Headlines:
| SCO gets more time to file appeal brief regarding its loss to Novell |
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Wednesday, September 01 2010 @ 03:07 AM EDT
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SCO filed a motion asking for more time to file its appeal brief with the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals. They needed 10 more days, and Novell agreed to it, so the clerk signed off on it the same day the motion was filed, and the new date for SCO to file its brief will be September 9.
SCO's argument asking for more time is interesting, because we learn that Novell asked to -- and SCO agreed they could -- attach 60 more documents to the Appendix. And Stuart Singer, who takes credit in his bio on Boies Schiller's website for representing SCO as lead counsel at this same court of appeals the last time SCO appealed, is busy with another case, working on a preliminary injunction proceeding. Well. Almost. It doesn't say the "SCO" word: Won appellate decision from Tenth Circuit (August 2009) regarding ownership of copyrights and contract rights for the UNIX operating system. Heh heh. They are incorrigible. Not exactly the whole story, eh? What he won was a jury trial to *determine* the ownership of UNIX and UnixWare copyrights and contract rights, but the jury at the trial
said Novell retained ownership of the copyrights for UNIX and UnixWare in 1995-6, and the judge
ruled that Novell had the right to waive contractual violations, so SCO lost completely, despite the Court of Appeals granting SCO that extra bite of the apple with a jury trial. Which, I must point out, reached exactly the same conclusion that the first judge had on summary judgment way back in August of 2007. Singer's bio makes it sound like SCO prevailed. No wonder Bloomberg got it so wrong today [see News Picks]. That's the trouble with fibs and spin. They detach your mind from reality. Over time, that can't be good for anybody's mental health. Preliminary injunctions are very, very hard to win, because one of the things you have to demonstrate early in the case, meaning before you've done discovery, is that you probably will win in the end, so it's a legitimate excuse this time. But what might those extra 60 documents be, I wonder?
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| Paul Allen's Complaint Against the World, as text |
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Monday, August 30 2010 @ 03:34 AM EDT
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So, do you hate software patents yet, now that you've read about Paul Allen's patent infringement lawsuit against the world and his dog?
I think it ought to inspire you, reading Allen's complaint [PDF], that it might get you to the tipping point, or at least help you to understand why most engineers do hate software patents, because they are a drain on the economy and a hindrance to innovation. So we did Allen's complaint as text, sort of as Exhibit A, shall we say, illustrating the point. But if you can figure out precisely what this litigation is about from this complaint, what the defendants are alleged to have done wrong, you are doing better than I am. It's unbelievably vague.
So are the patents. What is it that these patents do? What's the process or method? I mean, "Alerting Users to Items of Current Interest", a patent on a system for recommending things that might interest you based on your interest in something else? How's this for prior art? When I go to the local hamburger joint, they ask me if I want fries with my burger.
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| A Bird's Eye View of the HTC/Nokia/Apple Patent Litigations |
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Saturday, August 28 2010 @ 03:20 PM EDT
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I don't know about you, but I've found it hard to follow the various patent lawsuits involving Apple, Nokia and HTC. First there are so many cases filed all over the place, it's hard to understand the big picture. And I kept asking myself what it was all about. I mean, what's it all about really? Because some exhibits filed by HTC have just been unsealed, we get to read Apple admitting in one of the documents that the HTC litigation is indeed about Google and Android and the Open Handset Alliance. Or as Apple puts it, "HTC's products implicate the Android operating system developed by Google and the Open Handset Alliance."
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| SCO Files Objections to Novell's Bill of Costs |
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Friday, August 27 2010 @ 12:54 PM EDT
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SCO has filed, as expected, its objections to Novell's bill of costs:
08/26/2010 - 890 OBJECTIONS to 879 Bill of Costs filed by Plaintiff SCO Group. (Attachments: # 1 Exhibit A)(Normand, Edward) (Entered: 08/26/2010)
Novell's bills, SCO argues, "beg credulity". They are too high. Who makes that many copies? Some items are not authorized by statute. They are not demonstrated to have been necessary. They were for a mock trial, in one case. They are for things like slides that they should have asked the judge for permission to have made. The judge, SCO argues, should deny Novell's bill of costs entirely. I will translate for you.
What that means is that SCO would like to pay less. If Novell had lost, and they had been ordered to pay SCO's bill of costs, SCO would have fervently argued the opposite. Last time, SCO was able to get a bit knocked off the bill, so they may again. But they'll probably still have to pay something. But will they? In real life, I mean. Not on paper.
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| How You Can Help Patent Attorneys Help Free Software - Updated |
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Thursday, August 26 2010 @ 12:46 PM EDT
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I would like everyone to watch tridge's talk [.ogv] [mp3] on patents and how engineers can interact efficiently with patent lawyers, to get your knowledge across to them. More formats are linked from End Software Patents, if you prefer audio only.
