Cloudflare Defeats Patent Troll (cloudflare.com) 63
Cloudflare has emerged victorious in a patent infringement lawsuit against Sable Networks, securing a $225,000 settlement and forcing the patent holder to dedicate its entire portfolio to the public domain. The case, which began in March 2021 with Sable asserting nearly 100 claims across four patents, concluded after a Texas jury found Cloudflare not guilty of infringement in February 2024.
Sable, described by Cloudflare as a "patent troll," had previously sued several tech companies, including Cisco and Juniper Networks, who settled out of court. Cloudflare's aggressive defense strategy included launching Project Jengo, a crowd-sourced initiative to invalidate Sable's patents. The settlement prevents Sable from asserting these patents against any other company in the future, marking a significant blow to patent trolling practices in the tech industry. In a blog post, Cloudflare adds: While this $225,000 can't fully compensate us for the time, energy and frustration of having to deal with this litigation for nearly three years, it does help to even the score a bit. And we hope that it sends an important message to patent trolls everywhere to beware before taking on Cloudflare.
Sable, described by Cloudflare as a "patent troll," had previously sued several tech companies, including Cisco and Juniper Networks, who settled out of court. Cloudflare's aggressive defense strategy included launching Project Jengo, a crowd-sourced initiative to invalidate Sable's patents. The settlement prevents Sable from asserting these patents against any other company in the future, marking a significant blow to patent trolling practices in the tech industry. In a blog post, Cloudflare adds: While this $225,000 can't fully compensate us for the time, energy and frustration of having to deal with this litigation for nearly three years, it does help to even the score a bit. And we hope that it sends an important message to patent trolls everywhere to beware before taking on Cloudflare.
Well done, Cloudflare! (Score:5, Informative)
and they still had to pay more then $225,000 for l (Score:2)
and they still had to pay more then $225,000 for legal bills
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Dichotomy: Do you wanna live in a fair & just society or do you wanna be exploited?
Re:and they still had to pay more then $225,000 fo (Score:4, Insightful)
I want to live in a fair and just society. The problem is my idea of fair and just and yours may not and probably aren't the same.
The problem is, we want to protect the "minority" with the rule of law (tyranny of the majority) , but that same rule of law can be abused by the very people it is supposed to protect (tyranny of the minority).
The only person that can prevent you (me/us) from being exploited is you (me/us). The government isn't going to do this. There are whole YouTube channels dedicated to the abuses of government that do not know the laws that constrain it.
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THE smallest minority is the individual. Any single right that does not apply to each individual isn't really a right, and is in fact, a form of tyranny. Human rights apply to all humans.
Filed under: "All animals are equal, some animals are more equal than others" - George Orwell, Animal Farm
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That is probably correct. However the true cost savings is passed on to the rest of us.
While it seems like it is cheaper to settle, it really isn't. It is cheaper, almost always, to fight the trolls, but most of those savings are found elsewhere. See IBM vs SCO for a fine example of fighting to win costing a lot, but being cheaper in the end.
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While it seems like it is cheaper to settle, it really isn't.
As Kipling said,
That if once you have paid him the Dane-geld
You never get rid of the Dane.
Re:and they still had to pay more then $225,000 fo (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm certain they did - on this case. But the most often they win a fight like this, the less often they'll need to in the future. And every case they don't have to defend is a win.
Next step: sue the PTO examiners (Score:1)
Since Cloudflare proved the patents weren't valid, the next step should be to sue the PTO and examiners for wasting the public's taxes on their fraud (to which the scam called 'qualified immunity' shouldn't apply since they didn't do their job properly in the first place).
Re:Next step: sue the PTO examiners (Score:5, Insightful)
Wrong incentive for the PTO? (Score:2)
Re:Wrong incentive for the PTO? (Score:4, Informative)
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Then the examiners' salaries should be tied how airtight the patents they approve are - anything that gets thrown out results in them being on the hook for the costs of reversing it (including fees paid by Cloudflare in this case, and costs to the taxpayers from all resulting court costs).
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The examiners are protected by sovereign immunity.
Thanks for the correction (vs. 'qualified immunity').
Still complete bullshit/scam they can end up wasting taxpayers' money (their salary, then the court cases) for issuing bogus patents by being shit at their job in a fashion that would get anyone else fired for that same level of incompetence, all without any repercussions to them.
Re:Next step: sue the PTO examiners (Score:4, Interesting)
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How convenient for the scammers known as the PTO examiners (see my other comment [slashdot.org]).
Nice lucrative and cushy job they get, just like corrupt appointed judges.
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Nice lucrative and cushy job they get
Not really. Quick search on Google came up with this sheet [uspto.gov]. Those salaries look pretty low for a software engineer.
Min $46K for rubber-stamping (Score:2)
Min $46K for sitting on their thumbs, rubber-stamping anything that cross their desk? I'd call that pretty lucrative and cushy.
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Lol nice to see we have some of those useless PTO examiners with points modding the truth down - guess that proves they're just as bad as patent trolls.... if not worse.
Cloudflare wears a cape (Score:3)
Good on Cloudflare for not just secretly paying up. Patent trolls need to suffer - far more than this, but this is a decent start.
Watch out, though: the US is considering softening the stance against software patents. Encouraged, undoubtedly, by political donations by such companies. We need to reduce patent protection, not increase it.
