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RIM Chairman Wants Changes to U.S. Patent Law 245

florescent_beige writes "The Globe and Mail is reporting that James Balsillie '... called on U.S. lawmakers yesterday to fix a system that he says boxed the company into one of the largest legal settlements in U.S. history.' Although this will do nothing to change the $612.5M(US) settlement RIM was forced to sign with NTP, Mr. Balsille says he wants to help 'assure that no other company experiences what we endured over the past five years.' Mr Balsillie's rhetoric was direct: he said RIM's treatment at trial was like '... a judge in a murder case pondering execution while ignoring DNA evidence that exonerates the accused ... RIM was virtually held up for ransom by NTP...'"
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RIM Chairman Wants Changes to U.S. Patent Law

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  • Share the blame... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by PhysicsPhil ( 880677 ) on Thursday April 06, 2006 @02:57PM (#15078617)
    If he wants to blame someone for a massive court settlement, perhaps he should try looking in the mirror. RIM had the chance to settle this for a pittance early on, but decided to role the dice in court and lost. http://yro.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=06/01/29/17 26238 [slashdot.org]

    The patent system certainly needs some fixing, but outlawing stupid CEOs at the same time would also be a big help. I'm not going to get my hopes up though.

  • by concurrent.ca ( 909690 ) on Thursday April 06, 2006 @03:00PM (#15078644)
    ...a Canadian company is on the receiving end of US courts?
  • by SubtleNuance ( 184325 ) on Thursday April 06, 2006 @03:05PM (#15078703) Journal
    Where has the Neo Liberal Canadian Government been in all this?

    Canada's breakout convergence darling, our future NOKIA gets beaten with some BULLCRAP legal play by a collection of yankee lawyers -- forcing the company to hold still for years (customers doubt their viability, causing them to divert attention from conquering the world).

    Where was our government in all this? Why was a Canadian company being brow beaten by a housefull of lawyers? One reason: If RIM was AMERICAN, some in-house politico would have stopped it Pretty Darn Quick.

    $650 million was EXTORTED from RIM. Ive been pissed about this (i dont work for RIM or hold shares), but my vote is we burn NAFTA. It really blows getting burnt by your money grubbing patent laws (America to world: "we own IDEAS(!)). Stuff it.
  • by buckhead_buddy ( 186384 ) on Thursday April 06, 2006 @03:09PM (#15078749)
    This sounds like a good thing from the perspective of those who have seen abusive lawsuits over questionable patent claims. I can't help but think that from a lawmaker or business perspective it's RIM's opinion that will be viewed as a "sore loser" rather than "moral reformer".

    It's more likely this call for attention from RIM will encourage more curiousity of how to exploit these legislative loopholes rather than start the reformation of a broken system. It's a new way to milk your competitor. The only people hit by this will be the slow, poor, or legally-inept losers. And those are irrelevant voices in making legislation today anyway it seems.

    I really hope I'm wrong though. Reformation has to start somewhere.

  • by dada21 ( 163177 ) <adam.dada@gmail.com> on Thursday April 06, 2006 @03:10PM (#15078766) Homepage Journal
    Laws are written with the pretext that it will better serve the citizens, but with the posttext that it servers the politicians in giving them power over those they serve. No change to the law will make a difference -- politicians don't write laws the way we want them written, and many of them don't even read the bills that they vote into law. Don't be surprised when the "Fix the Patent System Act of 2007" is passed, and all it does is incorporate 500 pork barrel items not pertaining to patents, as well as some changes that only give Congress more power over something it was never meant to destroy. Yes, Congress has the right to make patent laws, but they were supposed to exist for a short period of time to protect individual inventors, not megacorporations who create nothing and stifle innovation.

    If we want to change the system, we need to get these laws in front of the Supreme Court, over and over and over. Don't let them tell you no, just keep refiling under new pretenses. Stop voting for the monsters who make the laws, and consider all the bad laws on the books.

    What we need is a President who does nothing but veto, over and over and over. That won't happen. What we need is Senators to be elected by the state governments like it was before the 17th Amendment was passed -- Senators who think about the power of the state over the power over of the federal government. That won't happen. What we need is to reduce the power of the two parties by throwing out all campaign finance laws ("incumbent protection acts") and also throwing out the control of the debates. That won't happen.

