Facebook Sued By Rembrandt IP For Two Patent Violations 105
An anonymous reader writes "Ars is reporting that the patent-holding company, along with the heirs of Dutch programmer, Joannes Jozef Everardus Van Der Meer (deceased 2004), have filed suit against Facebook for violating two patents relating to social media web sites. The two patents in question were filed for back in 1998, a full four years before Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg first entered university at Harvard. Among the claims made in the lawsuit is that Facebook's "Like" button violates one of Van Der Meer's patents. Facebook even cited one of Van Der Meer's patents in one of their own filings later on. The suit seeks unspecified damages."
Can we kill software patents now? (Score:5, Insightful)
Please. I hate Facebook as much as the next guy, but this is just ridiculous.
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Not until Zuck goes down. Then, we can talk about software patents. Yes, we all have a dog in this fight.
Yeah.. I have to admit my desire to see Facebook take one in the rear despite my disdain for software patents.
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Not until Zuck goes down. Then, we can talk about software patents. Yes, we all have a dog in this fight.
There's also a line of argument that since Zuck has all teh moneys at the moment, he currently has the responsibility to provide cover fire for the rest of us. In a few years' time, someone else will be passed the frivolous lawsuit patch pumpkin.
Re:When will this stop? (Score:5, Funny)
I patented the process to think.
Near as I can tell, very few people are actually violating your patent.
Re:When will this stop? (Score:5, Funny)
The more you think about it, the more it costs you...
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The more you think about it, the more it costs you...
Arguably the best patent comment ever.
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I refuse to take the credit; mine was a snarky reply to the actual best patent comment ever - the one which succintly makes it clear to anyone that in this age of fab-less production and freedom of information, patents are just stupid and almost completely stifle real progress, whilst feeding the fatcats (shareholders) who own and gamble on this world - unless it's *their* innovation, of course!
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Pretty sure I can pull up some prior art dating back from before the patent system.
Re:When will this stop? (Score:4, Insightful)
Thankfully, we are now a first-to-file system, so we don't have to bother with pesky details like prior art dating back to the dawn of civilization.
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Prior art still restricts patentability in the first to file system. Unless you are in the one year 'grace period' where your disclosure is protected.
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not me, at least according to a few people :p
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I patented the process to think. Everyone in the world owes me compensation.
That would only be true if people were using it. All evidence is contrary to that assertion, so you get nothing.
Re:Unspecified damages? (Score:4, Informative)
No, it is unspecified because they left the award amount up to the court. It happens on every suit I have seen. "We ask for relief as the court deems equitable."
If I yell "FOURTH!"... (Score:1)
Lawyers ... habitual liars as usual ... (Score:5, Informative)
"The way the patent laws work, and have worked for 200 years, is that when someone else uses it—whether intentionally or unintentionally—they owe a reasonable royalty," said Melsheimer. "It's not necessarily a function of bad intent or malicious planning. The notion that the original inventor didn't succeed in commercializing the invention is, legally speaking, not relevant.""
Patents are absolute monopolies which allow any and all royalty rates ... reason doesn't enter into it.
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reason does enter FRAND [wikipedia.org].
Not into the patents as such - FRAND is an agreement the patent holder accepts in order to get the patented tech included in a standard
... but not this time (Score:4, Interesting)
"The way the patent laws work, and have worked for 200 years, is that when someone else uses it—whether intentionally or unintentionally—they owe a reasonable royalty," said Melsheimer. "It's not necessarily a function of bad intent or malicious planning. The notion that the original inventor didn't succeed in commercializing the invention is, legally speaking, not relevant.""
Patents are absolute monopolies which allow any and all royalty rates ... reason doesn't enter into it.
Not so. Patents are absolute monopolies that can be used either for injunctive relief, which allows no royalties by definition because the infringer is no longer allowed to continue infringing; or for monetary damages, which allows a "reasonable royalty". In other words, you can either get 0 royalties and have an absolute monopoly, or you can get a reasonable royalty and no monopoly. You simply cannot have "any and all royalty rates," like 100% of revenue or infinite dollars per unit or whatnot. Check out 35 USC 284.
