Verizon/Vonage Lawsuit As A Proxy For What's Wrong With The Patent System
from the problems-every-where-you-look dept
With the news that the federal appeals court has granted a permanent stay on enforcing the injunction placed on Vonage preventing it from signing up new customers, Tim Lee has written up a good article about how the case demonstrates many of the problems with the patent system, from software patents to obvious ideas getting patented to overly broad patents to the fact that companies are now using patents for nuclear stockpiling purposes rather than for innovation. It's an idea that we've discussed here quite a bit, and as Tim says, "Vonage's fundamental mistake was that it chose not to join this arms race. As a result, when Verizon sued, it was completely defenseless." We keep asking for people to explain to us how this is beneficial for promoting innovation, but no one seems to have a good answer. On a related note, Tim points out the latest ridiculous patent on tabbed windows, wondering "would anyone seriously claim that granting legal monopolies on the general characteristics of windowing systems is either necessary or helpful to the progress of the software industry?" Anyone?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.
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What a mess
Tim Lee's post on that subject really got me fired up:
...the patent system cuts out the middleman and lets the rent-seekers write the regulations directly, with very little oversight by the bureaucrats. That means that the rent-seekers don’t have to even pretend their regulations are in the public interest.
http://www.techliberation.com/archives/042291.php#more
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The system works
What is the alternative to the patent system?
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Re: The system works
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Re: Re: The system works
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Re: The system works
The absence of a patent system?
I am sure if we took away patents suddenly there would be no reason to innovate or to create like we have all been spoon fed.
Maybe it would have the opposite effect? Unable to control technology and innovation the companies that own the patents that no longer exist couldn't maintain their stranglehold on the market thus freeing up technology to be used and developed far quicker than otherwise possible. Think of cooperation with developing technology rather than competition.
I think there have even been real world examples such as the creation of a patent system in Italy for the pharmaceutical companies that had the opposite effect of its intent.
If patents are not really directly related to innovation and the creation of new ideas then what purpose do they really serve. My answer is privilege. They allow for a relatively small amount of people to own the rights to technology they often didn't even develop themselves. Or worse to steal ideas and then patent them to prevent other from using them. All of these things happen regularly with our patent system.
I do not think that everyone involved with patents are wrong or bad people, quite the contrary. They are good people with good intentions but their methodology is flawed. The patent system in the US is now suffering from iatrogensis where the system itself is doing more damage than good.
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Re: The system works
1. No patent system. It's become a useless parasite.
2. If it can't be killed, it could be staffed with sane, honest, and intelligent people. Hey, maybe I could patent that idea. It sure would look new to the USPTO.
3. Claiming patents found to be fraudulent and/or ridiculous could be made a felony.
In short, the time for patience with patents is long past. We need to throw it away and start over.
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System needs to be reworked
However, too much patent law will inhibit innovation, because if a very long, strong patent is issued then the recipient has no incentive to invent anything else. Also, overly protective patents might not allow for the spread of a new idea, thereby not allowing others to build on it, and stifle innovation and progress everywhere. These ideas are taught widely in beginning macroeconomics.
When deciding this case, and deciding whether or not patents should be granted, the larger economic view should be considered. The patent office should operate according to it's purpose: fostering innovation.
The current system is old. Software and genetic patents certainly were not considered when the system was created, and today's quickly evolving markets and industries make predicting the impact of a patent difficult. The system needs to be reworked carefully, and it should be done not by beaurocrats but by economists, because economists actually understand the purpose of the patent system and are best equipped to make adjustments to it.
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BTW
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Re: BTW
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Patents Or RFC
Imagine if you got vonage and your friend got skype and you could actually talk to each other. What a concept.
Patents where inventet for Physical items and still have their place for whatever invention you are making but a concept should have never been alowed.
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Vonage invented nada, and took the risk.
The Berners Lee article acknowledges that Vonage cobbled together "modular" elements, presumably from outside the Vonage 'labs'. So, why shouldn't a competitor who invented and patented what Vonage appropriated to its own use - sue?
And, all of those who keep saying Verizon 'patented a concept' don't know what's in those patents.