    It isn't just the patent laws that are broken, it is the system. Instead of a Republic of Independent States, we have a democracy of statism and authoritarianism. Don't expect it to get fixed, not as long as you continue supporting the monsters in office -- from both parties.
  • by augustz ( 18082 ) on Thursday April 06, 2006 @03:12PM (#15078784)
    As a point of references, some history is useful.

    RIM made lots and lots of noise about their own IP, and have gone after lots of people before finding themselves on the other side of the ball.

    "RIM is alleging that Good is infringing on its patents, according to the suit. The first is "for a method and apparatus to remotely control gateway functions in a wireless data communications network." The second "relates to a method and system for loading an application program on a device." The third "relates to a method and system for transmitting data files between computers in a wireless data communications environment."

    or this one

    "Ontario, Canada-based RIM charges in a suit filed Wednesday in U.S. District Court in Delaware that Glenayre Technologies violates a patent granted last month to RIM protecting the way the BlackBerry redirects e-mail from a computer or server to a handheld using a single e-mail address." - http://news.com.com/RIM+wins+patent%2C+sues+rival/ 2100-1040_3-257801.html?tag=st.ref.goo [com.com]

    Anyways, my point is that RIM really loved patents when they could shut out their competition with them, but disliked them when someone heard them making lots of noise about their IP and said, wait a minute, we have patents in the same area. Despite extrodinarily preferential treatment by the USPTO (ie, no one else will get patents they context reviewed that fast ever), they still were unable to prevail.

    Something def needs to be fixed on the patent side, but there is something interesting also about RIM getting some of its own medicine. I wonder if someone has a more complete history on their annoucements on monetizing their IP portfolio.
  • by omahaNerd ( 860747 ) on Thursday April 06, 2006 @03:31PM (#15078953)
    seems like an easy change would be to require a full review by the patent office once a lawsuit has been brought. the lawsuit would not be allowed to proceed until a final determination has been made. that would seem to address the RIM case where the patents are well on their way to being rejected.
  • by TheRaven64 ( 641858 ) on Thursday April 06, 2006 @03:32PM (#15078958) Journal
    On a related note, I wonder how many congress critters you can get for $612.5...
  • by Gorshkov ( 932507 ) <AdmiralGorshkov@ ... com minus distro> on Thursday April 06, 2006 @03:35PM (#15078992)
    ...a Canadian company is on the receiving end of US courts?

    Why wouldn't they be? They're operating in the US, and as such those operations are subject to US law (and the silly US Patent system)

    (A Proud Canadian ..... well, since we got rid of the Liberals, anyway :-))
  • by Gorshkov ( 932507 ) <AdmiralGorshkov@ ... com minus distro> on Thursday April 06, 2006 @03:39PM (#15079028)
    .... but my vote is we burn NAFTA. It really blows getting burnt by your money grubbing patent laws (America to world: "we own IDEAS(!)). Stuff it.

    ummmmmm .... I have some bad news for you.

    NAFTA covers international trade, not intellectual property rights. When RIM conducts business in the United States, it's subject to US law. When IBM conducts business in Canada, it's subject to Canadian law.

    Running a business in a foreign country is not the same as selling wheat, softwood lumber, or beef from Canada into the United States.
  • by jtev ( 133871 ) on Thursday April 06, 2006 @04:53PM (#15079715) Journal
    He could have a real patent instead of a software pattent, we support those you know. It's not like we think people shouldn't be able to protect the "Computerized Better Mousetrap" Just that they shouldn't be able to pattent "Better Mousetrap OS Upgrade 5 subversion 23" that uses the exact same hardware, to do the exact same job, where copyright law would be quite satasfactory to cover the new software.
  • by darkmeridian ( 119044 ) <william.chuangNO@SPAMgmail.com> on Thursday April 06, 2006 @04:56PM (#15079738) Homepage
    How much money does RIM make from the United States? If RIM doesn't want to subject itself to United States law, it can leave our markets. If RIM wants to make American dollars, it has to follow American law. Certainly, RIM didn't shy away from the U.S. legal system when it sued others for infringing on its patent on miniature keyboards on portable devices. Besides, it's not as though RIM didn't lobby U.S. Congressman into getting the PTO to reject all the NTP patents in unheard-of pace.

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