Focus, please, also on what he's learned about patents, how to invalidate them in various ways, especially the part about proving non-infringement and why that is easier than proving prior art, and then the part about finding a workaround and then publicizing it. He shows how to read a patent filing document. You guys have been effective already in the past in finding prior art, but he is raising the bar with more techniques. I see some of you are already posting what you believe to be prior art on the Oracle America patents being used against Google, and we might as well do it as well as we can once we are sure Oracle is going to go forward full steam ahead, but there are other arrows to add to our quiver. I'm waiting to see if there is a settlement of some kind, but when I am sure it's going forward, I'll tell you. Patent infringement cases go on for years, usually, so there's time to hope for progress. Larry Ellison is giving a talk at JavaOne September 20 in San Francisco on "Oracle's vision and strategy" for Java. As James Gosling points out, there is still a way to fulfill the 2007 Java pledge by setting up an independent Java foundation, and there are other steps Oracle can still take. In spite of all that is happening, one thing I am clear on. Oracle is not SCO. Oracle is Oracle. Sui generis. Update: Google announced it will not be attending JavaOne. But as Eben Moglen
pointed out recently at LinuxCon, the patent crisis in general isn't going away. So it's best that we figure out the very best ways to deal with it. I'm told his talk will be available as video soon, and when it's up, it will be here on the Linux Foundation website.
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| HTC Files Answer with Counterclaims to Apple's Patent Infringement Suit - Updated |
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Tuesday, August 24 2010 @ 05:49 PM EDT
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This could get interesting. HTC has filed its answer to Apple's complaint [PDFs] against them for patent infringement, with affirmative defenses and counterclaims. The case, Apple Inc. v. High Tech Computer Corp. et al, is now before Judge Gregory M. Sleet, docket number: 1:10-cv-00544-GMS, in the US District Court in Delaware. The et al means there are others as defendants, and the full caption is Apple Inc. and NeXt Software, Inc. v. High Tech Computer Corp., a/k/a
HTC Corp., HTC (B.V.I.) Corp., HTC
America, Inc., and Exedea, Inc. The defendants are asking to move the case from Delaware, where Apple filed, to Northern California. I don't know about you, but I'd rather be in any state *but* Delaware, after watching SCO's bankruptcy there. HTC denies infringing the patents, of course, but they also say as a first affirmative defense that four of the patents are invalid for "failure to comply with one or more of the conditions for patentability set forth in Title 35 of the United States Code, including, but not limited to, utility, novelty, non-obviousness, enablement, written description and definiteness in accordance with 35 U.S.C. §§ 101, 102, 103, 112, and/or 116, or are invalid pursuant to the judicial doctrine barring double-patenting". HTC also claims prior art, marking, laches and marking defenses, and it says it has license agreements with third party suppliers to do what they do the things Apple is suing them over. It asks the court to declare the patents invalid. Here's a recent case highlighted on EFF's site where some of those types of defenses worked perfectly. You know how in the movies when two guys get into a fight on the street, another guy will run into a bar and yell, Fight! and everyone runs outside to watch? I feel like that guy reading this filing, because I see HTC intends to fight back.
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| SCO's motion to sell the software assets approved by Del. bankruptcy judge - Updated 3Xs |
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Monday, August 23 2010 @ 05:49 PM EDT
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It will not surprise you to learn that the bankruptcy court has approved SCO's request to auction off "substantially all of the debtors' software business assets" free from liens, claims and encumbrances, as well as certain executory contracts and leases. We learn this from the docket minutes and the signed order. Details will follow from our reporters who attended the hearing today.
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| Proof SCO Knew IBM Was Involved in Linux From 1998 Onward |
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Monday, August 23 2010 @ 02:20 PM EDT
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Look what I just found, SCO's Partners page from 2002, on Internet Archive, and lo and behold, it provides proof positive that SCO, then calling itself Caldera, knew that IBM was involved with Linux as far back as 1998. That's the year Santa Cruz and IBM signed the agreement regarding Project Monterey, executed in October of 1998. No one, therefore, Santa Cruz or Caldera, had any reason to be in the dark about IBM's Linux activities while IBM was also working on Project Monterey. Now that the old caldera.com pages are on Internet Archive again, thanks to SCO selling off the domain name, many interesting things are surfacing, and we find out why SCO tried to hide them for so long. They should have waited a little bit longer.
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| Novell's Appeal Brief in the WordPerfect Litigation Against Microsoft - Updated 2Xs |
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Sunday, August 22 2010 @ 08:40 PM EDT
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We have at last Novell's appeal brief [PDF] in the private antitrust case Novell brought against Microsoft regarding WordPerfect. The brief was filed with the US Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit. It begins: "This case has been here before." Indeed. Here's the decision from the US District Court in Maryland that Novell is appealing, as text. But there's more.
