Appeals Court Sends Eolas Case Back For New Trial 88
Rolan writes "News.com is reporting that an Appeals court has partially overturned the lower court's decision in favor of Eolas. From the story: "Microsoft on Wednesday claimed a victory in a high-profile Web browser patent dispute, as an appeals court partially reversed a lower court decision that left the software giant exposed to $565 million in damages." The article does not say what part was or was not overturned." Reader shogusumi adds a link to the ruling itself (PDF), supplies a link handy for catching up with the claims at issue here, and writes "As a refresher, this is the case that claims that the functionality provided by IE through the use of embed, applet, and object tags violates a patent owned by Eolas and the University of California."
Skrew MICROSOFT!........OH WAIT.. (Score:5, Insightful)
IHMO, some things should remain unpatentable....until both sides on the IP issue agree on that, the patent lawyers will continue to make everyone pay. I don't think case will be the one that does it either.
Just my 2 cents.........
Re:Skrew MICROSOFT!........OH WAIT.. (Score:2, Funny)
I promise not to use the word lawyer again.
Re:Skrew MICROSOFT!........OH WAIT.. (Score:1)
"A contraption for the containment or housing of odorless, colorless, and tasteless element of nature for which someone could use for various means in keeping a homosapien or other biological species functioning"
would probably be granted to you. That why you could put air in a bag and charge people to breathe.
It's CRAZY I SAY CRAZY.
Profiteers want patents for others not themselves. (Score:3, Interesting)
They know what a benefit it is to their business to make sure all other fields of endeavor are patentable.
If I recall correctly, some years ago in the US surgeons turned down the chance to lock up their work by allowing patents on surgical techniques.
Re:Profiteers want patents for others not themselv (Score:2)
Re:Skrew MICROSOFT!........OH WAIT.. (Score:1)
Re:Skrew MICROSOFT!........OH WAIT.. (Score:2)
If they win it will show them that having piles of cash is enough to beat the current IP system whilst using it to crush the small guys who cant fight in court.
Better than they lose.
Patent For Sale? (Score:1)
I don't know which is worse, MS lost the case or owns the patent in the end.
Cheaper to sue for M$ (Score:2)
Of course they will. They just have not been offered enough money.
MicroSloth says to themselves, "how much to buy vs. how much to sue". Obviously, The Sloth calculated the equasion correctly this time.
Re:Patent For Sale? (Score:5, Interesting)
M$ strategy
------------
1.) Send lawyer and drag case out for 5 years till the technology doesn't matter
2.) Send lawyer and drag case out for 5 years till the opposition can't afford their lawyers anymore.
3.) Send lawyer and win
Re:Patent For Sale? (Score:2, Insightful)
If Eolas wins this case, they have themselves a license to print money, since this patent is applicable to any number of software projects.
They can pull an SCO and threaten every individual user of practically every web browser, and more. Lots of apps seamlessly load plugins based on the input data, say, Winamp.
Yessir, free money, and they didn't have to work a day in their lives to earn it.
Re:Patent For Sale? (Score:3, Informative)
I have to agree with the parent poster. If I was Eolas, I'd sell it and make a guaranteed x million $'s. If MS was really evil, they'd buy the patent and demand royalties from competing browsers who can't afford the legal fees neccessary to challenge the patent.
Re:Patent For Sale? (Score:2)
Re:Patent For Sale? (Score:1)
Second Major Victory for Microsoft in as many days (Score:5, Informative)
The bottom line is that M$ is on a winning streak and we need to cross our fingers in the hopes that some judge is brave enough to step up against them.
Re:Second Major Victory for Microsoft in as many d (Score:1, Informative)
Re:Second Major Victory for Microsoft in as many d (Score:2)
Re:Second Major Victory for Microsoft in as many d (Score:1)
Re:Second Major Victory for Microsoft in as many d (Score:2)
Re:Second Major Victory for Microsoft in as many d (Score:2, Insightful)
This one is a confusing (Score:2, Interesting)
The position i see EOLAS in is of a lose
Re:This one is a confusing (Score:1)
How can you say those two things in the same post? Either the patent is wrong and MS deserve to win, or it's good and they deserve to lose. That's it, no other choices; this isn't about MS "buying a victory", it's about whether or not the patent is valid. It happens that in this instance, the patent holder has taken on someone that a) "we all hate" and b) has enough money to
Re:This one is a confusing (Score:2)
Re:This one is a confusing (Score:2)
Microsoft holds no moral highground here , and own far sillyer patents which they have held due to being able to keep the lawyers funded.
