Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Week 9 Blog 1 - One After Another

I read an article on Foss Patents today that made me laugh. It was about another Nokia vs. HTC trial. Only three days after Nokia won one of its lawsuits for a battery conserving method patent against HTC, they have already moved on to another lawsuit. Once again, Nokia is suing HTC for another one of its patents. The author of the article explains the patent: "The patent-in-suit discussed... cover(s) the feature sending messages from a particular network to a wireless device which then activates or deactivates certain programs or features based on what the message instructs to do."
The court did not reach a conclusion yesterday. HTC is trying its best to defend itself by carefully analyzing and interpreting what a "network" is. According to the author, this is a common tactic of those companies who have been sued by Nokia for this patent. This is because the description of the particular patent Nokia is suing other companies on contains the word "network,"  but not "telecommunications network." Therefore, HTC's claim is that Nokia's patent is too broad, which is something that the court struggled to decide on.
This case was very interesting to me, not only because I was surprised to read about Nokia being involved in a lawsuit with HTC only three days after they came to a conclusion on another patent, but to realize how important and essential a description for a patent can be. I really look forward to reading about the court's decision on this case.

http://www.fosspatents.com/2013/03/nokia-sues-htc-over-feature-letting.html


3 comments:

  1. i also did my blogpost on this FOSS article (focused on a very different point) and found it pretty interesting. in fact this is only 1 of the 40 patents nokia has asserted against HTC (again, according to FOSS). this whole wording issue only reminds me of how important lawyers / law firms are in the patent war. and really, its very exclusive to large-size companies.

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  2. I found it interesting that most companies defending themselves against recent Nokia lawsuits have a different interpretation of the word 'network'. And its also surprising how the entire contents of a patent could be based on the meaning of one word.

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  3. I have a feeling Nokia is going to win this just because of their track record with Blackberry.

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