Battle of the ludicrous patent claims: Apple vs Samsung vs Apple

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Medical patents take years to make back the investment on. People continue to buy the the same medicines for decades.

The iphone made back its R&D investment in under a year. No one is still buying an iPhone 3G or a Galaxy S.

Try again. When we're talking about government granted monopolies, a really solid case for why it's in the best interest of consumers to create that monopoly should be made. No one has ever made one for software patents or using trade dress against a non-counterfeit product.

The Galaxy S2 is still for sale and was found guilty of violating Apple patents today. And who the hell is talking about monopolies? Do you see Apple suing Rimm? Nokia? Microsoft? No. And they are all competitors to Apple in this space who created very different products. Apple isn't even suing Google, Google is the one suing Apple. So I suppose that means Google is trying for a government supported monopoly too? You try again.
 
One thing baffles me..pinch to zoom and tap to enlarge patents, shouldn't those be frand ones? I don't know of any other good method one could zoom in on mobile devices

There's double tap to zoom.

Pinch to zoom is still ridiculous though.

Maybe they can try double finger circle rotate to zoom?
 
The Galaxy S2 is still for sale and was found guilty of violating Apple patents today. And who the hell is talking about monopolies? Do you see Apple suing Rimm? Nokia? Microsoft? No. They are only suing the people they feel copied them. You try again.

We're talking about patents. A patent is a government granted monopoly. So yes, we're all talking about monopolies.

And hah. You think Google isn't next? Well, strictly speaking, Google's already initiated their pre-emptive strike. Which is also a dick move. This shit needs to end.
 
Software patents are so overeaching. If a successful local restaurant chain has a unique theme, service, recipe, and someone else takes that idea and modifies it and makes a different restaurant chain that becomes much more successful, does the derivative owe money to the original restaurant? I don't think so, but in the software patent world the original company owns it somehow. And not even the guy that comes up with the idea, but the business owners.
 
The only way to side with Samsung on this one if you are being disingenuous or an asshole.

This isnt about some rounded rectangles. They stole. Willfully. This was now proven by actual documents in the court of law.

It takes a huge cognitive dissonance to ignore a certain. 100+ pages document that outlines exactly how to recreate the iPhone experience.
(And then fail at it so damn hard, which is probably the funniest part about it)
 
The only way to side with Samsung on this one if you are being disingenuous or an asshole.

This isnt about some rounded rectangles. They stole. Willfully. This was now proven by actual documents in the court of law.

It takes a huge cognitive dissonance to ignore a certain. 100+ pages document that outlines exactly how to recreate the iPhone experience.
(And then fail at it so damn hard, which is probably the funniest part about it)

No, Fucking NO! We're talking about patent that Apple has that they shouldn't because there based on prior art!

The only way to defend this Apple Bullshit is to be in your words, "disingenuous or an asshole ."
 
The only way to side with Samsung on this one if you are being disingenuous or an asshole.

This isnt about some rounded rectangles. They stole. Willfully. This was now proven by actual documents in the court of law.

It takes a huge cognitive dissonance to ignore a certain. 100+ pages document that outlines exactly how to recreate the iPhone experience.
(And then fail at it so damn hard, which is probably the funniest part about it)
How did thy fail? Samsung has leap frogged to be biggest handset manufacturer in the world. Oh and I'm an asshole.
 
No, Fucking NO! We're talking about patent that Apple has that they shouldn't because there based on prior art!

The only way to defend this Apple Bullshit is to be in your words, "disingenuous or an asshole ."

Which of the patents Apple won on today do you consider to be prior art?
 
The only way to side with Samsung on this one if you are being disingenuous or an asshole.

This isnt about some rounded rectangles. They stole. Willfully. This was now proven by actual documents in the court of law.

It takes a huge cognitive dissonance to ignore a certain. 100+ pages document that outlines exactly how to recreate the iPhone experience.
(And then fail at it so damn hard, which is probably the funniest part about it)

Or maybe you side with them if these patents affect your livelihood and the future creativity of the industry you've spent your life working in. These patents and this lawsuit are toxic and will only lead to more toxicity.

This does not encourage anything but everyone lawyering up and phones being designed by lawyers. They should, and for the most part do, scare the shit out of everyone who does creative work in tech.
 
The only way to side with Samsung on this one if you are being disingenuous or an asshole.

This isnt about some rounded rectangles. They stole. Willfully. This was now proven by actual documents in the court of law.