Microsoft is fighting to keep certain documents it alleges the judge in the district court didn't base his ruling on from being considered by the court of appeals. Here's the Microsoft Motion to Strike [PDF]. The full title is Motion to Strike Certain Exhibits from the Joint Appendix and Any References to Such Documents in Novell's Brief. Microsoft is relying in part on some cases Novell already pointed out to Microsoft don't apply, as I'll show you. [Update: One of the exhibits is actually marked as filed under seal. So we've now split them apart.] [Update 2: We checked, and the filing is now unsealed and is part of the public record, so I've added it to the list.] But the case is interesting also on a tech level, because, in my view, the judge doesn't understand fully the difference between an operating system and an application. He ruled that WordPerfect is, under the relevant APA, an associated DOS operating system product and hence covered by the DR DOS litigation Caldera brought successfully against Microsoft. Because he lumped them together in a jujitsu way, accepting Microsoft's position, he found for Microsoft on summary judgment. That reminds me, because Groklaw is now in the Library of Congress's digital collection, accessible if you visit the library, I have been taking time to try to fix older broken links, and I just finished updating the links in the US v. Microsoft litigation section, part of our permanent page on Microsoft Litigation, to include the famous video moment, the doctored video. There are links now to Ed Felten's testimony [PDF] that you could indeed uninstall IE in Windows 98, the trial exhibits, the depositions used, and direct testimony transcripts. including the transcript of the cross examination of Microsoft's Jim Allchin by David Boies, the famous Perry Mason moment. The transcript is, ironically enough, in Microsoft's .doc format, but if you don't have Microsoft Windows and don't wish to buy it, you can download OpenOffice.org for free, as in beer and as in freedom, thanks in part to all the antitrust rulings in the US and the EU and then thanks to all the volunteers who worked so hard to give us a viable alternative, and you'll be able to read it just fine. If you notice any broken links, particularly on our permanent pages, please let me know. Being included in the Library of Congress is a great honor that I feel deeply, and when I disappear on the weekends somewhat these days, it's because I'm feeling that responsibility, knowing our work is available to researchers there who might not otherwise know about Groklaw, and I want to be sure our historical collections are as accurate as human limitations and the constantly changing Internet allow, so they are optimally useful. Also, I continue to work on completing our collection of exhibits in the Comes v. Microsoft antitrust case, some of which turned out to be relevant in the Novell v. Microsoft case, so if you'd like to help finish up, just go here, find any numbered PDF that isn't described or available in full as text, and do either a description or a transcript following the general style you see others have used, and then post what you find in plain text, ideally with HTML done and showing, or email me by clicking on the envelope icon. Thank you. But let's take a look at the latest dispute in the Novell v. Microsoft appeal.
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| Oracle v. Google Timeline |
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Sunday, August 22 2010 @ 10:57 AM EDT
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We have a new Timeline page where you will be able to find all the filed documents in the Oracle America, Inc. v. Google, Inc. litigation. The complaint and other administrative filings are there now, and when Google files an answer, you'll find it there. So if you read something in the media about the case, you can always verify the facts right here in the filings themselves. We've added a link to the new page in the standard menu. We also have set up a new topic, so if you are a member and you read Groklaw by topic, look for OraclevGoogle.
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46 comments
Most Recent Post: 09/02 08:58AM by Anonymous
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FCC Takes Net Neutrality to Court of Public Opinion (Again)
The FCC has opened the next chapter in the debate over net neutrality with a new Notice of Inquiry [PDF] seeking public comments and feedback on specific aspects of the proposed rules. Net neutrality advocates, however, are becoming increasingly frustrated with the FCC dragging its feet rather than implementing change.
The new FCC inquiry is in pursuit of specific feedback to clarify opinion on a couple of "under-developed issues" that came up during the negotiations with the ISPs and broadband industry, and as a result of the controversial Google-Verizon proposal. Specifically, the FCC wants input to get consensus on the concept of "specialized services" and application of net neutrality to wireless broadband service. [PJ: If you hate the Google-Verizon proposal, this is your opportunity to speak.] - Tony Bradley, PCWorld
Microsoft Patents Operating System Shutdown
[PJ: This is odd. Maybe I'm missing something, but Microsoft has gotten a patent on a "scheme" to shut down an operating system. The claims seem to say that it's about when you want to shut down, but you forgot you have unsaved work, so in Windows or a Mac, you get prompted to save it if you want. The patent is a system that saves it for you automatically. The patent says, "The following aspects will focus on a Windows based operating system. It will be understood, however, that aspects of the invention will apply similarly to other operating systems including, but not limited to, Mac and Linux based operating systems."
