| Thread Tools |
9th July 2012, 11:45 | #1 |
[M] Reviewer Join Date: May 2010 Location: Romania
Posts: 153,514
| The US patent system is out of kilter The US judge who threw out Apple's Patent trollage is questioning whether patents should cover software or most other industries. Richard Posner is a respected jurist who sits on the 7th US Circuit Court of Appeals in Chicago. He told Reuters this week that the technology industry's high profits and volatility made patent litigation attractive for companies looking to damage competitors. Posner said that the IT industry was a constant struggle for survival and just like the ungle, the animals will use all the means at their disposal, all their teeth and claws that are permitted by the ecosystem. Posner ended Apple's lawsuit against Google's Motorola Mobility unit when he canceled a closely anticipated trial between the two and rejected the iPhone maker's request for an injunction. He thinks that some industries, like pharmaceuticals, have a better claim to IP protection because it took a lot of investment to create a successful drug. But software and other industries' innovations cost much less, he said. Companies benefit tremendously from being first in the market with gadgets. He said that such companies would get that benefit they would still get if there were no software patents. Posner said that it was not clear that we really need patents in most industries. When a gadget like a smartphone has thousands of component features, and they all receive legal protection, it gets a bit silly. When he cancelled the trial, Posner said an injunction barring the sale of Motorola phones would harm consumers. He also thought it silly that you could ban an entire phone based on patents that cover individual features like the smooth operation of streaming video. He said that Apple could not claim a monopoly of streaming video just because the iPhone could do it. In this he is at odds with his fellow US District Judge Lucy Koh in San Jose, California, who granted Apple two injunctions against Samsung. Posner also told Motorola it could not have an injunction against the iPhone because the company had pledged to license its patent on fair and reasonable terms to other companies in exchange for having the technology adopted as an industry standard. He said that the smartphone litigation wars were merely taking the opportunities that the legal system offers. He thinks that this is fair enough but the law should be changed. Posner had actually wanted to preside over a trial between Motorola and Apple, but had no other choice than to toss the case out. He told Reuters that he didn't think he could have a trial just for fun. http://news.techeye.net/software/the...-out-of-kilter |
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
HTC decides to buy S3 after all, keeps it on ice for future patent wars | Stefan Mileschin | WebNews | 0 | 13th June 2012 08:25 |
Intel gets patent for germanium semiconductors | Stefan Mileschin | WebNews | 0 | 15th February 2012 08:20 |
Google Lawyer: Why The Patent System is Broken | Stefan Mileschin | WebNews | 0 | 8th November 2011 07:59 |
Nvidia and Rambus are in a patent tussle | jmke | WebNews | 0 | 5th March 2010 16:38 |
VideoLAN might disappear due to patent legislation | jmke | WebNews | 0 | 14th April 2005 12:56 |
Microsoft FAT patent rejected | jmke | WebNews | 1 | 1st October 2004 02:58 |
Thread Tools | |
| |