It takes a huge cognitive dissonance to ignore a certain. 100+ pages document that outlines exactly how to recreate the iPhone experience.
(And then fail at it so damn hard, which is probably the funniest part about it)
I personally feel that it's silly to side with Apple in this trial unless you're a shareholder, but I'm not going to call people assholes for doing so.
 
We're talking about patents. A patent is a government granted monopoly. So yes, we're all talking about monopolies.

And hah. You think Google isn't next? Well, strictly speaking, Google's already initiated their pre-emptive strike. Which is also a dick move. This shit needs to end.

You mean by buying Motorola patents?
 
They should, and for the most part do, scare the shit out of everyone who does creative work in tech.

I'd argue that this should only scare the shit out of everyone who does derivative and copycat "work" in tech.

I don't think anyone is suing for the Galaxy Nexus, and for good reason. It's nothing like an iPhone.

Ad Pinch-to-Zoom: I invite you to watch all those Mitsubishi Diamond Touch videos and not come away with the same verdict as the jury.
 
My wife works as a chemist in drug creation and there would be no money to do research if her company was not able to patent what they create. If another company could get away with copying it after they pay her for years of research, they would stop paying for that research and just wait for someone else to do it so that they could copy it. Patents ensure that it is worth your while to create something new.

It's not really the same thing.

Making a generic version of a drug would be like copying the source code of another software company.

The current state of software patents would be like being able to Patent non-drowsy antihistamine.

When the first HIV protease inhibitor came out were they given a patent on the concept of protease inhibitors? No, they were given a patent on their compound. Now imagine if they were given a patent on the concept, would that help innovation in the antiviral medical field? Just fight virus's another way!
 
Do you see Apple suing Rimm? Nokia? Microsoft? No. And they are all competitors to Apple in this space who created very different products..

Oh, I think they would sue Microsoft if they could. But the problem is pretty much every Apple devices infriges on tons of Microsoft's patents. It would be mutual destruction, so both companies don't bother.
Also..Apple has sued Nokia not long ago, they've just lost. Nokia however did successfuly sue Apple and now Apple has to pay them fee from every device sold.
 
I'd argue that this should only scare the shit out of everyone who does derivative and copycat "work" in tech.

It is impossible to not do derivative work in tech. The field moves too fast, the innovations come too quickly and are mostly obvious next-steps. Almost every line of code ever written risks infringing on a patent. The body is too large and too vague to know for sure. And reading patents (which were intended to enrich industry by being widely read and understood) is now literally dangerous, because you might accidentally infringe on something obvious and having read it means you 'knew' you were.

We have a system that assumes it takes 20 years to make good on an investment being applied to an industry with product lifecycles less than 5 years long, where the vast majority of their profit is in the first year.

If you can't see how that's fundamentally broken all of the above is, I don't know what to tell you.


Oh, I think they would sue Microsoft if they could. But the problem is pretty much every Apple devices infriges on tons of Microsoft's patents. It would be mutual destruction, so both companies don't bother.
Also..Apple has sued Nokia not long ago, they've just lost. Nokia however did successfuly sue Apple and now Apple has to pay them fee from every device sold.

Apple and Microsoft have an IP sharing agreement from the fallout of the 80s infringement trial against MS (which apple lost, for the most part) and Apple's near death in the late 90s.

If Apple could sue MS, and WinPhone was anywhere near Android's market share, you could bet your ass they'd sue. Plenty of the patents at issue in this and other cases are 'infringed' on by MS.
 
The current state of software patents would be like being able to Patent non-drowsy antihistamine.

When the first HIV protease inhibitor came out were they given a patent on the concept of protease inhibitors? No, they were given a patent on their compound. Now imagine if they were given a patent on the concept, would that help innovation in the antiviral medical field? Just fight virus's another way!


But non-drowsy allergy medicine was patented until 2002 - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loratadine
 
I'd argue that this should only scare the shit out of everyone who does derivative and copycat "work" in tech.

I don't think anyone is suing for the Galaxy Nexus, and for good reason. It's nothing like an iPhone.

Ad Pinch-to-Zoom: I invite you to watch all those Mitsubishi Diamond Touch videos and not come away with the same verdict as the jury.

What?
http://news.cnet.com/8301-13579_3-57496833-37/apple-samsungs-galaxy-nexus-a-copycat-of-iphone/

Cmon, apple is in for the monopoly, they will sue every successful competitor, doesn't matter how ridiculous its claim are.
 
