Court Invalidates Infamous E-commerce Patent
from the took-'em-long-enough dept
In January of 1999 the Supreme Court refused to hear an appeal on the State Street patent case, where the appeals court had said business model patents were fine (prior to that it had been commonly accepted that you couldn't patent business models). That opened the floodgates on attempts to patent business models. It took a little over a year for it to sink in why this was so troublesome, and in the summer of 2000, there were a bunch of articles about problematic business model patents. The poster child for these articles was an extremely broad patent from DE Technologies for what amounted to "international e-commerce." Why that was deserving of patent protection was not clear, but with the way the patent system works, it was approved. In 2004, the company went after Dell for daring to sell computers internationally using e-commerce (an idea they obviously never would have come up with in absence of such a patent). It appears that the District Court in Virginia has recognized the problems with this patent and has declared it invalid. It's likely that this will be appealed, but, for the moment, feel free to continue participating in international e-commerce without worrying about paying some random patent holder.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
Techdirt is one of the few remaining truly independent media outlets. We do not have a giant corporation behind us, and we rely heavily on our community to support us, in an age when advertisers are increasingly uninterested in sponsoring small, independent sites — especially a site like ours that is unwilling to pull punches in its reporting and analysis.
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I love that these guys keep calling out all the greed, stupidity and downright crookedness in the tech industry. Keep up the great work TECH DIRT!!
P.S.
I bet Anonymous Coward works for DE Technologies!! ;)
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Re:
It is a sign of the times that the litigation tail is wagging the innovation dog. These issues are important because of the impact they are having on technical innovation.
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This is from another article. Reading this the word 'jackass' comes to mind.
Say, I think I need to patent stupidity, I'd be richer than the top ten combined....
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Patent for trolling
btw:
I like Mike's summaries.
(note proper use of possesive 'S')
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idiot patent trolls
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Re:
Precious few in the current media have called them on it.
Tech Dirt is filling a much needed void in the reporting media. I often print out the articles and pass them around with notes that direct the reader to the Tech Dirt site for more information. I've gotten a few people interested in finding out more and some to actually write their representatives in Washington.
I say " "Hurrah, keep it going guys, you are making steady dents in a "Goliath".
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Damned Patents
Anyway, it's about time somebody started to undo the damage done by granting everyone a patent for anything they claimed first.
By the way, I hodl the patent on posting comments to an online medium. You all owe me money.... thx!
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Patents
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Re: Patents
That is doubtful. For example, patent law held the US back after inventing the airplane so that the French took intellectual leadership in aeronautics. Patent law at best and taken overall is probably only neutral in its effect and has been negative in some respects.
Not every idea is patentable and not evey patent is enforceable. Any idea which can be copied and used directly by the consumer, however useful it may be, cannot be the subject of an effective patent. Some of the best and most important ideas have always been outside of the reach of patent law.
More than patent law the US was helped along by the Morrill Act of 1862 which promoted the land grant colleges (the A&Ms) to promote the dissemination of agricultural and mechanical arts. It was the A&Ms together with high immigration and social mobility which laid the basis for American success.
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something better to do?
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Re: something better to do?
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Patents and Virginia and Tech Laws
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Patents and Virginia and Tech Laws
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Broad Intellectual Property or Specific Technology
www.detechnologies.com/press/release-2002-10-01.htm
www.detechnologies.com/press/ release-2005-01-19.htm
If they are patenting a TECHNOLOGY - that is one thing, but if they are getting greedy and patenting an entire Business Process, that is where it could hurt competition and / or be too broad for "Intellectual Property" coverage.
Perhaps, they overreached their bounds when defining what should be protected, but it IS understandable why they would want to get some ROI for a process that they alone invented and that is being used to help extremely large organizations get richer.
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From the "inventor" perspective.
I have a business model I'm moving forward and preparing for market. It is innovative in the way a few technologies are pulled together to make an overall process.
The process is profitable. Its innovative. Is it patentable? I wish it were not. Personally, I hate the idea of patenting processes like this. I hate it for all the reasons everyone else reading this hates it.
Still, if I opt not to patent it -- according to some very good lawyers -- I put myself at great risk for being stopped in the future from having this business. Ugly, isn't it?
So morally, I would prefer not to patent. Legally, it appears I almost have to.
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Thieves Trying To Steal Revenues From Others!
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Re: From the "inventor" perspective.
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Re: Damned Patents
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I find it difficult to believe that e-Commerce ("Commerce that is transacted electronically, as over the Internet." dictionary.com) has been going on for "many hundreds of years."
Nice try though; you almost had me fooled.
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Re: From the
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OK, it might not be hundreds of years, but it does date back to the nineteenth century when the original internet was better known as the telegraph.
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Re: Broad Intellectual Property or Specific Techno
This is using wordsmithing to bilk money out of big companies; con clueless bureaucrats into granting exclusivity on "no-duh" business processes; and waste thousands of man-hours of your American public resources and taxpayer dollars for their own benefit.
If I were an American, I would be angry.
These people just plain suck.
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Didn't we just see RIM pay better than half a billion dollars to some crackpot company that had "patented" and obvious method of sending and receiving email wirelessly?
Bueler? Bueler?
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Where is Dorpus and his comment
Unless of course he is at the patent office, putting in a patent for putting in patents....
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Techdirt wanna bes
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Re: Techdirt wanna bes
That is not true. There is just some real concern about frivilous patents being used to extort large sums of money and generally impeding the economy as a whole. That "buy it now" could be the subject of a valid patent boogles the mind.
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Eeeewww.
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what a prize twat.
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Re: Screw the patent System
Kim Delaney took to boozing it up a bit too much.
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So yeah...fun
I could draw you charts and diagrams showing how I did it and I'm pretty sure I can charge everyone a nickel for every breath they take(the french would be charged a dime).
Go me!
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A question on Patents. Legal opinion needed
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A question on Patents. Legal opinion needed
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Re: kim delaney
Looks like a different person altogether. Bizzare.
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So true!
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