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"Upon finding for the claimant the court shall award the claimant damages adequate to compensate for the infringement, but in no event less than a reasonable royalty for the use made of the invention by the infringer, together with interest and costs as fixed by the court. "
The actual royalty rates you have to pay to use a patent officially are not limited to reasonable ones.
This can copyright malarkey can be fixed overnight (Score:4, Insightful)
Simple... If Facebook has the guts to do it. Turn all of Facebook off. That's right, just a blank page to Facebook.com and make all FB powered comments show one thing :
Do that worldwide.
Facebook will lose a day's revenue, and my-oh-my, will that get everyeone's attention. And before someone asserts that they're just protecting their IP... um... no. Not only do "copyright holding" companies fly against the very face of the very spirit of copyright protection -- that is to give innovators of a concept and creation to profit from that creation -- these guys don't invent anything, don't produce anything, don't contribute anything to society. It's the copyright equivalent of cybersquatting.
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Hm, too risky. You forget, Facebook users aren't what I would call "active". The little twats on Twitter, maybe, but Facebook? They'd twitch a bit for a day or so, but they wouldn't say a damn thing to anyone that matters. If it goes too long, they'd quickly drift away. Advertisers and marketers wouldn't panic; hell, they've been saying that Facebook advertising isn't getting them much to begin with. The big brands would just write it off the same way they wrote off Second Life (remember that brief pe
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You don't remember what happened to myspace very well, do you?
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I sure do. But Facebook is no MySpace. Their biggest mistake was staying static once getting to the top, whereas Facebook kept adding features, improving the systems in the backend and front. There are numerous games/apps that spread like wildfire. They were always actively trying to court companies into promoting through the platform and making it easier (read:harder) to share content without their direct cooperation and blessing.
They may be unscrupulous with regard to their cattle, but one thing FB never
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> Turn all of Facebook off.
And nothing of value is lost.
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"What Facebook can, and will do to these little morons"
Underestimating your enemy is one sure way to get your ass kicked. Or, the reverse of that, overestimating yourself. I don't think "morons" run these patent holding companies. There are an awful lot of derogatory terms that might apply to them, but "morons" isn't one of them.
"either counter-sue and sue them for years now, bankrupting them with legal fees."
Sue? On what grounds? You're proposing frivolous suits, based on nothing, as a suitable counte
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The problem is that all the facebooks or Google's of this world, has patents them-self and are part of the problem. They could the thing they do in a hear beat (and it isn't the first time that I see this mentioned) but they would cut in their own skin.
Can someone explain why it's reasonable... (Score:3)
Can someone explain why it's reasonable to have patents and copyrights continue to exist after the original author is dead?
I really never understood that.
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You realise that if IP rights terminated with their death you are creating the perverse incentive to have copyright holders and inventors of patented inventions assassinated.
Re:Can someone explain why it's reasonable... (Score:4, Insightful)
> creating the perverse incentive to have copyright holders and inventors of patented inventions assassinated.
The incentives to kill people always exists for parties who can leverage the death in a myriad of ways. This wouldn't be perverse or special in any way.
Re:Can someone explain why it's reasonable... (Score:5, Insightful)
It's cheaper to hire a hit-man than to fight a patent suit...
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And copyright protections and patents are better deterrents to that than laws against murder?
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You realise that if IP rights terminated with their death you are creating the perverse incentive to have copyright holders and inventors of patented inventions assassinated.
You realise that if IP rights terminated with their death you are creating the perverse incentive to have copyright holders and inventors of patented inventions assassinated.
Yes, that would be TOTALLY different from corporation assassinating them to have rights transferred so it can profit.
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Think of the children^Wshare holders!
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Ask Walt Disney. He was a force behind the current Life+75 years change.
Ofcourse, he made his fortune animating stories that were out of copyright.
So....
