The BlackBerry Infringing on Other Technologies? 107
windwaker writes "The maker of the popular BlackBerry waits to see if he's infringing on eight other patents. If this is true, future BlackBerrys will have to be licensed differently, to compensate for the infringement."
Promotion (Score:2, Funny)
Dingleberry (Score:1)
This just in: (Score:4, Funny)
Re:This just in: (Score:1)
Re:This just in: (Score:2)
Re:This just in: (Score:2)
Unfortunately this is the very kind of situation that software patents herald.
Bullshit -- Why do software patents make this any more likely than the existing physical entity patents?
Re:This just in: (Score:1)
I didn't RTFA, but I assumed the patents that BB was being sued over were software patents. Stifling innovation like BB (like em or not) through lawsuits is just the reason why software should not be patentable. Copyright laws are more than enough to protect software.
Re:This just in: (Score:1, Interesting)
I'm not hostile, I justam really frustrated that people think that software patents = stupidity patents. They're not the same. Stupidity patents occur in hardware too, see that recent ipod bay in a recent /. article.
I am still unconvinced that copyright is enough to protect software. Copyright just prevents the copying of a work. It does not protect the nature of the work. Take JPEG compression for instance. It's a novel, nontrivial method to achieve lossy compression on images. Copyright would pro
Re:This just in: (Score:1)
Re:This just in: (Score:2)
I am still unconvinced that "protecting" software is a good idea.
If I can't use an idea or piece of software, it's no different (to me) than if it doesn't exist.
Re:This just in: (Score:2, Insightful)
Let me ask you this then: Do you feel that protecting processes or hardware is a good idea? How do inventors recoup their research and development investment if the process is trivial to perform once all the work in figuring out how to do it profitably is done? If you do feel that this is a good idea, why is software different?
I'm not trolling; this is the very crux of the whole software patent issue, in my mind. Why is software different? It's *not* mathematical formulas. It's *not* protected by co
Re:This just in: (Score:2)
I'm not sure.
The pitifully few studies I've seen support the idea that the average man does better in a community that doesn't restrict processes to the inventor, but I remain unconvinced either way.
If processes aren't protected then i
Re:This just in: (Score:1)
It would suck to write a program from scratch, only to be brought to court by eight different companies for infringing on some functionality or another... say... the ability to control player pianos...
Re:This just in: (Score:1)
RCA Lyra (Score:1)
Who did what to whom? was Re:RCA Lyra (Score:2, Interesting)
You don't have to attempt to patent a technology in order to be liable for infringing on a patent on the same technology.
Synaptics (Score:2)
The wheel is not the issue. It's a lovely 'software' issue of getting mail to a wireless device.
I get mail to my wireless laptop with 802.1- Maybe I should turn myself in.
PS: This whole blackberry suit is a joke.
-M
uh... (Score:5, Insightful)
seeing as how the PTO has soundly rejected NTP's patents so far (the ones that have been reexamined and made public), i don't quite see where someone would get the opinion that such would make a stronger case for NTP.
Re:uh... (Score:1)
Re:uh... (Score:2)
Re:uh... (Score:1)
An application is probably subject to more intense scrutiny upon reinstatement than upon initial acceptance.
Re:uh... (Score:1)
reinstatement seems gauranteed to have more scrutiny...no?
Re:uh... (Score:1)
Famous last words.
Actually it is nine... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Actually it is nine... (Score:2)
Re:Actually it is nine... (Score:1)
$DEITY
Re:Actually it is 42 (Score:1)
Re:Actually it is 42 (Score:1)
Re:Actually it is nine... (Score:3, Funny)
Now pay me something! Anything?
... in an office which may or may not contain... (Score:2)
Re:Actually it is nine... (Score:2, Funny)
"on the Internet"
-Mike
From TFA (Score:4, Funny)
Until he finds out that the patent for "workarounds for electronic devices that appear to infringe patents" has already been issued...
Frankly I hope they sue themselves into oblivion and then maybe someone will think about reviewing the whole concept of patents.
Re:From TFA (Score:3, Funny)
I can't hardly imagine a world dominated by lawyers would consider patent reform.