It is impossible to not do derivative work in tech. The field moves too fast, the innovations come too quickly and are mostly obvious next-steps. Almost every line of code ever written risks infringing on a patent. The body is too large and too vague to know for sure. And reading patents (which were intended to enrich industry by being widely read and understood) is now literally dangerous, because you might accidentally infringe on something obvious and having read it means you 'knew' you were.

We have a system that assumes it takes 20 years to make good on an investment being applied to an industry with product lifecycles less than 5 years long, where the vast majority of their profit is in the first year.

If you can't see how that's fundamentally broken all of the above is, I don't know what to tell you.




Apple and Microsoft have an IP sharing agreement from the fallout of the 80s infringement trial against MS (which apple lost, for the most part) and Apple's near death in the late 90s.

If Apple could sue MS, and WinPhone was anywhere near Android's market share, you could bet your ass they'd sue. Plenty of the patents at issue in this and other cases are 'infringed' on by MS.

but see, that's not Apple's job. It's a bit of a "hate the game" sort-of situation.

Someone should have gone and said, "okay, bounceback and pinch to zoom are FRAND-patents" and then you can go and put it in your phone.
I say with Pinch to Zoom no one would argue against it.
but fucking Bounceback? that's bullshit. Samsung deserves all the shit they can get for stealing that.


Cmon, apple is in for the monopoly, they will sue every successful competitor, doesn't matter how ridiculous its claim are.

These lawsuits are decided in a court of law. If they are truly that ridiculous, you have nothing to fear.
 
The Galaxy S2 is still for sale and was found guilty of violating Apple patents today. And who the hell is talking about monopolies? Do you see Apple suing Rimm? Nokia? Microsoft? No. And they are all competitors to Apple in this space who created very different products. Apple isn't even suing Google, Google is the one suing Apple. So I suppose that means Google is trying for a government supported monopoly too? You try again.

No, but Nokia and Motorola are suing apple for infringing patents fundamental to making a mobile phone. Yet apple are happy to ignore those and release anyway, then retrospectively ask for FRAND terms once they are successful. And at the same time suing for stupid amounts of money for aesthetic patents like fucking swipe to unlock. Nothing fundamental to getting you actually connected to the mobile network or the Internet etc.

Just seems hugely disproportionate.

And please tell me it isn't a jury of normal people - its patent and tech experts, right?
 
Oh, I think they would sue Microsoft if they could. But the problem is pretty much every Apple devices infriges on tons of Microsoft's patents. It would be mutual destruction, so both companies don't bother.
Also..Apple has sued Nokia not long ago, they've just lost. Nokia however did successfuly sue Apple and now Apple has to pay them fee from every device sold.

Microsoft actually pays Apple a license fee to use some of the patents the Samsung violated, which is the reason they don't get sued. Samsung could have had the same thing, but they probably still would have violated the anti-cloning clause.
 
No, Ethyl 4-(8-chloro-5,6-dihydro-11H-benzo[5,6]cyclohepta[1,2-b]pyridin-11-ylidene)-1-piperidinecarboxylate (and/or the process to synthesize it) was patented.

Just like Apple didn't have a patent on touch screen phones, but rather specific implementations like bounce back scrolling. You are proving Apple's point. There is more than 1 way to accomplish the same end goal - make a smart phone. Samsung didnt need to copy Apple's patents to do it.
 
but see, that's not Apple's job. It's a bit of a "hate the game" sort-of situation.

I don't know what you're trying to say here, but if I haven't been clear that I hate this game regardless of who plays it, I don't know what to do. Software patents are bullshit and never should have been allowed into the patent game in the first place. Using trade dress to patent look and feel also should never win the day. It's for punishing counterfeiters, not competition.

Someone should have gone and said, "okay, bounceback and pinch to zoom are FRAND-patents" and then you can go and put it in your phone.
I say with Pinch to Zoom no one would argue against it.
but fucking Bounceback? that's bullshit. Samsung deserves all the shit they can get for stealing that.

Why?

Again I ask, what is the net benefit to society or the industry in having piecemeal ideas like this protected by law? This is a monopoly we're talking about here, a company is entitled to exclude its competition from making something and I want to know why that's a good idea.


Just like Apple didn't have a patent on touch screen phones, but rather specific implementations like bounce back scrolling. You are proving Apple's point. There is more than 1 way to accomplish the same end goal - make a smart phone. Samsung didnt need to copy Apple's patents to do it.

Bounceback scrolling is an idea. It is not anywhere near as concrete as a chemical reaction. Pretending that they're somehow equivalent in either scope or purpose is disingenuous at best.
 
