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Submission + - US Patent Office Proposes Rule To Make It Much Harder To Kill Bad Patents (techdirt.com)

An anonymous reader writes: So, this is bad. Over the last few years, we’ve written plenty about the so-called “inter partes review” or "IPR” that came into being about a decade ago as part of the “America Invents Act,” which was the first major change to the patent system in decades. For much of the first decade of the 2000s, patent trolls were running wild and creating a massive tax on innovation. There were so many stories of people (mostly lawyers) getting vague and broad patents that they never had any intention of commercializing, then waiting for someone to come along and build something actually useful and innovative... and then shaking them down with the threat of patent litigation. The IPR process, while not perfect, was at least an important tool in pushing back on some of the worst of the worst patents. In its most basic form, the IPR process allows nearly anyone to challenge a bad patent and have the special Patent Trial and Appeal Board (PTAB) review the patent to determine if it should have been granted in the first place. Given that a bad patent can completely stifle innovation for decades this seems like the very least that the Patent Office should offer to try to get rid of innovation-killing bad patents.

However, patent trolls absolutely loathe the IPR process for fairly obvious reasons. It kills their terrible patents. The entire IPR process has been challenged over and over again and (thankfully) the Supreme Court said that it’s perfectly fine for the Patent Office to review granted patents to see if they made a mistake. But, of course, that never stops the patent trolls. They’ve complained to Congress. And, now, it seems that the Patent Office itself is trying to help them out. Recently, the USPTO announced a possible change to the IPR process that would basically lead to limiting who can actually challenge bad patents, and which patents could be challenged.

The wording of the proposed changes seems to be written in a manner to be as confusing as possible. But there are a few different elements to the proposal. One part would limit who can bring challenges to patents under the IPR system, utilizing the power of the director to do a “discretionary denial.” For example, it would say that “certain for-profit entities” are not allowed to bring challenges. Why? That’s not clear. [...] But the more worrisome change is this one: "Recognizing the important role the USPTO plays in encouraging and protecting innovation by individual inventors, startups, and under-resourced innovators who are working to bring their ideas to market, the Office is considering limiting the impact of AIA post-grant proceedings on such entities by denying institution when certain conditions are met." Basically, if a patent holder is designated as an “individual inventor, startup” or “under-resourced innovator” then their patents are protected from the IPR process. But, as anyone studying this space well knows, patent trolls often present themselves as all three of those things (even though it’s quite frequently not at all true). [...] And, again, none of this should matter. A bad patent is a bad patent. Why should the USPTO create different rules that protect bad patents? If the patent is legit, it will survive the IPR process.

Submission + - China Erupting in Revolt 9

LionKimbro writes: When I first heard about the "wage dispute" story at FoxConn, I thought that was all there was to it. Nope.

Dramatic footage has come out from the China Show, and completely changed the picture for me. Now I believe that a massive revolt is underway in China — directed against Zero-Covid, and even in places against the CCP and Xi specifically.

Two days ago, the China Show reported: "This is not an uprising that's saying oh let's overthrow the central government. This is not an uprising that says oh everyone rise up let's stop the communist party of China. No one's doing that right. The problem is that the Chinese government knows how things can morph. So things can take shape."

That has changed. "This is why you don't see massive revolts in China that spread at the same time. Because it's impossible. The Chinese government shuts it down and disappears the people that organize everything so everyone's too scared to do it. Again, since 1989, this is the first time I've seen... ...this is unprecedented. You do not see people riseup against a central government — they're going to local government offices but their messaging is the central government. I've never heard that. CCP step down. Step down Xi Jingping. I've never heard that before. Ever."

CNN too is reporting the story. On the front page, "Protests erupt across China."

Comparisons are being drawn with Tiananmen square. Lei's Real Talk has outlined the response from Xi: Crackdown. On the ground, people are responding with: "Help people."

Submission + - Ask Slashdot: Disable web-assembly to reduce browser-based abuse?

Tablizer writes: This Github bloglet by Steve Springett suggests disabling WASM (Web Assembly) in browsers for security purposes unless you need it often, and includes commands for switching it off in the common browsers. WASM potentially has some of the same risks that Java Applets and Flash did. What's Slashdotters view of this?

Browsers should have a way to easily disable it, including whitelisting. For example, if you need it for specific gaming site, you can whitelist just that site and not have WASM exposed for other sites.

Submission + - KDE Plasma 5.25 released (kde.org)

jrepin writes: Plasma is a popular desktop environment, which is also powering the desktop mode on the Steam Deck portable gaming console. The KDE Community announced release of KDE Plasma 5.25 . This new version brings many improvements: the accent colour can now be set based on the prominent colour from the current desktop background image (it updates if you use slide-show wallpapers) and it applies to more graphical elements, Floating Panels add a margin all around the panel to make it float while no window is maximised. Touch-screen mode can now be activated by detaching the screen, rotating it 360, or enabling it manually. The Overview effect can be activated by gestures on touchpad or touchscreen. The Global Theme settings page lets you pick and choose which parts to apply. The Application page for Discover has been redesigned and gives you links to the application’s documentation and website, and shows what system resources it has access to. Panels can now be navigated with the keyboard, and you can assign custom shortcuts to focus individual panels.

