THOSE WHO lose the mobile race are trying to transform it into a patent race or a sort of Cold War where each alliance is a form of cartel.
“Just remember who started this.”
--RonBGoogle's approach as described in this week's post would not be effective against patent trolls. The Times of India writes about the Oracle-Google talk falling through, so there too problems exist. The best solution to Google's headache would be a blanket removal of all software patents. These monopolies were not supposed to be granted in the first place as these impede thought and expression, not physical creation.
From what we can gather based on the past couple of years, these patents breed trolls, cartels, and embargoes, including some of Apple's that now backfire. Slashdot says that "Via Files Suit Against Apple" after Apple indirectly attacked Via, the company which "owns a number of fundamental technology patents inherited from Centaur..."
"Via also has a vested interest," notes Slashdot, as "CEO Wenchi Chen is married to the head of HTC, which Apple sued for patent infringement last March."
RonB writes (in USENET); "Just remember who started this."
Via is "seeking to ban sales of Apple's iPad and iPhone," says the article he cites, "which it says infringe upon three of its U.S. patents. VIA is also seeking damages and has asked for a trial by jury."
"Death by a million cuts," RonB calls it. "Apple basically took on the whole industry. Let's see how well it plays out."
The more M.A.D. this gets, the less popular the patent system will become.
Meanwhile in Korea, only old companies use patents. Samsung has a whole load of them, even in Europe, so it is likely to try and embargo Apple there, having been attacked by Apple first. Always remember who started it.
The president of the FFII, based in Belgium, writes:
Samsung will try to block iphone with patents, the more mess the better
Samsung may be planning more aggressive tactics against its number one customer, Apple, after legal setbacks in Germany and The Netherlands. The Korean-based company will move to have Apple's next-generation iPhone banned from sale in Korea following EU-wide injunctions issued against Samsung's tablets and smartphones in those countries.
Comments
Michael
2011-09-24 14:19:37