VCs Invested $300 Million In Visto And All They Got Were... Some Patents To Sue With?

from the lovely dept

Visto is an interesting company. They've been around for quite some time and came out with a fairly mediocre email system for mobile phones that never really got very much traction -- though, somehow, the company kept convincing venture capitalists to dump in more money (to the tune of somewhere around $300 million). However, more recently, the company has gotten very active on the patent lawsuit front. We noted back in December 2005 that, just as RIM and NTP were going back to court over NTP's invalid patents, NTP "convinced" Visto to license its patents. Though, the details seemed pretty sketchy. NTP first invested in Visto -- effectively NTP gave money to Visto, which Visto could then use to "license" the patents. This way, NTP could point to Visto as a licensee of the patents to put pressure on RIM to settle (which it eventually did). However, it became clear that Visto didn't just take money from NTP, but the lessons of how to use patent lawsuits to its advantage -- which it proceeded to by suing Microsoft for patent infringement.

Since then, it seems that Visto has continued to struggle -- failing to go public as promised in 2006. So, instead, it seems to be falling on the all-too-popular tactic of falling back on patent infringement lawsuits when you've failed to make a real dent with your real business model. There was a bit of confusion last week as Visto had apparently kept quiet the fact that it had raised another $35 million. However, the folks over at Valleywag have come up with a pretty good explanation for why they might have wanted to keep it quiet. The firm that lead the latest round tends to invest in patent trolls. That is, they like to invest in patent litigation, rather than companies that actually have something to sell. The website for Altitude Capital Partners makes this pretty clear. They only care about the "intellectual property" a firm has, along with things like "Number and Quality of Potential Infringers" as well as how well the company has done in previous patent challenges. This seems like yet another example of a company that failed in the marketplace wanting to take money away from those who actually did deliver what customers wanted.
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  • identicon
    Joe Smith, 19 Feb 2007 @ 10:35am

    NTP

    Does anyone know what stage the NTP appeals are at? The last I heard NTP was alleging wrongdoing at the USPTO to divert the issue away from the fact that their patents were invalid as a result of the prior art.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 19 Feb 2007 @ 10:44am

    Mike really wanted to ruin everybody's lunch today: I wanted to throw up really bad when I looked at that 'Altitude' website. You should really add a 'Disturbing website' warning to that link.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Iron Chef, 19 Feb 2007 @ 11:05am

    How successful attornies in IP law get started

    Remember that kid everyone made fun of in elementary school?

    The one that took the soccer ball away because it was his ball?

    Kids, if your still growing up, and know someone like this, go and be his friend. If you don't he'll sue your children in 25 years.


    (queue NBC "The More You Know" theme music)

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    Derek Kerton (profile), 19 Feb 2007 @ 11:14am

    Management - not so important

    I love the way Altitude's investment criteria list "Quality of Management" as the second-last bullet in their list. Clearly, there is little interest in the operations or the prospects for the company as a going concern.

    Most VCs put Management as their #1 criterion in a potential investment.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    zh, 19 Feb 2007 @ 2:42pm

    ok, just one second

    You said :
    "This seems like yet another example of a company that failed in the marketplace wanting to take money away from those who actually did deliver what customers wanted."

    this weakens your point a little - I hate patent trolls as much as the next guy, but there are certainly legitimate patent holder/innovators out there who have gotten their ideas ripped off and successfully taken to market, and this statement would seem to say they shouldn't be able to sue either.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Nick Fodor, 20 Feb 2007 @ 5:06am

    Patents and prior art

    What I don't understand is how holding patents can stop a 3rd party from using the patented processes if it did way before the patents were filed ?

    The trolls must have some information most people don't have to pour so much money in a company that don't even claim any number of users.

    :->

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      Vincent Clement, 20 Feb 2007 @ 6:13am

      Re: Patents and prior art

      It has nothing to do with any information the trolls may have (which more likely than not they do not have). It's about minimizing your legal expenses when facing a lawsuit from a patent troll.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 20 Feb 2007 @ 6:12am

    The name is not quite close enough

    It ought to be "Attitude". As in a bad one.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    angry dude, 20 Feb 2007 @ 8:48am

    What's fucking wrong with you, people ?

    On another thread discucsing the legitimacy of the rights of small investor who bought Vinnie the Pooh

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    angry dude, 20 Feb 2007 @ 8:50am

    What's fucking wrong with you, people ?

    On another thread discussing small investor's right to profit from "Vinnie the Pooh" copyright,
    and at the same time cursing a company which buys patent rights from inventors..

    You really are idiots, especially Mike

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Hugh, 20 Feb 2007 @ 9:34am

    Visto is baaad...

    I am cursed by Vodafone into using their Email software. It is slow and it fails often. The server takes up to a minute to display a page and they have taken what should have been a simple POP retrieval into a client server solution that is fundementally broken.

    link to this | view in chronology ]


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