Submission + - "Father of MIDI" Dave Smith Dies At 72

NormalVisual writes: Synthtopia reports that Dave Smith, founder of the legendary synthesizer manufacturer Sequential Circuits and creator of the MIDI (Musical Instrument Digital Interface) standard, died this past Wednesday. Some of Smith's notable creations include the Prophet 5, one of the first commercially available digitally-controlled polyphonic analog synthesizers, and the Prophet-600, the first available device to offer MIDI. Smith's contributions to MIDI earned him a Technical Grammy award in 2013. Smith, who held degrees in both computer science and electronic engineering from UC Berkeley, was scheduled to appear at this year's National Association of Music Merchant (NAMM), but died suddenly. No cause of death has yet been released.

Submission + - SPAM: Carbon-coated nickel enables fuel cell free of precious metals

schwit1 writes: “A nitrogen doped carbon-coated nickel anode can catalyze an essential reaction in hydrogen fuel cells at a fraction of the cost of the precious metals currently used, Cornell University researchers have found. The new discovery could accelerate the widespread use of hydrogen fuel cells, which hold great promise as efficient, clean energy sources for vehicles and other applications.”
Link to Original Source

Submission + - Ukraine Proposes ICANN Remove Russian Domains (theregister.com)

unimind writes: With so many coming together on the side of Ukraine (even those who traditionally stay neutral in international affairs), asking ICANN to take action against Russia seems like it could be a reasonable proposition under the circumstances. From the article:

In response to the Russian invasion of Ukraine last week, Mykhailo Fedorov, First Vice Prime Minister of Ukraine, on Monday asked the head of DNS overlord ICANN to disable country code top-level domains associated with Russia...
Specifically, he has asked for the revocation of domains “.ru”, “.”, “.su”, and others used by the Russian Federation, shutting down DNS root servers serving the Russian Federation, and contributing to the revocation of associated TLS/SSL certificates for those domains.
"All of these measures will help users seek for reliable information in alternative domain zones, preventing propaganda and disinformation," Fedorov's email says.

As a bonus the likely decrease in spam would be a welcome reprieve...

Submission + - Why the World's Astronomers Are Very, Very Anxious Right Now (archive.md)

know-nothing cunt writes: The New York Times (link is NOT paywalled!) reports:

“You work for years and it all goes up in a puff of smoke,” said Marcia Rieke of the University of Arizona. Dr. Rieke admits her fingers will be crossed on the morning of Dec. 22 when she tunes in for the launch of the James Webb Space Telescope. For 20 years, she has been working to design and build an ultrasensitive infrared camera that will live aboard the spacecraft.

“I will almost certainly watch the launch and be terrified the entire time,” said Chanda Prescod-Weinstein, a professor of physics and gender studies at the University of New Hampshire.


Comment Re:Synergy (Score 4, Interesting) 15

I actually opened the thread just to say the same thing. Have used Synergy periodically for about 15 years and the last time I did was to "unite" a PC with a Mac. I see that now the 1.x stuff is on sourceforge and still free assuming it still works on current platforms. The 2.x series is $29 from a commerical company.

Submission + - Founder of anti-vaccination Christian TV network dies after contracting COVID-19 (abc.net.au) 3

Anonymouse Cowtard writes: A televangelist accused of broadcasting COVID-19 vaccine disinformation has died, weeks after contracting the virus.
Marcus Lamb, 64, and his wife Joni co-founded Christian TV channel Daystar in 1997.

The network announced the death of Mr Lamb earlier this week on Twitter.

"It's with a heavy heart we announce that Marcus Lamb, president and founder of Daystar Television Network, went home to be with the Lord this morning," the post said.

Mrs Lamb spoke about the death of her husband on her talk show on Tuesday morning US time.

"This morning at 4am, the president and founder of Daystar and the love of my life went to be with Jesus," she told viewers.

Submission + - Breakthrough by McMaster PhD student creates Laser in Silicon (mcmaster.ca)

thisisnotreal writes: Long sought-after, and previously thought impossible — a McMaster University PhD student in Hamilton Canada demonstrates a cost-effective and simple laser in silicon.
This could have dramatic consequences for the SiP (Silicon Photonics) — a hot topic for those working in the field of integrated optics. Integrated optics is a critical technology involved in advanced telecommunications networks, and showing increasing importance in quantum research and devices, such as QKD (Quantum Key Distribution) and in various entanglement type experiments (involved in Quantum Compute)

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