Well, on to the inevitable appeal. Apple winning this round is uninteresting - was so clearly going to go in their favour given the way things were set up. Round one is a partial loss for consumers and a partial win for shitty patents, but until we get a final decision here it's largely irrelevant. Hopefully this sort of thing will only damage the US market - decisions elsewhere seem a whole lot more sane so far.

Edit: Just read the Groklaw article on the decision. If what they're saying The Verge has reported about the jury deciding they didn't need the instructions and returning an inconsistent verdict (awarding Apple damages for non-infringing devices) is halfway true, then it's a real facepalm moment. Yet more ammunition for the appeal.
 
Well, on to the inevitable appeal. Apple winning this round is uninteresting - was so clearly going to go in their favour given the way things were set up. Round one is a partial loss for consumers and a partial win for shitty patents, but until we get a final decision here it's largely irrelevant. Hopefully this sort of thing will only damage the US market - decisions elsewhere seem a whole lot more sane so far.

Edit: Just read the Groklaw article on the decision. If what they're saying The Verge has reported about the jury deciding they didn't need the instructions and returning an inconsistent verdict (awarding Apple damages for non-infringing devices) is halfway true, then it's a real facepalm moment. Yet more ammunition for the appeal.

meh, i need to see a better breakdown because i could have sworn i saw the same exact phone on two different carriers, one with an infringe, the other not
 
seems like Above the Law and Groklaw think both Judge Koh and the jury's performance were a giant clusterfuck. a perfect setting for Samsung's appeal, at least.
 
I think I wanna be a lawyer.

Attorney fees could add up to tens of millions, or even hundreds of millions for each side, according to some estimates. Legal experts say the money was well spent, given the stakes.

Court documents show that some Morrison Foerster partners and of counsel billing a median rate of $582 an hour for work on portions of the case, while some Quinn Emanuel partners billed on average $821 per hour. Spokeswomen for both law firms did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
 
These lawsuits are decided in a court of law. If they are truly that ridiculous, you have nothing to fear.

That would make sense if the decisions weren't made by a jury full of people who evidently don't really understand these matters or know what they're doing. Any sane person can see that the pinch-to-zoom patent should be invalidated, yet it wasn't.
 
Did we ever get to see the information on other license agreements? I remember that was a possibility and some companies were freaking out trying to keep the info sealed.
 
That would make sense if the decisions weren't made by a jury full of people who evidently don't really understand these matters or know what they're doing. Any sane person can see that the pinch-to-zoom patent should be invalidated, yet it wasn't.
What did you find objectionable to Karan Singh and Ravin Balakrishnan's arguments in court that DiamondTouch, Jeff Han etc. did not constitute prior Art?
 
That would make sense if the decisions weren't made by a jury full of people who evidently don't really understand these matters or know what they're doing. Any sane person can see that the pinch-to-zoom patent should be invalidated, yet it wasn't.

Yeah it was pretty unlucky that all the jurors were insane
 
And this is stealing

samsung-galaxy-ace-vs-iphone-front.jpg
i3QALYNqGNcaG.jpg


don't forget the ipad.
 
That would make sense if the decisions weren't made by a jury full of people who evidently don't really understand these matters or know what they're doing. Any sane person can see that the pinch-to-zoom patent should be invalidated, yet it wasn't.

Complex matters like fraud and copyright/patent infringement shouldnt use the jury system
 
Exactly. It seems insane to me to let matters like these be decided by people who really can't be expected to fully understand them in such a short time.

Doubly so if those people decide not to bother with jury instructions or double-checking their verdict so that they can get home for the weekend.
 
Since the software patents were found valid by a jury, could those patents be argued again in a different case?

Did the trade dress do anything to narrow the focus beyond "rectangle with round edge"? Were all the phones included in the patent infringement part of the trade dress as well? While the Galaxy S I and II are the closest to Apple of all the mainstream Android phone, the other phones contains a lot more hardware design differences from iPhone. The Continuum, for example, is nearly an oval looks more like a dumbphone, and the Epic 4G contains a keyboard that should ensure no consumer confusion. If so, then I doubt the phone curve on the Galaxy Nexus or the nearly round top and bottom of the Galaxy S3 are enough to avoid another trade dress lawsuit.
 
I think the jury really bought into Apple's story of the iPhone design that took 3 months to be copied after years of R&D at Apple. The comparison documents, "heaven and Earth", and "crisis of design" didn't help Samsung at all. Not surprised the jury was compelled by this stuff, it was a pretty good case from Apple's lawyers.
 
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