insightful)
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"If you're a lawyer, never tell this to a doctor." should be parsed as "If you tell a doctor you're a lawyer, you'll never be able to get an appointment or medical service."
That's still slightly an exaggeration...but only slightly.
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Strangely they don't do the same for tea.
I would think the Mcdonalds court case will have prevented many accidents due to the change in working practice by Mcdonalds. That is the value in that law suit, not the eventual cash award.
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It's a time honored tradition, [wikipedia.org] you HEATHEN! :-)
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Don't get me wrong, I do believe there are huge problems with the patent system and things need to change (and from the article itself, it looks like a small improvement at least is afoot), but you're statement is the equivalent of saying to a kid "Oh, you missed 1 problem out of 2000 on your test. You obviously don't know math an
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Re:Get rid of the USPTO (Score:5, Insightful)
Do they do such a bad job because they receive so many, or do they receive so many becaue they do a bad job?
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Do they do such a bad job because they receive so many, or do they receive so many becaue they do a bad job?
That's an interesting question, but probably not the right one.
They receive so many applications because the game is set up in such a way that doing so is more profitable to file any possible patent than to only file patents over inventions which are likely eligible for a patent.
The amount of money that a patent troll can get through the courts without asking for an appropriate licensing deal is more than enough to compensate for the minimal cost of filing a patent which is ultimately rejected. And is enou
Re:Get rid of the USPTO (Score:5, Interesting)
700,000 / 52 = about 13.5K per week.
Give that they have 5,477 patent examiners, that is a rate of about 2.5 patents per examiner per week.
There seems to be, based off of
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The difference being the penalties for failure. If a patent examiner "screws up", he just made the USPTO more money in the form of maintenance fees (the fact that entire swaths of technology are illegitimately locked down is irrelevant.)
If a pharmacist screws up
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Re:Get rid of the USPTO (Score:4, Insightful)
That's a joke, right? (Score:1, Insightful)
Pharmacists once required extensive training because they had to mix, compound, and measure the medicines. Today they are literally just dispensin
Re:That's a joke, right? (Score:4, Informative)
When your doctor prescribes something for you, go talk to your pharmacist about your entire drug picture before you start swallowing those little pills. That can very well save your life, particularly if you have something like a heart condition.
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Double check with your pharmacist --- good advice (Score:1)
>
> did they homework while studying
Frankly, I think most of the problem is that many doctors specialize after graduation, and subsequently lose touch with pharmacological advances in other specialties. I heartily agree with the advice to double-check everything with a pharmacist you trust.
I've also had experience where a doctor was blithely willing to prescribe a(n expensive) medication without asking me what medication I might
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There are 8,913 total employees.
http://www1.uspto.gov/web/offices/com/annual/2007/desc_staffing.html [uspto.gov]
Also, backlog doesn't matter. 700,000 per year is 700,000 per year. Just because they have a backlog doesn't change any percentage of accuracy on work completed.
"Prior art" isn't the only problem... (Score:5, Insightful)
Then again, they're getting paid to approve patents, not to reject them so should we be surprised?
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Accepting a few "oops, I really meant
Preserving the flow of conversation is useful for third parties (e.g. moderators and metamoderators), and it is difficult to do this if earlier parts of the conversation can be edited.
Inserting a "not" or "un" to reverse an initial (and wrong) assertion, for example, could be unfai
Put down the dictionary (Score:1)
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Well, if the law uses a normal word, maybe you people in the patent industry ought to interpret the law the way it is written.
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I believe the word they us is "novel" (Score:2)
When I look at patents like 20050023524 or 20040230959 I know for sure that that patent office isn't applying any such criteria.
Then again, most years somebody slips a patent for the wheel past them "just for fun" and patents like 6368227 clearly show that the examiners drink too much beer at lunch time and just rubber stamp whatever's on their desk when they
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And these ideas are then actually utilized by using them in products in the world, I'm sure? Oh wait, they aren't, because they're now patented. The real way ideas are shared is to actually use and share them alongside their products, products which will be much more common when there are no restrictions. If patents didn't exist, no one would feel threatened that they might violate a pat
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If it were not for the fact it was a life saving treatment, agreement could probably never be reached.
I think the patent examiners should be evaluated by how many patents they reject, and then get a negative if in later appeal a rejections holds as the wrong choice.
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Well... (Score:1)
Of course, since lawyers are going to be involved in this, who knows what will really happen.
Is there class that USES this software? (Score:2)
I've never had a class that actually used the system. At best, they would put a syllabus on the website. MAYBE they would even put a grade or two. And the classes that I had that put grades up, it would be like the first homework grade and nothing else.
For all the money schools put into buying and maintaining these systems, it seems like it's not for any purpose.
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My uni *loves* to use Blackboard and by use I mean the syllabus and occasional grades. It doesn't even do that simple job very well either... certainly nothing that merits anything other than HTML + javascript at most. What do they use? JAVA. yes JAVA of
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By the look of my Uni's website, it hasn't been updated since 2003. I don't know if there are security issues with this, or perhaps it's just that the copyright notice hasn't been updated with version updates.
In any case, my Uni uses it for classes. Lecturers upload all their lecture slides, tutorial questions, etc. onto the course's Blackboard section, our grades are given on Blackboard, staff make announcements for their course, th
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The user interface is probably about as hostile as it gets. I can't help but feel that whoever designed the thing actually wanted the students to feel like they've been trapped with the typical web design of the mid-90s.