The Copyright Extension Act that extended the term to 50 years (75 for "anonymous works) was passed in 1976, the . Walt Disney himself died in 1966, so I don't think you can blame him for getting the extension passed any more than you can blame Thomas Edison for anything G.E. does today.
The Copyright Term Extension Act (widely called The Mickey Mouse Protection Act) wasn't passed until 1998, more than 20 years after Disney's death.
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Would you prefer corporate hit men bumping off young inventors to protect their company's standing?
What I don't understand is how patent trolling promotes anything. Nor how life+decades are limited times.
"To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries."
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Corporations already routinely use things created by individuals and smaller companies regardless of copyright or patent. As long as their legal team has tens of billions of dollars behind it they can outspend you 100:1, they're pretty comfortable with the fact that they can litigate you until your bankrupt and then buy your patents or copyrights or just buy your whole company. Patents and copyrights do not really protect small inventors.
Re:Can someone explain why it's reasonable... (Score:5, Insightful)
Imagine that you create something and then die the next day. You and your heirs will never get any reward for your creation. Now imagine that you die and, instead of passing your house and posessions to your heirs, the government takes it all. Ultimately, ownership of anything (physical or intellectual) is possible only because laws allow you to own it.
The real problem with copyright is not that they continue to exist after the author is dead, but that the terms are far too long. Patents are not too long, but are granted for things that are obvious and not inventive.
Re:Can someone explain why it's reasonable... (Score:4, Insightful)
I don't believe heirs should get any reward for your invention.
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I don't believe heirs should get any reward for your invention.
So why should they inherit your money and property either?
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And ... because you believe that, so must everyone else?
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Copyrights and Patents are two very different things. They get clumped together under IP Law, but I know IP lawyers who focus only on Copyright (and usually trademarks) and then just patents. Often the folks who deal with patents have engineering or scientific undergraduate degrees. They are two very different beasts as patents have a term of 17 years in the US and that doesn't matter if you are a company of individual or trust/estate. It's 17 years. Problem has become business process patents. Those
IP does not exist (Score:2)
Stop falling for the propaganda (aka P.R.) there is no such thing as I.P. it was created to fool people into merging all concepts into 1 generic term for the benefit of the industry. In addition, it is called Property when it is not property or even tangible!
Also they put forward this myth people have fallen for that only big powerful interests can create anything of value. Music and art always existed and these laws did not exist during most of human of civilization. Inventions also happened without them;
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Stop falling for the propaganda (aka P.R.) there is no such thing as I.P. it was created to fool people into merging all concepts into 1 generic term for the benefit of the industry. In addition, it is called Property when it is not property or even tangible!
Don't be circular in your definition. It is called "property" because it is something you own. In the case of copyright, you own the right to copy, and in patent you own the right to use the process. Just because you don't like the name doesn't mean it shouldn't be used.
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there is no such thing as I.P.
There is no such thing as property either. It only means something because there are laws and conventions in a civilised society that allow it to exist.
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Suppose I am a 65 year old writer.
If I work, say for a movie studio my creations will be worth substantially less to the studio than a younger author if the copyrights expire at my death.
This will make it hard for me to get a job or otherwise sell my works.
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A movie studio can make a billion dollars off of a movie in five years. Your objection would seem to point to copyright terms being too long in general rather than them being too short.
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A movie studio can make a billion dollars off of a movie in five years. Your objection would seem to point to copyright terms being too long in general rather than them being too short.
No, his objection points to the term needing to exist after the inventor or author's death, to protect older inventors and authors. That the term is too long overall is a different argument. You could have a 5 year term, but that doesn't help the author who dies the day after publishing if it doesn't extend past his or her death.
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That the term is too long overall is not a separate argument.
If you're concerned that older writers are unfairly disadvantaged because younger writers could sell the authority to use their creations for decades, then the solution seems obvious: Reduce the younger writers' ability to sell the authority to use their creations.
I am going to die at some point. I have no intention of leaving an heir. When I die, the idea that authority over the things I have created would somehow be held by some private individu
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That the term is too long overall is not a separate argument.