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Re: Vonage invented nada, and took the risk.
Excuse me, but isn't price cutting one of the features of capitalizism? Price cutting benefits consumers because they can afford more, and why shouldn't people use whatever service is cheaper. Why shouldn't companies compete for business by lowering prices?
To lower prices implies the "Oh yeah? Well I can do that better than you," ability. If Verizon comes up with something but sucks at it, and what they do is easily replicated, then why shouldn't Vonage be able to come in and do it better, which benefits everybody, except Verizon?
Oh, but poor Verizon is getting screwed! Listen, if you can't handle the heat, get out of the kitchen. Excellent, Verizon, so you came up with something. But, now you got lazy and Vonage can go in there and do it better than you can. But, you got a head start on them, so shouldn't you be coming up with a new idea by now? Or have developed a method of even cheaper production?
The only reason to have patents is to provide enough cushioning so that Verizon has the ability to stay one step ahead, should it seize the opportunity.
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When venture capitalists look at a firm, don’t you think that they look at what patents are out there? Of course they do, they want to ensure that the money train doesn’t stop. Didn’t Vonage look at the existing patents? My guess is no, they rushed to market, just like they rushed to market with VoIP with no e911. Just like they rushed to market with their network (which was built in a way that makes having a workaround easy to get up and running.)
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I'll take a stab...
Patents provide more incentive than that granted the patent holder. Patents also provide incentive for other inventors and innovators to find different ways to meet perceived needs. "Tabbed windows" is just ONE way to link multiple windows and it isn't necessarily the best way. For instance, a "task bar" showing icons is another way that windows can be linked for quick viewing.
Abundance does not promote invention or innovation, scarcity does. There is no drive to meet a need when there is no need. As Jefferson and others have pointed out, when an idea is released into the wild public arena it ceases to be scarce. Patents, like copyright, provide artificial scarcity and encourage alternative approaches.
While some people feel driven to invent just to see if it can be done I do not believe they represent a significant minority or any sort of majority of inventors. So, while we will still see invention and innovation in areas of abundance, it is scarcity, perceived or real, that drives most inventors and innovators to put their ideas into the wild and just maybe make some money.
While I agree that issuing patents for broad concepts can be bad overall it is important to remember that something that seems broad to a few can be viewed as narrow by others, and vice-versa. We have a system of courts to resolve these and other differences of opinion.
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Re: I'll take a stab...
Ah, but you miss a key point here. Patents are designed to provide more incentive only for the purpose of correcting a market failure -- i.e., that the innovation wouldn't have occurred otherwise. If it would have (as in this case seems likely) then there' simply no societal benefit for locking stuff up.
Abundance does not promote invention or innovation, scarcity does. There is no drive to meet a need when there is no need. As Jefferson and others have pointed out, when an idea is released into the wild public arena it ceases to be scarce. Patents, like copyright, provide artificial scarcity and encourage alternative approaches.
This is false in SO many ways I don't even know where to start. Scarcity LIMITS market size, while abundance increases it. Why would you ever want to limit a market size with artificial scarcity?
So, while we will still see invention and innovation in areas of abundance, it is scarcity, perceived or real, that drives most inventors and innovators to put their ideas into the wild and just maybe make some money.
This is false, both in theory and in practice (look at the research). What may drive innovation is the rewards (both monetary and non-monetary) to the innovator -- but you do not need scarcity in the idea to benefit monetarily. Take a look at the history of the Netherlands when they ditched patents and Switzerland when they had no real patent system to understand why.
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Thomason comment response
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vonage patent
the chance to be more closer to their family and keep in touch with their love ones more often. Bottom line Verizon did the lawsuit due to the fact that a lot of customers are running away from them since they cherge so much fees and taxes on their services. I think the Federal Communication Commission (FCC) and see if its really beneficial to the consumers and should be given the choice wether they prefer a traditional phone line or VOIP service.
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vonage patent
the chance to be more closer to their family and keep in touch with their love ones more often. Bottom line Verizon did the lawsuit due to the fact that a lot of customers are running away from them since they charge so much fees and taxes on their services. I think the Federal Communication Commission (FCC)should get involve and see if its really beneficial to the consumers. and we should be given the choice wether we prefer a traditional phone line or VOIP service.