Re:From TFA (Score:1)
we're in that world now. our legislative branch is stuffed with lawyers elected to office (wiki says 45% [wikipedia.org], the senate is more interested in how many were doctors [senate.gov], cspan says 37% of last congress had law degrees [c-span.org]), our executive branch is frequently headed by a former lawyer who staffs the positions below him with more lawyers, and our judicial branch is mostly former lawyers. lawyers surely come in all stripes, but there is
Re:From TFA (Score:2)
No but then we would know who to aim at...
And patents are a good thing because...? (Score:5, Insightful)
Uck
how to make money... (Score:4, Interesting)
2. do nothing with the tech that was just patented cause your company is so broke from getting the patent...
3. wait 5 years for some company to do something truly inovative and useful with somthing that could be considered your patent only because the original application to the patent office was so vauge, AND THEN SUE THEM!!!
4. ???
5. $$$$$$$$
Re:how to make money... (Score:1)
summary of 8? (Score:2)
Stupid patents...they're a relic from an age of much slower innovation and a less dynamic evolutionary landscape.
Re:summary of 8? (Score:1)
In your new POV, what will motivate innovation in
a world where the content / product creator has to deal with immediate reproduction and competition of their own hard work?
In other words, how will the innovator benefit from innovating?
Re:summary of 8? (Score:2, Insightful)
Why should any inovator be able to patent generic simple algorithm that can be devised in 2 hours?
I agree. My post doesn't reveal that I would support this either. Clearly the USPTO doesn't have the resources or skills to appropriately review patents. That is a money issue, I would suppose. Or maybe the fact that the US graduated more sports medicine majors last year than certain engineering fields.
Why, in reality, only powerful companies are able to sue, while small inovators don't have the money
Re:summary of 8? (Score:1)
17 years is and has always been the patent length in the US since the inception of the Constitution. I understand that copyright law has been ruined by lobbyists, extending their life beyond a reasonable timeframe.
I don't agree that I support patents because I want "the glory AND the profit". My belief in the system is that there is a start-up cost in real innovation. Patents allow the innovator to recover their initial investment of time and materials and then be rewarded for their contribution to soci
Blackberries (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Blackberries (Score:5, Insightful)
The BES server integrated seemlessly into my exchange and SQL server. Worked right out of the box. There was a problem syncing Outlook 2003 but Service Pack 3 for the desktop software (now up to version 4) fixed that. My company has 20 blackberries and not one of them has been broken by the end user. We have had 2 with bad flash roms which caused them to lock up at random times but they were replaced under warranty. I have personally dropped my blackberry from heights of 5ft or more to concrete and blacktop more than a dozen times. Got some road rash but no real damage. We have been using these devices both in the US and internationally for more than a year and all 20 users are Berry berry satisfied.
YMMV I guess.
Re:Blackberries (Score:1)
In fairness to RIM, the damaged units could be neglect on the part of the user. I think some people resent having them since they are now expected to be available by email 24/7.
Exchange vs. Domio (Score:1)
Twenty? (Score:3, Insightful)
We have 2,000 blackberries and they suck up more support time/costs than windows does.
You had a 10% DOA rate that amounts to two units. Mine is less than 5%, but it's still a major pain to return 100 units as that task falls to the support personnel.
I cannot wait to move all of our blackberry users to an end
Re:Twenty? (Score:2)
The authentication part is quite simple so i'm not entirely sure what you
Re:Twenty? (Score:2)
Re:Twenty? (Score:2)
The 100 was Dead On Arrival (DOA). Maybe that is acceptable for handhelds. We just neve
Re:Blackberries (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Blackberries (Score:1, Informative)
Plus I can't live without my Idokorro [idokorro.com] software for mobile end user support
Re:Blackberries (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Blackberries (Score:2, Informative)
My experience with deploying Blac
Re:Blackberries (Score:1, Informative)
We've got close to 40 blackberries from Sprint, Nextel, and Verizon. And a whole slew of the different models.
We use Lotus Notes and have our own BES Server.
And I have to say we have had almost no problems with it.
They are really easy to setup run with.