I hate the idea of software patents , what i hate more is the fact that a corperation can buy justice , In this case i can see no good comming from either side achiving Victory
also i do not see Microsoft changing their view on patents because of this , perhaps purchasing even more patents to assur
Re:This one is a confusing (Score:2)
Re:This one is a confusing (Score:2)
Re:This one is a confusing (Score:1)
Why? So they see that patents have as much potential to harm them as other people, and start fighting against them.
This patent is just as valid as, for example, the patent MS is holding over the WMV file format, that disallows anyone from making a tool from reading it. I'm not even talking about a patented codec, I'm talking about a patented file format.
It would be idiotic for me to hope MS isn't hit by patents as much as they are hoping to hit other peo
Re:This one is a confusing (Score:1)
Re:Second Major Victory for Microsoft in as many d (Score:1)
Undoubtedly
From what I know of the Eolas case, MS is right (did I just say that?), so I hope they win. OTOH, the cynic in me says that only very rich companies will be able to afford justice.
Oh well, I can still hope for an apple tree to fall on the chief executive assholes in Redmond.
Re:Second Major Victory for Microsoft in as many d (Score:4, Insightful)
The president of Eolas once said he wouldn't go after Mozilla. If FF becomes popular enough, do you figure he's going to keep his "word"?
You just keep crossing your fingers. Microsoft can afford to pay Eolas off. Your favorite cheap software foundations can't.
Re:Second Major Victory for Microsoft in as many d (Score:2)
More Details.... (Score:5, Informative)
From the ruling:
Re:More Details.... (Score:5, Informative)
The remand is primarily based on one piece of prior art, the Viola Browser developed by Pei-Yuan Wei. The trial court ruled that Wei abandoned his invention and therefore the browser was not relevant as prior art. The appeals court ruled that Wei did not abandon his invention, therefore the jury has to consider whether or not the Viola browser is prior art to the Eolas invention.
If you want further details, Wei developed DX34 version of Viola and disclosed it to Sun engineers. He subsequently modified it and released the new version (DX37) to the public. The trial court ruled that the new version is a separate invention and constituted an abandonment of DX34. The appeals court disagreed, saying they are the same invention and thus the release of DX37 did not abandon DX34. (If Wei had abandoned his invention, it woiuld not be prior art).
Re:More Details.... (Score:2)
I don't understand the relevance of whether or not Wei abandoned his invention. As I understand it, any publicly known disclosed example of the same invention constitutes prior art. It doesn't matter whether it is patented or has been put into the public domain. The issue of abandonment has to do with abandoned patent applications, that is, with whether patent applications that the applicant did not pursue to the granting of a patent constitute prior art with respect to subsequent patents. The argument is
Re:More Details.... (Score:2)
The prior art issue is under 102(b). According to the court: "Public use [under 35 U.S.C. 102(b)] includes any use of the claimed invention by a person other than the inventor who is un
A victory? (Score:1, Troll)
"Microsoft on Wednesday claimed a victory in a high-profile Web browser patent dispute, as an appeals court partially reversed a lower court decision that left the software giant exposed to $565 million in damages."
MS is left having to pay $565 million, and they claim this a victory? What exactly would be a loss??
Re:A victory? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:A victory? (Score:2)
Re:A victory? (Score:1)
a lower court decision that left the software giant exposed to $565 million in damages
So this lower court decision is now reversed, and MS is no longer exposed to the penalty.
Re:A victory? (Score:1)
That wording is hopefully a little clearer.
Re:A victory? (Score:2)
MS is left having to pay $565 million, and they claim this a victory? What exactly would be a loss??
It should be read as:
"Microsoft on Wednesday claimed a victory in a high-profile Web browser patent dispute, as an appeals court partially reversed a (lower court decision that left the softwa
Re:A victory? (Score:2)
Dude, if you have to ask you can't afford it.
