Google Tries To Patent Least Cost Routing?
from the er...-that's-old dept
First off, we should point out that there's a tendency in the press to discover a patent app (or even a granted patent) from a company and immediately write up an article claiming that the company is planning to implement what's in said patent -- as if the patent gives a glimpse into that company's future plans. The truth is that plenty of companies patent stuff that never amount to anything. So, reading the tea leaves via patent application is unlikely to be very accurate. So, it's difficult to put much weight into the claims from Wired that Google is planning to "kill off cellphone contracts" based on a recently revealed patent application on a flexible communications system, that would effectively bid out to various telco providers for the best possible rate before initiating a connection.The real question shouldn't be about whether or not this will kill off mobile contracts, but why anyone should think this is patentable material. Least cost routing techniques have been around for ages, and you could buy a fax machine that would do it automatically for you years ago (I think I bought mine at least five years ago). It's hard to see what's all that different here, other than that it would be for data instead of voice or fax (which are really data in their own way) and that it could include mobile lines or alternative broadband options like WiFi. But that hardly seems worthy of a patent. Even odder? Google was sued about three years ago for apparently infringing on a least cost routing patent held by RTI, a patent holding company that recently had its tactics exposed.
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Filed Under: least cost routing, patents
Companies: google, rti
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The point I am making is simply that I would not casually dismiss his work and that of his co-inventors/colleagues simply because LCR techniques have previously been developed. What matters here is to identify the technique he and his colleagues have created, and to then compare that technique to prior art techniques to determine if it is new, useful and nonobvious.
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Re:
I wouldn't take what Mike has said as a personal criticism of either the good Doctor or similarly qualified persons. Take rather as a frustrated howl that the system encourages obvious applications for reasons that have little to do with innovation.
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Example of how IP Owner gets screwed
here is an article where a man makes a HUGE contribution to the medical profession, and through the same types of theft y'all seem to promote the man gets screwed into poverty.
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Re:
again - it's not what they are doing but how.
Just because you can travel from here to there already by bicycle doesn't mean that traveling the same route by car isn't a different thing altogether.
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Anti-lawsuit patent
Still, it is disheartening to see so many patents in the hands of one company, where a change in ownership or corporate philosophy could really harm tech innovation. And, certainly, this should not be patentable.
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How is that odd?
Why do you think it's odd that Google would try to protect itself from similar law suits in the future by obtaining a patent for its method of least cost routing?
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patent the solution, not the problem
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Re: Example of how IP Owner gets screwed
Theft? Please explain what was "stolen"? All I see in the article is competition that drove the medical industry forward, and one guy who was unable to compete.
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Just One MVNO Could Make Wireless a Utility
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