This needs to happen between Apple and Samsung.
http://www.macrumors.com/2012/11/10/apple-and-htc-settle-patent-dispute/
http://www.macrumors.com/2012/11/10/apple-and-htc-settle-patent-dispute/
No, these lawsuits need to keep going until the absurdity of software patents ends. Tie the courts up with enough of this nonsense and there is pressure for reform.This needs to happen between Apple and Samsung.
http://www.macrumors.com/2012/11/10/apple-and-htc-settle-patent-dispute/
You are correct. I was wrong.
Words never before seen on the interwebs!
Refreshing!![]()
It was an honest mistake confusing two terms.
My larger point was lost due to me misusing the terms. That was that those who prosecute patents have different specializations in skills than those who litigate them. Which, IME, is true.
I have a prep for a deposition tonight as a matter of fact. This is the litigation team prepping me, not the lawyer who wrote the patent.
No, these lawsuits need to keep going until the absurdity of software patents ends. Tie the courts up with enough of this nonsense and there is pressure for reform.
This is very true. Even worse, often the prosecutors involved in the preparation of the patent can't be directly involved in aspects of the litigation because of protective orders and/or their own role as witnesses.
I'm wondering if this is a good way to handle it. After all, the ones who write up the patent in the end (prosecutors, if i got it right) should have a better knowledge of what was actually meant/intended. It already is a problem that they are not the one who came up with the stuff in the first place, so they are already in a position were they merely interpret what someone else told them, so to say.
Now, if it comes to litigation, having a different person there defending/explaining it just adds another level of "the Chinese whisper game" to it. Basically, that person has to interpret what another person's interpretation of the inventors intention was. At least that is how i understand this.
I find that very inefficient and error-prone. I do understand that this is the way it must be done now, but i think it is just wrong. It's already bad enough that the one writing the actual patent has only second-hand knowledge. And in many cases is not familiar with the matter at hand anyways.
Is there a reason why the person who originally invented the matter at hand can not or does not speak up or be a witness in such cases? With that i mean the people who really came up with it in the first place, and not some folks of the company tho whom that patent belongs?
Not really. Even though the attorney isn't listed as an inventor on the patent, in my experience, they have a much better understanding of what is being protected, and in many cases are able to broaden the coverage in ways the inventor(s) never thought about.
In short, they may not have created the invention but very much have first hand knowledge about what is covered, and why; often more so than the inventor.
What makes you think this is the case? I've been deposed a number of times in cases where I was listed as the inventor on one or more patents involved. I'll be doing it again next week.
Hmm, in my opinion that's just wrong and problematic.
Especially the "broaden the coverage in ways the inventor(s) never thought about" part. What is wrong with patenting just what the inventor intended originally?
OK so that is like 2907823 for Samsung. Still 1 point for Apple.
A DUTCH COURT has ruled that Samsung infringes an Apple patent in its Galaxy smartphones and tablets, awarding a court victory to the Iphone maker.
The Hague ruled on Wednesday that Samsung's Galaxy devices running Android versions 2.2.1 to 3.0 infringe an Apple patent. The patent in question relates to the way Samsung's devices scroll through a photo gallery using touch, and the pinch-to-zoom gesture used within the app.
<snip>
the two firms went through a similar battle in a Dutch court last year. To avoid seeing a sales ban on the Galaxy S2 and Galaxy Ace, Samsung tweaked the photo gallery feature on its smartphones, but clearly forgot to remove the feature from its older devices.
Two weeks from today there is potential for a big win for either side:
Apple and Samsung are due back in court on Dec. 6 for follow-up action on their earlier trial. Some of the issues at stake in that hearing include Apple's request to ban U.S. sales of at least eight Samsung devices and Samsung's motion to toss out the jury verdict entirely.
Samsung's call for a retrial rests on a claim that the jury foreman acted with "deliberate dishonesty" during jury selection.
It alleges that Velvin Hogan "deliberately concealed information" about a lawsuit he had been involved in against hard drive-maker Seagate nearly 20 years ago that resulted in him filing for bankruptcy.
Samsung argues that hundreds of millions of dollars should be shaved off of the total damages, which Samsung has yet to pay. In a motion to the court, the company argues that the jury used some incorrect legal standards in determining the amount.
The jury's decision cannot be questioned. As I understand it, only matters of law or matters of redress may be.
And I can't see any reason they should be questioned. Apple had valid patents, enforced them, and won.
What a jury SAYS is never considered.
The only illegality that will matter isn if one of them were externally influenced.
Period.
In a criminal matter, you can even decide to pretend the law doesn't exist and rule to acquit, and your verdict as a jury is still valid.
In advance of today's Apple v. Samsung hearing, Samsung filed a key document it fought hard to acquire—Apple's recent patent settlement with HTC.
The 143-page settlement [PDF] is heavily redacted, and no financial terms are revealed. Still, certain parts of the document are revelatory.
The hearing is set to go the rest of the day. Stay tuned for additional decisions.
For the second time in less than two months, the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) has issued a first Office action tentatively declaring a key Apple multitouch patent invalid.
The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office has issued a preliminary ruling invalidating “the Steve Jobs patent,” which covers several key multitouch features — including scrolling — at the heart of iOS.
“It is simply too early to make any sweeping conclusions at this point,” Brian Love, an assistant professor of law at Santa Clara University School of Law, said. “Office action rejections during re-examination are common and rarely are fatal to the entire patent.”
Apple can make additional arguments that the claims are valid, and possibly persuade the examiner to change his mind — we know all too well how persuasive Apple’s legal team can be.
Love noted that 89 percent of patents subject to re-examination survive in some form or another — they’re either unchanged or approved in amended form, so the odds that Apple’s iconic patent will be tossed entirely are slim.
if Apple has to adjust its claims to salvage the patent, it will not be able to recover damages for alleged infringement that took place before the patent was amended.
Jobs is listed as the first inventor of this patent, U.S. Patent No. 7,479,949, titled “Touch screen device, method, and graphical user interface for determining commands by applying heuristics.” Apple filed the patent on April 11, 2008 and it was approved the following year. In a re-examination of the patent, the U.S. PTO rejected all 20 claims of the patent in question.
Mueller said in a blog post that he never liked the ’949 patent because “it seeks to monopolize the right to solve a problem as opposed to a specific solution.”
Everything is set up to incentivize the examiners to reject the claims out of the box regardless of their merits.
Both articles refer to "re-examination" several times. You did notice that right?
Anyone that actually read the articles would know that I meant "resubmit" as a synonym for "re-examine".