I suffered through various version of Blackboard for years. The version numbers went up 4,5,6 etc but it really was just the same old crap. Blackboard's interface was/is just awful and it never got better with new versions. This was all made worse by the fact that I was supposed to be, at the time, making course materials for Blackboard.
I came to the conclusion that the makers of Blackboard just didn't care about the user experience and the educational value for the users. Mainly 'cos the users didn'
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The Mother of all Prior Art ... (Score:5, Insightful)
Quote [thinkofit.com]: "PLATO originated in the early 1960's at the Urbana campus of the University of Illinois. Professor Don Bitzer became interested in using computers for teaching, and with some colleagues founded the Computer-based Education Research Laboratory (CERL). Bitzer, an electrical engineer, collaborated with a few other engineers to design the PLATO hardware. To write the software, he collected a staff of creative eccentrics ranging from university professors to high school students, few of whom had any computer background. Together they built a system that was at least a decade ahead of its time in many ways." (emphasis mine)
Please note that they had a place for "eccentrics" back then.
CC.
What About Learning in Motion's Knowledge Forum? (Score:2)
I think I first learned about Knowledge Forum from Andy at a party we attended in 1997, but I think it was already by then a mature product.
(While Knowle
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Oh well (Score:1)
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If they don't win an appeal, their patent could turn to dust. They'd better do their lines and improve their software, or a chunk of their business could be erased from competing products.
Is the tide turning? (Score:5, Interesting)
I found these remarks in the comments of TFA very interesting, and I assume they are genuine.
And this commentator is not alone. I hear from many people who once defended software patents, even those who own them and have profited, that secretly or even openly they believe they are immoral and wrong. The problem has always been that since they were allowed it's been a defensive measure to acquire them.
We have to go back to the source and overturn this awful mistake that was made. The world does not accept software and business patents. Proponents of it can shout and scream all they like, and maybe many will lose a lot of money they wasted on these things, but at the end of the day humanity will be better once we lay this monster to rest. I hope this is the start of a domino effect that starts to bring down all the bogus patents made in bad faith. Only those on real manufacturable goods should stand.
The "legislative intent" that never was... (Score:2, Informative)
The court's logic was based on flawed logic even back then:
As has now been unearthed [oxfordjournals.org], they didn't properly check their sources, misquoting a Senate (by taking too few words, out of context, as their famous citation) which had actually said:
There is hope (Score:2)
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They really need to radically shorten patent duration based on industry to the typical life-cycle of a product times 3 with current patent durations as an upper limit. For software, this would mean a patent duration of 1.5-3 years depending on how you measure. For most technology related to computer hardware, about 6-9 years.
There's no value at all in the patent system except to the applicant if the patents outlast the u
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I just wonder (Score:5, Funny)
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Risk to USERS of open source from patent claims? (Score:5, Insightful)
1) Any patent lawsuit against a user of a software component used by major vendors will automatically result in those vendors lending legal support to reduce the chance that their own customers will also end up being sued.
2) Any patent lawsuit costs the suing party at least several hundred thousand dollars.
3) Any patent put before the courts is at very great risk of being destroyed by prior art.
4) Any payout awarded from a single end user has to be in proportion to value of the patented technology. The value of a single instance will could only be measured in hundreds of dollars, not coming close to covering the costs of the lawsuit to the platiff.
5) Patent lawsuits take six years to over a decade to work it's way though appeals.
6) Developers will release new software using a method that circumvents the patent in question within two months. This will be quickly adopted and by the time the first patent case is resolved there will be no further customers for the patent holder to sue.
7) The outrage generated in taking out a case against any open source will result in Groklaw [groklaw.net] and other groups putting the suing party and their lawyers under the closest scrutiny. You will not believe the level of bad publicity, let alone the the amount of prior art, dirty business practices, and legal suspect practices and even violation of statutes [rcn.com] that will be uncovered.
Lastly to quote Pulp Fiction, and then "we are going to get medieval on your ass."
Any IP case against users of open source puts the attacker at a far greater risk.
Re:Risk to USERS of open source from patent claims (Score:2)
4) Any payout awarded from a single end user has to be in proportion to value of the patented technology. The value of a single instance will could only be measured in hundreds of dollars, not coming close to covering the costs of the lawsuit to the platiff.
Tell that to RIM.
Where to Send Your Check (Score:5, Informative)
Software Freedom Law Center
1995 Broadway, 17th floor
New York, NY 10023
They're a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization, so if you're in the US, your contribution will be tax-deductible.
It's expensive to fight lawsuits. Vote with your wallet!
So... (Score:2)
Blackboard was hated before the patent issue (Score:3, Informative)
A number of small and medium sized schools are going to Moodle and customizing it for their environment (for example, incorporating home-grown services into it, etc). Moodle's been growing by leaps and bounds the last year or two, and I expect it's going to keep growing. Sakai's harder to implement, unless you have a herd of Java developers at your disposal. Faculty always want significant local customization.
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Gradebook is a NIGHTMARE. I mistyped one of the calcs (23 instead 32 percent) and didn't catch it u
From a local newspaper (Score:2)
They were devastated by the earlier court ruling, and now this?
Here is an article [therecord.com] from the local newspaper on the topic.
Note: RIM is also local here, and NTP's affair with them was closely followed.
Time to revamp how patents are issued, or have the USPTO pay the court damages due to wrongly issued patents.
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Blackboard sucks (Score:1)
I really like Moodle though. That generally works really well.
The "appeal" process will allow ... (Score:2)
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One problem is patent number 1,000,000 is on bias-ply car tires