Google, Facebook Sued Because Without Some Random Patent No One Would Ever Access A Social Network From A Mobile Phone
from the this-dept.-is-patented dept
Wireless Ink was a company that I remember getting some buzz back in the 2005/2006 timeframe... and then they dropped completely off my radar. Honestly, I had thought they had gone out of business. So I was a bit surprised to see them suddenly pop back up with a patent (of course) and a lawsuit against both Google and Facebook, claiming infringement because both companies allow users to access social networking tools via a mobile phone. Seriously. Does anyone honestly (honestly, really) think that without this patent, no one would have ever figured out how to let people access a social network via a mobile phone? The patent itself (7,599,983) was filed in 2004, but was granted at the end of last year. Wireless Ink (also known as Wink) is claiming that since the patent was filed in 2004, both companies must have known about it, which seems like an odd argument considering how many patents were filed since 2004. Once again, it's hard to see this lawsuit as anything other than an attempt to shakedown more successful companies.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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Filed Under: mobile, patents, social networking
Companies: facebook, google, wink, wireless ink
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Not if one or more of your allegations involves wilfull infringemenet.
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Heh, to clarify, I didn't mean odd as in why, but odd as in an argument that makes no sense. But, yes, I'm sure the reason why they said that was to claim willful infringement and shoot for triple damages. Well, or to just try to get the companies to settle.
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Taking on Google?
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Well, thank the gods that some genius managed that leap of frakin' logic, and managed to patent it. Otherwise the rest of us would never have figured out how to put Coke machines on the internet or whatnot.
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patent hitman
http://patenthitman.com/
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http://patenthitman.com/
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The Mail - a fond history
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Re: The Mail - a fond history
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BNP = British National Party, a far-right neo-nazi party in the UK.
M&S = Marks & Spencer
And yes, none of this has anything to do with the original article.
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Btw, are there any pirate partisan candidates running for election in the U.S. ? Who?
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This is abread-and-butter business matter, so it hardly seems the big deal suggested by the original article.
You do not like patents in the least. You have made this point as nauseum. Why not now move on to other matters of interest and having significant societal importance.
A good start might be an analysis of proposals made in a recent article by a member of the H or R from Wisconsin addressing the economics of health care and recommendations that emphasize open competition versus further bureaucratic involvement by the federal government. It appears in the February issue of a relatively unknown publication known as Imprimus and published by a small institution by the name of Hillsdale college. The article does in many regards track the economic arguments presented with great regularity on this site.
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This is one reason why our economy is in the shitter. Rather than create something of value to consumers that earns profit, they leech off the value others create.
As usual, it is the lawyers who win.
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You do like patents very much -- and your career has been based on helping companies with patents. You have made this point ad nauseum. Every time we post about patents or copyright you find some reason to make snide marginally insulting comments, often prefaced with condescending opening clauses "merely for your information," "a good start," "If I may..." etc.
I write about what I want to write about, and I listen to the larger audience of folks here. This particular story was submitted approximately 30 times -- way more than most stories. In other words, people wanted to read about it, and I agreed that it was interesting.
You disagree, obviously. But, then again, I have noticed that you disagree with everything I post. So as a simple solution, you might consider not reading the site. Or, if you do continue (which would be great), please recognize that given the past correlation between "posts you dislike" and "posts most of our community likes" being so strong, I will take each "you shouldn't post about this" comment from you to be a reassurance that I'm on the right track.
:)
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I initially began reading your site because I was interested in learning about the views of those who see nothing wrong in distributing copyrighted materials to others. Yes, I approach this question from a legal perspective, but like anything in life there are always two sides to a story and I am always willing to entertain and learn from counterpoints.
I do not disagree with all of your articles, as should be apparent from a recent comment concerning the worthlessness of trying to equate the number of patents held with innovation by the patent holders. I have made many other such comments, but apparently they are often not noted.
I do not challenge your understanding of economics because I am not steeped in the subject. My background is engineering and law. Where I do raise challenges, however, are when I read statements that are plainly a misunderstanding of the law and its associated history. Of course, I am invariably met with comments like "I have lots of friends who are lawyers and they all disagree". I do not know who these unnamed friends are, but I probably have a pretty good idea about who many of the firms with which they are associated. Perhaps I am missing out by not talking with them, but in all likelihood I have at one time or another worked on matters with the named partners of those firms, persons who have been involved in the practice of law similar in length of time to mine. This is not to say I discount what newer members to the legal profession have to say. Quite the opposite. It is just that I daresay conversations with your friends would very likely reveal agreement that much of what you say to your "followers" about what the law "is" is simply wrong (e.g., your "fair use" analysis about the person using WS photos on her website).
If instead of going into the defensive mode, and then attack mode, every time such errors are pointed out you would very well learn much useful information that would prove helpful for your future articles.