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It looks to me that Verizon is attempting to bury VoIP into the ground the way Andrew Ford bought rails and destroyed them so the only option to get to work in most communities is to buy an automobile. Now we are facing issues such as global warming, high gasoline prices, high death rates due to automobile accidents, and Ford is losing the automotive race to Japanese car making companies.
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tabbed windows
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Jeremy Reimer is not a computer expert/authority b
Seems that Jeremy Reimer has been exposed as a "wannabe" who has no degree or certification in computer related disciplines and that he has no years to decades of actual hands on professional experience in the trenches doing the job. Do you think he is worth listening to? I do not.
http://www.windowsitpro.com/articles/index.cfm?articleid=41095&cpage=193#feedbackAnchor
In the 2nd url just above, Jeremy Reimer was also caught impersonating others on his forums online, email harassing others (his isp shaw.ca caught him here), & had portions of his website removed under force by his hosting provider. Reimer's colleague in this and friend, Jay Little, also had his entire website removed by crystaltech.com for his misdoings as well.
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Jeremy Reimer is not a computer expert/authority b
Seems that Jeremy Reimer has been exposed as a "wannabe" who has no degree or certification in computer related disciplines and that he has no years to decades of actual hands on professional experience in the trenches doing the job. Do you think he is worth listening to? I do not.
http://www.windowsitpro.com/articles/index.cfm?articleid=41095&cpage=193#feedbackAnchor
In the 2nd url just above, Jeremy Reimer was also caught impersonating others on his forums online, email harassing others (his isp shaw.ca caught him here), & had portions of his website removed under force by his hosting provider. Reimer's colleague in this and friend, Jay Little, also had his entire website removed by crystaltech.com for his misdoings as well.
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Jeremy Reimer also posts under multiple guises to
http://www.windowsitpro.com/articles/index.cfm?articleid=41095&cpage=213#feedbackAnchor
Posting as others (i.e. same person posting under multiple names/guises/nicks/handles) along with his friend Jay Little above to "support one another" when they were found SO technically inacurrate, they were laughed off that site and both of them outright left & that was after law enforcement were called on them both. Windows IT Pro is a widely read publication in the field of computers.
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vonage fees to cancel
Device charge $49.99
rebate (49.99)
activation fee $29.99
credit back (29.99
Prepay service a month in advance $24.99
recovery fees $.99
Emergency 911 $.99
---------------------------------------------
Fed'l Universal Service Fee $2.02
reversed? (2.02)
Shipping $14.95
----------------------------------------------
TOTAL CHARGED UPFRONT $44.95
CANCELLATION WITHIN 60 DAY MONEY BACK PERIOD $39.99
ACTUAL AMOUNT REFUNDED $44.94
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Dear Friend
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Jeremy Reimer is a psycho
Jeremy Reimer was caught email harassing, impersonating, & bothering others online needlessly. That ended up having Jeremy Reimer's website have portions removed and his friends that helped him in it (a Mr. Jay Little of Atlanta Ga. USA) had their websites removed in their entirety. See here for that:
http://www.windowsitpro.com/articles/index.cfm?articleid=41095&cpage=216#feedbackAnchor
Also, others from educational institutions where actual professional journalism & writing are taught, are questioning Jeremy Reimer's validity & credibility as a writer, period, here:
http://www.cwrl.utexas.edu/node/933
All Reimer does is spit back what others wrote already anyhow. He is an ambulance chaser at best. A mere "hack" reporter.
Jeremy Reimer and his friends were also caught here:
http://www.windowsitpro.com/articles/index.cfm?articleid=41095&cpage=216#feedbackAnchor
Posting as others (i.e. same person posting under multiple names/guises/nicks/handles) along with his friend Jay Little above to "support one another" when they were found SO technically inaccurate, they were laughed off that site and both of them outright left & that was after law enforcement were called on them both. Windows IT Pro is a widely read publication in the field of computers.
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hi
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