Re:Cloudflare wears a cape (Score:4, Informative)
Visit the EFF's page about this [eff.org]. Click Take Action. /. your representative's inboxes.
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It IS accurate, Cloudflare defeated this particular patent troll in that part of the settlement is that the troll has to release all its patents to the public and never enforce them again.
If you own stock in Cisco or Juniper (Score:5, Insightful)
Or any other company that settled, you should take this up with the board of directors, who agreed to settle a case they clearly should have fought.
They're as much to blame for the existence of patent trolls, and the damage they do, as the patent trolls themselves. If every victim (who has the money, at least, and Cisco and Juniper certainly do) fought tooth and nail, there'd be no profit even if the trolls won. And money is the only thing this is about.
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This exactly. Put this own social media so people know.
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*on
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Tech lawsuits should have experts as jury. Change my mind.
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The biggest argument against it is the lack of sufficient experts who can be relied on to be impartial. If you can't get enough jurors, you can't hold the trial, and justice is impossible.
Mandatory technical training for judges would be another matter.
Re: If you own stock in Cisco or Juniper (Score:3)
The board directors have a fiduciary duty to maximize their company's profit, not to make the world better. They can do the latter if they feel altruistic, but only if it doesn't prevent them from doing the former. And as it became clear, settling with the troll was the cheaper option, hence the management had to choose it.
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It is their fiduciary responsibility that should lead them to fight tooth and nail. Fighting on bogus patent troll lawsuit to the bitter end - win or lose - will significantly reduce the number of such lawsuits in the future. By enough to cost significantly less in the long run.
As opposed to caving in and paying off the trolls, which will encourage more lawsuits, which you will then have to pay out, lather, rinse and repeat.
This isn't a new concept, and it's been proven to be effective in the long term.
MBAs
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You do not appear to have replied to the correct post. Or didn't understand what you read. Or both.
Re: If you own stock in Cisco or Juniper (Score:2)
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More likely, you do not appear to have understood the reply.
That would be because it was incoherent.
Re: If you own stock in Cisco or Juniper (Score:2)
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They did not HAVE to choose it, as shown by Cloudflare. They chose the smaller short term loss rather than a greater expense now to reduce losses later.
The next dozen trolls will make a beeline for Cisco and Juniper and avoid Cloudflare.
It might be interesting to enact a law that should a patent be invalidated, all fees thus far collected for it must be refunded.
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Or any other company that settled, you should take this up with the board of directors, who agreed to settle a case they clearly should have fought.
Companies settle because it often costs less than fighting it. I don't disagree with fighting patent trolls, but from a shareholder perspective fighting them isn't necessarily in their best interest.
Re:If you own stock in Cisco or Juniper (Score:4)
Or any other company that settled, you should take this up with the board of directors, who agreed to settle a case they clearly should have fought.
Companies settle because it often costs less than fighting it. I don't disagree with fighting patent trolls, but from a shareholder perspective fighting them isn't necessarily in their best interest.
Only if they're looking at the short term, as I explained already. The more often you settle, the more often you'll have to settle, because you have publicly declared you'll settle. The more often you fight, even if you lose, the less often you'll have to.
As I explained.
But it requires looking past the current fiscal quarter, which MBAs are taught not to do.
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Only if they're looking at the short term, as I explained already.
You didn't explain anything. You're making an assumption, and holding it to be true. I'm not saying it's necessarily wrong, but at least some evidence indicates it is.
First, RPX’s analysis shows that companies that stayed over 370 days in suit (a proxy for a tough-target reputation) saw the number of their NPE lawsuits grow at a similar rate compared to companies that were resolving cases in less than 370 days. This seems to suggest that NPEs do not necessarily make decisions in suing companies based on their reputation. Second, after examining over 500 litigations, RPX has concluded that patent troll cases that lasted longer than one year cost five times more than cases that lasted less than one year. In addition, it has been reported that NPEs are willing to settle for the lowest price near the start of the suit.
https://jipel.law.nyu.edu/pate... [nyu.edu]
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Or any other company that settled, you should take this up with the board of directors, who agreed to settle a case they clearly should have fought.
Hindsight is great, but doesn't help anyone. How "clear" is it they should have won? These companies have legal teams who provide them advice on how to handle these cases. Their own advice was to settle out of court meaning that for many people *in the know* it wasn't "clear" at all.
Terminate them now (Score:2)
Incorporate Sable 2.0 (Score:2)
Can't they just create a new corporation, sell the portfolio to them, then continue trolling?
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No. RTFS:
forcing the patent holder to dedicate its entire portfolio to the public domain
How's their case with the porn company going? (Score:2)
Apparently Phat Cat Global (the company that apparently controls uncensored Japanese porn distribution label Caribbeancom at the moment) sued CloudFlare in June [justia.com] for copyright infringement. I don't have any more details on the case. Does anyone else know what's going on?
No winners (Score:2)
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They kind of both did as it cost Cloudflare money, but in cases against patent trolls we always want the patent trolls to lose
Re: No winners (Score:2)
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Dunno what your beef with them is, Cloudflare has a pretty good service
Re: No winners (Score:2)
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It's not the job of a CDN to police the content
So I have to wonder... (Score:2)
... if the guy behind Sable will now attempt to write a cookbook.
Someone please defeat the captcha troll. (Score:2)