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On the surface this patent looks like many others which claim the addition of "with the internet" or "with a cell phone" is new and non obvious. Possibly you could show why this is not so.
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We all know that an issued patent is deemed presumptively valid absent clear and convincing evidence that it is not. Perhaps such evidence exists. Perhaps not.
My comment was merely to note that there are many other important matters calculated to have an important impact on all of us that might be used as the subject of a thought provoking article. I believe the article I mentioned in the current Imprimus explores one such matter, health care, in a manner that this site might find interesting and worthy of discussion.
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"random" patent
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Why not now stop telling other people what to do and move on to not making a career out of exploiting the public. and patents do have significant social importance, they cause plenty of harm to society, and that is worth discussing. but the fact that you would try and censor those who disagree with you, by telling them not to discuss their disagreements, only emphasizes the indefensible nature of your position.
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my issue with this patent
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Re: "random" patent
Isn’t the alleged purpose of a patent to give companies incentive not to keep things secret and to encourage open platforms? Yet it doesn’t seem to be working, Microsoft still keeps its software closed source despite having a plethora of patents.
“how is this is a "shakedown?"”
They’re trying to collect money from google for no good reason. Google and facebook innovated, the patent holder did not.
“what exactly is a "random" patent? just say patent.”
The patent is random because it came from some random, insignificant, company that did nothing to innovate but instead chose to litigate for no good reason. The word “random” in this context is to emphasize how something insignificant in terms of providing any societal benefit can end up having significant negative consequences to society for no good reason.
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Oh yes, because there are other issues that can be discussed the issues on techdirt should never be discussed. Excellent logic.
The mainstream media covers these issues enough. I’m tired of these issues and i think there are other very important issues that our corrupt mainstream media intentionally ignores and I want to discuss those issues. Do you have a problem with that? You can discuss these other issues on other blogs if you wish, no one is stopping you. There are plenty of other places to discuss them and part of what makes techdirt unique, and visited by me and others alike, is because it discusses important issues that aren’t discussed enough. As such, techdirt plays an important role on the Internet and in society.
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So first you complain that
“I read statements that are plainly a misunderstanding of the law and its associated history.”
Then when asked to give us a correct understanding of the subject you retort,
“I have no opinion on the validity of the patent because I have not studied all of the materials I would deem necessary to make such a determination. “
So first you complain about our alleged misunderstandings and then when we ask for clarification you appeal to your own ignorance.
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The first was a generic observation concerning many of the articles wherein pronouncements of what the law "is" are plainly wrong. This has nothing at all to do with the patent litigation giving rise to this specific article.
Since I expressed no opinion on the merits or demerits of this specific lawsuit, and specifically because I do not have a factual basis upon which to form an informed opinion, I most certainly cannot express an opinion concerning the particular patent at issue. The most that can be said is that the patent has issued and that under Title 35 it enjoys a presumption of validity, a presumption that under current CAFC precedent requires "clear and convincing" proof to the contrary, a standard higher than is the case in some other types of lawsuits where "preponderance of the evidence" is the litmus test.
As for your comment pertaining to an argument to a judge, it is perjorative at best. Perhaps it would be more appropriate to ask you if you happen to believe this particular patent is invalid and why you believe this to be the case. Remember, however, that it is the claims of the patent that are pertinent...and not merely the fact that in some way it relates to a broad area of technical subject matter.
To answer this question in a responsive manner it would be incumbent upon you to analyze, beyond the patent itself, the full history of the patent from the date the application was filed until a formal notice of allowance of the application was issued. This is know as the "file wrapper".
As I initially noted, this is just another run of the mill lawsuit that will wend its way under our judicial system to a final resolution (assuming the parties to not settle beforehand). The fact the two defendants are Facebook and Google may be interesting given the fact they are well known companies, but for all intents and purposes their identities are irrelevant.
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but
A: I’ve been reading this blog for a while and I know that your alleged observation is wrong.
B: you haven’t given any evidence to support your contention.
“This has nothing at all to do with the patent litigation giving rise to this specific article.”
but I am using your response to this specific case as an example of why your general opinion is wrong. You claim that you read statements that are “statements that are plainly a misunderstanding of the law,” you claimed it in this specific thread and provide no examples elsewhere, and then when asked about the law pertaining to this specific thread you show no understanding and instead appeal to your own ignorance.
“To answer this question in a responsive manner it would be incumbent upon you to analyze, beyond the patent itself, the full history of the patent from the date the application was filed until a formal notice of allowance of the application was issued. This is know as the "file wrapper".”
If one needs to analyze every aspect of a situation, even every irrelevant aspect of the situation, in order to draw any reasonable conclusions one would never be able to conclude anything. The law dictations that patents shouldn’t be obvious to someone trained in the arts. This patent is obvious to those not trained in the arts. It should have never been granted. Yet we waste precious resources on these patents.