Sounds like maybe you don't have a BES server and if that's the case don't make other people believe that Blackberry's are problems just because you have service issues with RI
Re:Blackberries (Score:2)
Someone schedules a meeting and then reschedules it, yet the Notes calender still shows the old day/time and sends messages based on it.
I had to have a Lotus Notes email database rebuilt from scratch and the email copied into it - it got that hosed - cross server replicate was bungled - and that was with 2 non-mobile servers. God only knows what problems adding a mobile device would bring.
As for dropping things - most electronic devices don't deal well w
My routine (Score:5, Insightful)
6:30 AM -- Get up
6:31 AM -- Go to the bathroom
6:32 AM -- Get coffee
6:35 AM -- Open Firefox, go to
Seriously, what's it going to take for this patent situation to be fixed? Or maybe it won't since trial lawyers are the #1 contributors to politicians [opensecrets.org].
Re:My routine (Score:2, Funny)
Re:My routine (Score:2)
Re:My routine (Score:5, Interesting)
A better index [opensecrets.org] to use would be the top donors since 1989.
The top contributors, which isn't surprising given the number of people they employ, are the American Federation of State, County & Municipal Employees (think of all those police officers and firefighters); the National Association of Realtors (perhaps surprising to be this high on the list), the National Education Association (teachers), and coming in fourth is the Association of Trial Lawyers of America.
Big businesses are absent from this list, which might surprise some people, until they realize that almost every top individual [opensecrets.org] donor sits in a pretty high position in their company.
Re:My routine (Score:2)
Re:My routine (Score:2)
Either way, if you browse around the site you will see that the Republican Party does manage to get a lot more money than the Democratic Party. But, like the grandparent did, it is easy to take some statistics, such as "the top 9 donors are all Democratic" and make it look like the opposite. The Democrats just have some large organizations that support them; Repu
profit! (Score:4, Funny)
6:30 AM -- Get up /. and read that there's a new patent infringment case
6:31 AM -- Go to the bathroom
6:32 AM -- Get coffee
6:35 AM -- Open Firefox, go to
6:40 AM -- ?
7:00 AM -- profit!
A bit too late (Score:5, Insightful)
Globe and Mail Article [globetechnology.com] on the patents being rejected.
Re:A bit too late (Score:2)
Re:A bit too late (Score:1)
well OBVIOUSLY (Score:5, Funny)
Re:well OBVIOUSLY (Score:2)
I can almost hear Simon Jones voice saying "flaaaygrant use of elec'tricity"
J.
Re:well OBVIOUSLY (Score:2)
You're missing the most obvious violation -- they're screaming over at the Blackberry Growers Association over the confusion this device causes in the average consumer who is accustomed to the juicy sweetness (with a hint of tartness) of a "properly" produced Blackberry(TM).
This unpleasantly plasticky, painfully crunchy and bitter-tasting produc
This is a good thing. (Score:2, Insightful)
No one in power will ever listen to a bunch of geeks complaining about patented media formats. We need more and more corporates to be bitten on the ass by submarine patents.
So I for one hope the Blackberry does infringe patents. I hope IBM, Sony and any other high tech corporations you can think of get stung with frivolous lawsuits too. I hope someone, somewhere, has patented "usi
Bad News.... (Score:5, Insightful)
Rediculous (Score:1)
This crap is the #1 reason our society isn't sustainable, this loss of money to NTP, from RIM, from RIM's customers is wasteful, they're getting money for doing NOTHING.
Welcome to America, home of the lazy.
Re:Rediculous (Score:1)
definitely (Score:1, Funny)
The Blackberry is manufactured by RIM (Score:2)
Re:Patent companies (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Patent companies (Score:1)
don't hate the player, hate the game. i think that's what the parent is saying
Re:Patent companies (Score:2)
I'd hardly call that riding a submarine.
Re:Patent companies (Score:5, Interesting)
Get out of your cave! (Score:1, Funny)
Savage.
Re:Get out of your cave! (Score:1)
The first time I ever heard about them was on a slashdot story maybe two months ago and my reaction was similar.
In short it seems like they are really ugly cellphones that you can send email with.