Washington State Has Sued A Patent Troll For Violating Consumer Protection Laws
from the state-ags-stopping-trolls dept
Landmark Technology, a patent troll that has spent 20 years threatening and suing small businesses over bogus patents, and received EFF’s Stupid Patent of the Month award in 2019, has been sued by the State of Washington.
Washington Attorney General Bob Ferguson has filed a lawsuit claiming that Landmark Technology has violated the state’s Patent Troll Protection Act, which bans “bad faith” assertions of patent infringement. Following a widespread campaign of patent demand letters, more than 30 states passed some kind of law placing limits on bad-faith patent assertions.
These laws face an uphill battle to be enforced. First of all, the Constitution places important limits on the government’s ability to penalize the act of seeking legal redress. Second, the Federal Circuit has specifically held that a high bar of bad faith must be established for laws that would penalize patent assertion.
Washington’s case against Landmark could be a major test of state anti-troll laws, and whether state anti-trolling and consumer protection laws can dissuade some worst-of-the-worst patent troll behavior.
The lawsuit is filed against “Landmark Technology A,” a recently created LLC that appears to be largely identical to the now-defunct “Landmark Technology.” The new company asserts the same patent against the same type of targets. The patent’s inventor is Landmark Technology owner Lawrence Lockwood.
Over 1,000 Demand Letters
Landmark threatens and sues small businesses over U.S. Patent No. 7,010,508, which was issued to Lockwood in 2006 and claims rights to “automated multimedia data processing network for processing business and financial transactions between entities from remote sites.”
The Washington case reveals just how widespread Landmark’s threats are. From January 2019 to July 2020, Landmark sent identical demand letters to 1,176 small businesses all across the country. Those letters threaten to sue unless Landmark gets paid a $65,000 licensing fee.
Landmark essentially insists that if you use a website for e-commerce, you infringe this patent. In recent years, it’s filed suit against candy companies, an educational toy maker, an organic farm, and a Seattle bottle maker, just to name a few.
Or as the Washington State Attorney General put it:
[T]he company broadly and aggressively misuses the patent claims, targeting virtually any small business with a website, seemingly at random. Landmark claims that common, near-ubiquitous business webpages infringe on its patent rights — such as small business home pages, customer login pages, new customer registration and product-ordering pages.
“Landmark extorts small businesses, demanding payment for webpages that are essential for running a business,” Washington Attorney General Ferguson said. “It backs them into a corner — pay up now, or get buried in legal fees. I’m putting patent trolls on notice: Bully businesses with unreasonable patent assertions, and you’ll see us in court.”
According to the AG’s press release, four Washington companies settled for between $15,000 and $20,000 each to avoid litigation costs. The lawsuit seeks restitution for those companies.
The patents created by Landmark owner Lawnrence Lockwood patents have been used in well over 150 lawsuits filed by Landmark Technology and Landmark Technology A; as well as at least 40 cases filed by his earlier company PanIP, which sued dozens of early e-commerce websites by 2003. Given what we now know about the more than 1,000 letters sent just in 2019 and 2020, the litigation record seems like just the tip of the iceberg.
The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office found in a 2014 review that the ’508 patent was likely to be invalid because it didn’t actually explain how to do the things it claimed. However, that case settled before the patent could be invalidated.
The USPTO is an office that labors under industry capture. Its fees are paid by patent owners, and in practice it works for patent owners far too often—not users or small business owners. While review processes like inter partes review (IPR) are useful in restoring some balance to the system, it’s critical that the worst abusers of the patent system be treated as a serious consumer protection problem. It’s certainly worthwhile for states to experiment and try to find ways to deter abuse, within the bounds of due process.
Patent owners who demand licensing fees from hundreds or thousands of individuals based on a patent that clearly should be found invalid, for broadly used web technology, are essentially engaging in widespread extortion, as AG Ferguson states. When patent owners won’t let users set up even a basic, out-of-the-box website without facing a demand letter, it’s not just an economic problem—it’s a threat to free expression.
Republished from the EFF Deep Links blog
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Filed Under: bob ferguson, consumer protection, patent trolls, patents, washington
Companies: landmark technology
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But without IP nothing would ever be created!!!!!
We have to pay these people who have these sketchy loose definitions of processes that can cover all sorts of things!
There are multiple patents on making a PB&J, the fact that USTPO keeps pretending that the patent trolls are just sour grapes from others while the rest of us can look at these overly broad patents that should never have been issued, according to the USPTO's own rules, that are only used in litigation and call a troll a troll.
Rounded Rectangles should never have gotten a patent.
Any patent issued covering something modeled after the underpants gnomes business model...
Phase 1: Collect Underpants
Phase 2: ?
Phase 3: Profit
Phase 1: Get broad stupid patents.
Phase 2: Do nothing with them.
Phase 3: Extortion
Once upon a time it was to hard to get a patent, then magically everyone could get a patent on everything.
Perhaps it is time to try the non-binary solution of actual review in a reasonable amount of time & reject the overly broad.
We need to stop allowing regulation to be undermined by people loyal to those being overseen, its happened all over the government & its harming the nation. Of course the .1% are happy with how this is going so of course no politician cares, maybe we should remind them that no matter how much is donated to them we can still vote them out.
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It should not be possible to get a patent on broad concepts like taking customer orders and allowing customers to login and buy goods on a website this patent could be challenged
and probably cancelled but small company's have not got the money or time to deal with patent trolls
There's been people buying goods on the Web for over 15 years
and logging in to personal accounts
of course trolls will take advantage of any system which allows
them to say to a small company pay me 5k or else pay 50k in legal fees
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taking customer orders and allowing customers to login and buy goods on a website
Hasn't Apple & Microsoft been doing this for years?
Good Luck taking them on
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Re:
I don't think that's quite how it works. Do recall that people like McConnell, Jordan, Nunes, et al, keep getting re-elected, despite making themselves the butt of oh-so-many late-night talk show host jokes. These are the people who prove the old adage There ain't no such thing as bad publicity.
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Re:
Bob Ferguson has a history of upholding WA state's Consumer Protection Act. I think he's going to have a walk in the park when he shows the court a history of using said court as an ATM, even if the court didn't know it was being used as a bludgeon the great majority of the time. Basically, he's going to stand in for the thousands of little guys that don't have the money to defend themselves individually, but do pay taxes for things like this - to have the government stand up for the little guy.
And forgive my memory going South, but didn't the USSC dictate fairly clearly in Alice that just adding the words "do it on a computer" to a standard business practice, such as a retail financial transaction, doesn't automatically confer the protection of a new patent? Or am I daft (as usual)?
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Re:
Screw Apple and Microsoft, just look at Amazon, one of the earliest in the game. Hell, they even got a patent in 1999 covering pretty much this same thing, and it has even stood up in court. This one's on the USPTO, they failed to look at prior art even though it was only a few years old, before issuing the ersatz patent to Landmark.
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That sound you hear is out_of_the_blue, John Smith and Tero Pulkinnen grinding their teeth in self-righteous protest.
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Re:
First you have to get someone worth voting for to stand for office, which is difficult when you look at the cess pit they would have to swim in. Also, you have to get a significant number of people to stop voting for the party that defines the tribe that they belong to.
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Re:
we'll just move to trademark trolling. Anything with the letter 'm' obviously violates my 'meshpage.org' trademark.
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Re:
Actually, no. With modern redistricting technology, the pols select their voters, rather than the old-fashioned way where the voters selected their pols.
For state-wide races, it generally comes down to the pols selecting their corporate sponsors, who provide the funding to keep the sponsored pols in position. No one is going to walk from Pensacola to Key West today; if you tried, you would surely be run over.
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