Firefox (Score:1, Troll)
Re:Firefox (Score:2)
No patent (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:No patent (Score:1)
I may be an insensitive clod, but please, put down the crack pipe. I try to understand stuff through spelling and grammar issues, but I have zero clue WTF you were trying to say there. O_o
Legal Code (Score:4, Insightful)
The enemy of my enemy is not my friend (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:The enemy of my enemy is not my friend (Score:1)
Re:The enemy of my enemy is not my friend (Score:2)
Re:The enemy of my enemy is not my friend (Score:2)
>If Microsoft does well here, it's not a victory
>so much for Microsoft as it is for everyone. I
>wish them luck.
I disagre.
Two things make me disagree.
1. A good way to make bad laws go away, is to follow them to the letter.
2. Anything that hurts microsoft and their IP lawsuit business model is good.
Eolas lawsuit against ms is good because it hurts their pro-patent arguments, it may also weaken their browser monopoly.
Should Eolas win in the l
Re:The enemy of my enemy is not my friend (Score:2)
MS is a right pain, but it is a right pain that is dying slownly as OSS catches up in all of its profitable markets.
Patent litigation is a right pain, and it is a right pain that is gaining momentum. A few wins for the likes of Eolas now will create hundreds of these little parasitic companies sucking the life out of anybody producing software.
I don't see how producing better software can win the pat
Re:The enemy of my enemy is not my friend (Score:2)
If Eolas wins, this means the judge and the jury have decided that the law makes sense. Software patent litigation would thereby gains wide recognition, the definition of what constitutes prior art would be narrowed, and this case would make jurisprudence.
In other words this would be terrible.
Re:The enemy of my enemy is not my friend (Score:2)
I think you missed my argument. Say Eolas wins and all the other things you say come to pass. As a result the market adjusts (by greatly increasing the number of parasitic companies).
The next step is for a lot of previously large companies to go bankrupt due to constant patent litigation. I'm betting Sony would be first, since they seem to enjoy rolling over (treating the US litigation as a cost of doing business, much as US companies tr
Did Microsoft really violate Eolas licensing? (Score:2, Insightful)
From: Mike Doyle
Please note from our Web site that, in almost all cases, Eolas' Weblet-related technologies will be licensed free of charge for noncommercial use.
Does this mean that the only case that it DOES violate it is if you're Microsoft?
I dislike a lot of things about Microsoft, but it looks to me like they were exercising on Mr. Doyle's offer. I could be wrong..
Re:Did Microsoft really violate Eolas licensing? (Score:3, Insightful)
That's just a smokescreen for "we won't start suing again until we run low on bucks".
If they win, what are they going to do with the cash? Use it to prop up their legal department. Then they can do what SCO dreamed of doing - send a bill to every end user of every owner of every computer. This patent goes beyond simple web browsers.
It can concievably cover anything that "seamlessly loads plugins based on input data". Photoshop loads a TIFF filter if you open a TIFF file, Winamp loa
carrot and stick (Score:1)
Re:Did Microsoft really violate Eolas licensing? (Score:2, Informative)
Ruling overturned the exclusion of Pei's prior Art (Score:5, Informative)
Specifically, the ruling overturned the district court's incorrect assertion that the Viola Web browser, and specifically DX34 was "abandoned suppressed or concealed" and therefore did not qualify as something that could be shown to the jury as an example of prior art.
To quote from today's ruling "The district court's conclusion inappropriately narrowed the definition of "invention" as used in section 102(g)"
The court goes on to note that a change in version number does not necessarily constitute a new invention and that version DX37, which they tried to demo to the court, just represents an improved version of Wei's invention.
In our brief, we argued that that the intellectual property rights of all software developers must be protected, including those developers who wish to give their inventions away without charge.
Those who wish to donate their work to the "IP commons" to enlist others for help and feedback are not abandoning it for others to patent. Software developers often proactively choose to do this as an act of beneficence or as a part of their software development process. This was certainly the case for Pei-Yuan Wei, the inventor of the Viola browser that should be considered prior art to invalidate the Eolas patent.
Re:Ruling overturned the exclusion of Pei's prior (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:Ruling overturned the exclusion of Pei's prior (Score:2)
Let the poor kid be (Score:1, Troll)