But Linux has always done this. It's one of my favorite things about Linux, that if you want to shut down, or even do it by mistake, it saves everything for you. I just wanted to mention it, because if some legal gnome at Microsoft has a "scheme" in mind for this patent, as in $$$ from Linux, this is just to point out that the supremely clueless USPTO just gave Microsoft a patent on something with tons of prior art, unless there is some detail I'm missing.] - ConceivablyTech
CEO compensation totaled $598 million at the 50 companies that laid off the most workers
The 50 U.S. chief executives who laid off the most employees between November 2008 and April 2010 eliminated a total of 531,363 jobs, according to the Institute for Policy Studies, a research group that works for social justice and against wealth concentration...In 2009, median CEO pay was 263 times the average pay of U.S. workers. In the 1970s, the CEO-to-employee pay ratio was about 30-to-1. The report noted that management guru Peter Drucker, who coined the term “knowledge worker” and was instrumental in shaping American management theory until his death in 2005, believed the ratio of pay between worker and executive should be no higher than 20-to-1. Kansas City Star
Cars: The next hacking frontier?
That nice, new computerized car you just bought could be hackable.
Of course, your car is probably not a high-priority target for most malicious hackers. But security experts tell CNET that car hacking is starting to move from the realm of the theoretical to reality, thanks to new wireless technologies and evermore dependence on computers to make cars safer, more energy efficient, and modern. - Elinor Mills, CNET
Oracle veep backs software revolution at historic anniversary OpenOffice.org global conference
OpenOffice.org, the Open Document Format and their customers are equally important, Michael Bemmer, the Vice President and General Manager of Oracle Office, said at the annual international OpenOffice.org Conference on Wednesday 1st September. Although Bemmer did not divulge details of his company's future strategy he made it clear that the inexorable rise of OpenOffice.org will continue in the years ahead, in a speech entitled “A Decade of Success” at the plenary session of the annual international OpenOffice.org Conference in the Hungarian Parliament building. - OpenOffice.org
Facebook's Ad Practices Draw Class Action on Behalf of Calif. Minors
Facebook, based in Palo Alto, Calif., violates California law in two ways, Stuart said: by using a child's name or likeness in advertisements that allow members to express their support for a product or service by pushing a "like" button; and on "landing pages," which show up on search engines to lure new members.
Facebook's Statement of Rights and Responsibilities, which is available on its website, does not give the social networking site "consent" to use a member's name or likeness, particularly parental consent, according to the complaint.... "It's pretty clear to us that Facebook isn't really getting the kind of consent it should get for the commercial use of name and likeness of anybody." - Law.com
'Patently Absurd' Lawsuits Proliferate Among Web Firms
The problem with these sorts of lawsuits is that they have become just part of doing business in the world of technology. They don’t hurt big companies, but they make it harder for smaller ones to innovate without fear of running headlong into a lawsuit that will burn through startup capital. And they’ll continue to be a drain on the technology industry’s ability to innovate until someone manages to ban software patents and put their protection under copyright where it belongs. - Sean Gallagher, Internet Evolution
Paul Allen's Lawsuit Renews Patent Debate
"If the patent holder just sat on their rights for a long time… the patent might become unenforceable," said Dennis Crouch, a law professor at the University of Missouri. Timeliness is often raised as a defense in patent suits, but that strategy has had mixed results, legal experts said.
David Postman, a spokesman for Mr. Allen, declined to comment and said Mr. Allen and his attorneys weren't available. - Dionne Searcey, WSJ
What Paul Allen and Larry Ellison Have in Common
The trouble with that line of attack, of course, is that it's complete nonsense. Interval Research was not an “an early, ground-breaking contributor to the development of the internet economy”: I was there, and they had zero impact whatsoever, as far as I can recall. Allen may indeed have invested money in an attempt to “innovate” in this area, but the patents cited in the action are certainly anything but that, since they are all trivially obvious and seem vulnerable to piles of prior art (I certainly have plenty of relevant screen shots in my ancient 1995 book
“The Internet with Windows”, which precedes them.) - Glyn Moody, ComputerWorldUK
Paul Allen’s Dog Ate His Suit Against Apple, Yahoo
What gets me is the notion that Allen would wait this long to sue. The law sets no time limit, but courts punish those who sit on their patents while others are infringing them...Still, perhaps he’s thinking of his legacy as one of the most pivotal contributors to Internet technology, which changed the world.
That’s fine by me. Technology loses nothing and gains much when we recognize who set down which part of the foundation of the ever-evolving science we now take for granted, compensate accordingly and chase away thieves and copycats.
It’s just that it would have been fairer to other innovators, including companies now named as defendants, if he had thought of that sooner. - Ann Woolner, Bloomberg
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