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#251 | ||
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You can't seem to stick to a subject uh ? Quote:
Prior art can definately be actual products or concepts.
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"What you leave behind is not what is engraved in stone monuments, but what is woven into the lives of others." -- Pericles |
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#252 | |
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Samsung copied NOTHING? You must be delusional. (Evidenced by your posts in other forums, ie - Open Source has nothing to do with $$ - look at ANDROID, LINUX, FireFox, UBUNTU!) Use effing touch wiz for a few minutes next to an iPhone. They're so much alike it isn't funny. Wasted energy for me 'eh? I'm in design school, as of today. I don't want people to be able to copy my designs and ideas - and this is a turning point in the future of IP and design. The linux phone isn't infringing because it wasn't actually multitouch. The linux phone did the same thing the iBook (2005) did, which was "zoom levels" and not smooth scrolling. The samsung and HTC lawsuits are about the fluidity that made the iPhone famous. HTC settled, but Samsung maintains that they did nothing wrong. I drew a comic that included a thing like Google Glasses when I was 9. Should I sue google? No, because it wasn't actuality. |
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#253 | |
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A California court issued a guilty verdict for patent infringement, but the thing about patents is that you don't need to copy to infringe. Since no copyright claims have been made nor ruled upon, "copying" remains firmly in the realm of opinion. Thank you for playing. Ignored.
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"What you leave behind is not what is engraved in stone monuments, but what is woven into the lives of others." -- Pericles |
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#254 | ||
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Total nonsense. You don't have to ship to be innovative.
For example, other companies actually shipped phones for a decade or more, while Apple sat around innovating within itself and selling nothing. Does their internal R&D therefore count for nothing? Heck, Apple still is obtaining patents on phone features that the iPhone will likely never use. Are those patents non-innovative because they aren't being shipped? Quote:
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It's nearly impossible not to use some or even most UI ideas that came before you. Imagine if you could not use pulldown menus or checkboxes or multiple selection lists or any of the common ideas that users understand and expect. It would be like every car brand having a different pedal arrangement. Moreover, it's very easy for multiple developers to independently come up with solutions so similar that they would infringe if one of them got a patent. Slide to unlock, animations, context-sensitive keyboards... all are common solutions to common problems. |
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#255 | |
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Also, everyone keeps claiming that the Jury incorrectly validated Apple's patents because they couldn't be run on the same processor, but that is not entirely true. Jury Instructions: "For the claim to be invalid because it is not new, all of its requirements must have existed in a single device or method that predates the claimed invention, or must have been described in a single previous publication or patent that predates the claimed invention. In patent law, these previous devices, methods, publications or patents are called “prior art references.” If a patent claim is not new we say it is “anticipated” by a prior art reference. The description in the written reference does not have to be in the same words as the claim, but all of the requirements of the claim must be there, either stated or necessarily implied, so that someone of ordinary skill in the field looking at that one reference would be able to make and use the claimed invention." If you even researched or looked at the various "prior art" cases that Samsung had presented, you would know that they were a farcry from being "prior art" and most CERTAINLY did not have satisfy all requirements, they were not even remotely similar... See here for videos regarding the "prior art": http://appleinsider.com/articles/12/...witnesses.html |
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#256 | ||||
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However, the jury foreman went WAY beyond that definition, and mistakenly added his own test of having to run on the prior art devices: Quote:
Ironically, that bounceback patent is one that the USPTO later decided would most likely have the majority of its claims stripped for being obvious extensions of prior art... the opposite of what the jury had decided using incorrect parameters supplied by the foreman. Last edited by kdarling; Nov 30, 2012 at 04:30 PM. |
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#257 | |
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#258 | |
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__________________
There are four kinds of lies: Lies, damned lies, statistics, and analyst projections. |
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#259 |
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It was only a small part of his reasoning, he also said how it was completely different software and not to be considered prior art. Which that alone, is enough to validate the patent and dismiss the claim of prior art. His comments after were really just irrelevant.
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#260 |
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Well, if "more importantly" is a small part for you then the case is over.
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There are four kinds of lies: Lies, damned lies, statistics, and analyst projections. |
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#261 | |
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"Prior art didn't mean that the prior art wasn't valid. It was valid. But the stipulation under the law is for the prior art to be sufficient to negate or invalidate the Apple patents in this case, it had to be sufficiently similar or, more importantly, it had to be interchangeable. And in example after example, when we put it to the test, the older prior art was just that. Not that there's anything [wrong] with older prior art - but the key was that the hardware was different, the software was an entirely different methodology, and the more modern software could not be loaded onto the older example and be run without error." That alone is enough to dismiss prior art claims... He added in the other differences to stress that they were extremely different. |
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#262 | |
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That alone shows that he had very poor understanding.
__________________
There are four kinds of lies: Lies, damned lies, statistics, and analyst projections. |
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#263 | |
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#264 | |
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It helps to read the FULL jury instructions, not a small subset. As instructed, invalidation of a patent did not depend solely on the small section that was quoted in this thread. There were multiple pages of ways that invalidation could take place, and a previous patent fulfilling all claims was just one of them. Being shown at all was another way. There was also an entire section about obviousness. As for his comments about software interchangeability, it was the first and only thing he brought up in a previous interview, where he said this (see 3:10 here) about his "aha" moment that made him decide the patent was valid: "The software on the Apple side could not be placed into the processor on the prior art and vice versa. That means they are not interchangeable. That changed everything right there." - Jury foreman The enormity of that mistaken idea alone, makes any other statement he made about the patent just as suspect. Finally, I emphasize again that shortly after this layman jury found the bounceback patent to be valid, and Samsung liable for millions of dollars due to infringing, the USPTO itself found that the patent was likely invalid due to obviousness and anticipation by prior patents. I don't think the foreman mistakes were the worst part of the trial, though. What was more shameful was how much prior art was banned from the trial due to legal technicalities. It taints the validity of the trial outcome. It's one thing if the jury knows everything and comes to a decision. It's quite another if critical evidence is withheld. |
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