“The fact the two defendants are Facebook and Google may be interesting given the fact they are well known companies, but for all intents and purposes their identities are irrelevant.”
What is important is the fact that our legal system and entities waste precious resources granting, litigation, and potentially enforcing ridiculous and obvious patents.
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RE:re:RE:re:RE
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So healthcare is a totally moot point for me.
Intellectual property is not, though. For me.
The world is much bigger than America.
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trying to unconfuse John @36
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Extortion
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Giant robotic slippers with catapults?
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Criticisms, and competition.
On patents, I think too many companies steal ideas from other companies. I also think that a few companies (particularly influential or larger companies) sue just because they have the money to win. That said, it IS for the courts to decide, and I hope they DO get to decide, because small people often cave in due to the cost and the hassle, which means the big companies are being counter-competitive (a good thing for them, and a bad thing for the rest of us).
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Re: Criticisms, and competition.
Good luck with that.
"On patents, I think too many companies steal ideas from other companies. I also think that a few companies (particularly influential or larger companies) sue just because they have the money to win. That said, it IS for the courts to decide, and I hope they DO get to decide, because small people often cave in due to the cost and the hassle, which means the big companies are being counter-competitive (a good thing for them, and a bad thing for the rest of us)."
Talking about patents just because the article is about patents doesn't necessarily make your post on-topic. I only point this out in light of your preceding rant.
Personally I don't think enough companies 'steal' ideas from other companies; but I get your point. The legal landscape seems very biased towards those with cash. Cases like this give a counter point though, in that a seemingly small company is costing two giants lots of money precisely because they have lots of money.
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Editors please note!
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Ran that by two copyright lawyers. Both agreed with my analysis.
What can you do? You keep insisting stuff is wrong that lawyers I know and respect, who have worked in this field for a very long time tell me I got right. In the end, my only conclusion is that perhaps it is not me getting it wrong.
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Re: trying to unconfuse John @36
Good idea, but bear in mind that many of us view these comments in "threaded mode" (a choice at the top of this page). Threaded mode makes it much easier to follow the side debates.
However, threaded mode also removes the numbers that you use for reference.
Perhaps it should not...Dennis?
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Moreover, what may perhaps be viewed as "transformative" in one circuit court of appeal may be viewed entirely differently in another. E.g., the very narrow interpretation adopted by the 6th Circuit Court of Appeals. I am not aware of there as yet being a split among circuits sufficient for such a split to require intervention by the Supreme Court to elaborate on the metes and bounds of what is and what is not deemed transformative.
What I am trying to point out without writing a legal treatise is that fair use has many dimensions that does not lend itself to a "cookbook" analysis. In this particular situation (which, as I have already noted, does seem to be an overboard reaction by someone at WS who forwarded the matter to an outside law firm where it was addressed in a letter in a way devoid of any consideration of other factors important to WS...not the least of which is its public image and reputation), however, the individual running her website has done herself no favors by many of her comments on the that clearly stand as declarations against her own interests and almost completely undercut any reasonable possibility of being able to prevail on the question of whether or not "transformative" has been met.
Fortunately, having read the letter sent by the law firm, the various matters noted in the letter are easily overcome without having any significant negative effect on what the individual in Alaska is trying to do.
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I will take each "you shouldn't post about this" comment from you to be a reassurance that I'm on the right track.
"""
It's like free marketing research!
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The point is that such exclusive privileges should not be granted by the USPTO to begin with.
"Moreover, what may perhaps be viewed as "transformative" in one circuit court of appeal may be viewed entirely differently in another. E.g., the very narrow interpretation adopted by the 6th Circuit Court of Appeals."
and what courts and retard lawyers/judges view as transformative, the general public views as common sense. Someone trained in the arts, moreso.
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This is abread-and-butter business matter, so it hardly seems the big deal suggested by the original article.
You do not like patents in the least. You have made this point as nauseum. Why not now move on to other matters of interest and having significant societal importance.
A good start might be an analysis of proposals made in a recent article by a member of the H or R from Wisconsin addressing the economics of health care and recommendations that emphasize open competition versus further bureaucratic involvement by the federal government. It appears in the February issue of a relatively unknown publication known as Imprimus and published by a small institution by the name of Hillsdale college. The article does in many regards track the economic arguments presented with great regularity on this site.
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Edison
Why did Edison get the patent...
Wait, I remember. He was the first person to do it.
What makes the US great is you get to own your own ideas, and if you patent them and put them and put them into practice and someone copies them...then they owe it all to you.
Welcome to capitalism!
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Edison
Why did Edison get the patent...
Wait, I remember. He was the first person to do it.
What makes the US great is you get to own your own ideas, and if you patent them and put them and put them into practice and someone copies them...then they owe it all to you.
Welcome to capitalism!
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