- Aug 23, 2003
- 25,375
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Just a warning, this NYTimes piece is a long read and comes off indicting Apple as a company gaming the patent system for profit.
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/10/08/t...n-stifle-competition.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0
My favorite selections:
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/10/08/t...n-stifle-competition.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0
My favorite selections:
...Last year, for the first time, spending by Apple and Google on patent lawsuits and unusually big-dollar patent purchases exceeded spending on research and development of new products, according to public filings...
...Former Apple employees say senior executives made a deliberate decision over the last decade...to use patents as leverage against competitors to the iPhone...
Mr. Jobs gathered his senior managers...when it came to the new iPhone, were going to patent it all, he declared...His attitude was that if someone at Apple can dream it up, then we should apply for a patent, because even if we never build it, its a defensive tool, said Nancy R. Heinen, Apples general counsel until 2006...
...Patents for software and some kinds of electronics, particularly smartphones, are now so problematic that they contribute to a so-called patent tax that adds as much as 20 percent to companies research and development costs, according to a study conducted last year by two Boston University professors...
...Apple has been hard to pin down, said one person from Google who was not authorized to speak publicly. Sometimes theyre asking for money. Then they say we have to promise to not copy aspects of the iPhone. And whenever we get close to an agreement, it all changes again. Our feeling is they dont really want this to end. As long as everyone is distracted by these trials, the iPhone continues to sell"...
...The application by Apple that eventually became patent 8,086,604 first crossed desks at the Patent and Trademark Office on a winter day in 2004. In the next two years, a small cast of officials spent about 23 hours the time generally allotted for reviewing a new application examining the three dozen pages before recommending rejection. The application, for a voice- and text-based search engine, was an obvious variation on existing ideas, a patent examiner named Raheem Hoffler wrote. Over the next five years, Apple modified and resubmitted the application eight times and each time it was rejected by the patent office. On its 10th attempt, Apple got patent 8,086,604 approved...
...Patent 8,086,604s path to approval shows theres a lot wrong with the process, said Arti K. Rai, an intellectual property expert at Duke University School of Law who reviewed the patent application for The Times. That patent, like numerous others, is an example of how companies can file an application again and again until they win approval, Ms. Rai said...
...Some experts worry that Apples broad patents may give the company control of technologies that, over the last seven years, have been independently developed at dozens of companies and have become central to many devices...