If you're concerned that older writers are unfairly disadvantaged because younger writers could sell the authority to use their creations for decades, then the solution seems obvious: Reduce the younger writers' ability to sell the authority to use their creations.
I am going to die at some point. I have no intention of leaving an heir. When I die, the idea that authority over the things I have created would somehow be held by some private individual instead of being available for the common good is not only not desirable to me, but I see it as really detrimental, and despicable that someone might hope to gain from my work by denying it to others.
Ah, but fortunately, we live in a representative democracy, and not in a "my situation is different than everybody else's, but nonetheless, the laws should be written specifically for me" dictatorship. I have no plans for kids either, but am not so selfish that I believe that people who do want kids should be impaired in their ability to pass on an inheritance. After all, I realize that I too had parents and inherited from them. Perhaps this does not apply in your case?
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You're adorable.
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Can someone explain why it's reasonable to have patents and copyrights continue to exist after the original author is dead?
I really never understood that.
Hey! zombies deserve the right to be rewarded for their innovations!
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You have to have "life + 25" or some such to allow corporations to negotiate expensive contracts with the patent or copyright holder and not be afraid that if they step in front of a bus tomorrow, the entire contract becomes worthless.
Same goes for sale (Score:2)
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I guess for the same reason people can inherit stuff. Why should your kids or wife be rich, just because you were rich? You can make that argument sure. I guess if you work hard for something, you have the right to leave it to your family. Of course, this is a separate argument to whether patents should exist in the first place.
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But why should someone else benefit as soon as I die? If I want to provide for my children, and I'm a cabinet maker, I can make a bunch of cabinets and give to my children, so they can sell after I die. But if I'm an author, and I finish the story the day before I die, my children (or wife) are
Patent should only cover realised ideas. (Score:4, Interesting)
I think patent should only cover ideas that are implemented. Under the current system, if you patent some ideas that cannot be implemented now, you essentially stop people in the future from implementing them, until your patent expires. This stifles innovation.
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To obtain a patent, you need to be able to reduce it to a practicable description, meaning that you do have to show exactly how the patented device works with enough particularity to make it functional right now. Future patents aren't granted. The idea behind it is that if you figure out how to do it but don't actually do it, you've told other people how to do it by posting the patent, and therefore you deserve royalties from that (which means that implementation isn't stymied, it's just expensive). In practice, what we've done is encourage the development of patent trolls given the free transfer of patent rights like property. This could either be fixed by limiting transfers of patent rights or by requiring a modicum percentage of active use and implementation. To require that you actually practice a patent is unfair, though, because I could not reasonably practice implementation of a novel and revolutionary ion space drive or nuclear reactor even if I could design and perfectly describe it on paper.
It used to work the way you describe, but not any more. Now reduction to practice is not required by the USPTO.
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The problem with your idea is that lots of patents are improvements on inventions owned by somebody else.
You can't implement them without violating their patent.
Hurry up and violate my FTL patent (Score:2)
I have written a vague yet extensive theory of how one might use some technical means, as yet undefined, to make some sort of vehicle, also undefined, travel faster than the speed of light. I'm hoping someone will hurry up and violate it soon, as I could really use the money.
Crowdfunding patent litigation (Score:2)
It works as follows:
- anyone with a patent that looks monetizable starts a cheap one-off company.
- this company floats an IPO through a crowd-funding offer (see e.g. http://crowdfunding.com/ [crowdfunding.com] ) for, say, $250,000 in which the text of the patent in question is put online plus a target amount of money you propose to raise through licensing
- if the IPO succeeds in raising the money, $10,000 is used for administrative affairs and the rest g
Alternative history (Score:2)
Cited? (Score:1)
Facebook even cited one of Van Der Meer's patents in one of their own filings later on.
I thought the point of citing someone else's patent in one's patent filing was to show that the method covered in the filing is sufficiently different to award a patent. This legal claim sounds kind of dubious.