Some days ago we wrote about how MPEG-LA managed to extort even free codecs. As one site notes:
Last week, MPEG LA and Google announced that they entered into agreements granting Google a license to technologies that “may” be essential to VP8, the video codec fueling WebM. While this agreement may have little impact in the traditional streaming market, it could be very significant in other markets, particularly WebRTC. No financial terms of the agreement were announced, and MPEG LA declined to answer our questions.
Hearing on: Abusive Patent Litigation: The Impact on American Innovation & Jobs, and Potential Solutions
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says: "In none of the cases where SAS has been sued for patent infringement is the plaintiff an operating company that makes anything, sells anything, produces anything or employs anyone (other than a bunch of lawyers). All of these cases involve what I call “patent trolls” – which others more demurely call Non-Practicing Entities, or Patent Assertion Entities — as plaintiff. It is a problem that is only becoming worse for companies like SAS for one simple reason: it is a business model that is incredibly cheap to pursue, remarkably profitable to the pursuers, and disproportionately damaging to the victims."
Here's Groklaw's response to the USPTO's request for suggested topics for discussion in the future by the Software Partnership. We just sent it to the USPTO today.
We are also publishing here on Groklaw a more detailed supplement on those four topics, explaining in depth why we propose them, with references, on the theme, "Using Semiotics to Identify Patent-Eligible Software". The supplement is referenced in the document sent, if they wish to read more in-depth arguments, based on interest level.
High-profile former U.S. federal prosecutor Andrew Stolper said Tuesday he had teamed up with an ex-FBI agent to form a private equity firm specializing in litigation finance, a growing business in the legal industry. Stolper, whose career included the ill-fated Broadcom case in 2009, said Crux Capital launched on Monday. He resigned last week from his position with the U.S. Attorney's office in Santa Ana, where he had worked for 10 years. The litigation finance boutique, based in Irvine, Calif., will specialize in plaintiff's commercial litigation and eventually staff up to about five people.
A spokesman for the U.S. Attorney's office declined to comment about Stolper's move into private practice.
A U.S. District Court judge singled out Stolper for criticism when he dismissed criminal stock fraud charges against Broadcom Corp co-founder Henry T. Nicholas III in 2009, citing a "shameful" prosecution campaign to intimidate witnesses.