Hyperlinking From CD To The Web Patented — Plenty Of Software Companies Sued

from the seriously? dept

Remember Acacia? It’s the patent hoarder that buys up random questionable patents and then sues lots and lots of companies. Its most famous patent is for streaming media, which is number one on the EFF’s list of patents that need to be busted. However, the company also has other patents. The latest is about to get a lot more attention. It’s officially a patent for an information distribution system, but which Acacia claims actually covers having a hyperlink on a CD-ROM that links to a database, such as the web. Acacia has a subsidiary, called Disc Link, who is “monetizing” this patent by suing a ton of software companies, such as Oracle, SAP, Borland, Business Objects, Compuware, Corel, Eastman Kodak and Novell among others. Considering how many companies distribute CD-ROMs with links to the web, you can imagine how many companies can now be sued. How this concept could possibly be patented isn’t explained — not when there’s plenty of money to be made by suing companies who are doing the most basic things that hyperlinks were designed to allow.


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Comments on “Hyperlinking From CD To The Web Patented — Plenty Of Software Companies Sued”

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41 Comments
Avatar28 says:

They need to band together.

With Acacia suing this many companies over this and with all the others that they could possibly sue, I think you can bet that at least one will fight it. If they can band together to fight it, so much the better.

Looking at the patent, it appears that it would work more like the help system in Microsoft Office. You have a database distributed on CDROM that then links to another database remotely.

In any case, the filing date was Nov 8, 1998. I’m PRETTY sure that the technique Acacia is claiming was well established by then and the use seems rather obvious to me but, then, I don’t work in the Patent Office and their standards are different than mine.

The infamous Joe says:

You've got it wrong.

Haha, I love these guys!

Don’t you see? How better to show the flaws in the patent system than to so blatantly exploit them? Acacia is a parody of any big business that attempts to stifle innovation via the patent system.

They bring the spotlight and point it at the flaws– hopefully someone with the power to fix those flaws does so.

dataGuy says:

Re: You've got it wrong.

I’m not very knowledgeable about how the patent office works. I know there are a lot of different proposals floating around on how to “fix” the patent system. What I’d like to know is, would it be quicker to straighten this patent mess by having a regime change in the patent office or is waiting on Congress and the Courts the only real answer?

Shohat (user link) says:

I have a CD of a 1995 PC Answers CD magazine

I have a CD of a 1995 PC Answers CD magazine that has links on it’s CD pointing directly to websites and software on the Internet . This is a 12 year old CD (OMFG Time does goes by fast..), and the fact that now there is some company that sues other companies for that technology is plain retarded.

Just because there was no major technological progress for over 50 years (!), doesn’t mean we should squeeze every single drop out of the small progress that was made and abuse the patent system that was developed for times with much greater amount of innovation, when the strict patent system was still needed in order to reward inventors.

Now that innovation is rare and 95% is just natural progress/improvement and combinations of existing technologies, there should a different kind of protection granted in place.
Fix it !

Chronno S. Trigger says:

Even if...

Even if you look at this patent the way it’s written and not how they’re twisting it, this patent is BS anyways. It’s about having a link (Not necessarily a hyperlink) that points to a database and when it is clicked then it shows the information in the database. I work on software like that all day (From a company big enough to crush these people).

I say any patent that uses a term as loose as “bi-directional channel” should be rewritten to be more specific.

terogers says:

Re: time for prior art..

Prior art doesn’t automatically invalidate the patent; it protects those practicing that art from being hounded by the patent holder. The patent rights still extend to others unless it’s challenged, which is often the case.

If most of the companies being sued can’t show prior art, I’d be surprised. This technology was around in the ’80’s, before CD’s were capable of being used as a medium for links.

I built distributed systems that probably qualify; we used floppies.

Overcast says:

Yeah, the idiots!!

Go check out their ‘patent portfolio’

http://www.acaciatechnologies.com/patentportfolio.htm

This one really had me laughing.

“COMPACT DISK
The patent, currently being reexamined by the United States Patent and Trademark Office, covers certain systems for recording and playing compact disks containing compressed audio data utilizing certain data-compression methods. The CD player technology, consisting in part of a CD drive that reads MPEG Layer-3 (MP3) compressed digital audio data recorded on a CD, and an integrated circuit chip which decompresses the data and produces a non-compressed audio output, is commonly found in DVD and CD players.”

LOL, riiiiiiight.

If you do to their web page, and look – you’ll even find they tried to patent ‘2D Bar Codes’. They almost act like they are begging people to invest, most likely they need the money for all the court fees. So they can patent other people’s stuff and then sue for it.

Can you say fraud?

James says:

Hold your breathe

I have just patented the process of breathing oxygen either alone or mixed with other gases with or without artificial assistance, by a human being.

Everyone at Acacia (and the RIAA, MPAA and any politically-motivated religous organization… and Sony) owe me $10,000 per individual for an annually renewable license, or face direct violation of this patent. 😉

Those holding their breathe will not be considered in violation.

Everyone is grand-fathered in 😉

Wire-Cramped (user link) says:

Acacia shows why..

They show why so many other countries look at us with shame and pity. That we would be the richest country on the planet and then see millions and millions wasted on this crap while our people go hungry and cold.

I hand my head in shame also to see such a capable country allow this company to exist and not pull its license and disband the whole farce.

I agree there is enough prior art or for most of their patents something to prove they wont win a snowballs chance in hell at actually getting one of these through to the finish.

I think I am going to launch a all out assualt on this company until they are skulking away from the entire nations criticism. I will get their employees to leave and any funding they seek I intend on telling those agencies/groups/companies/individuals that as a 20yr I.T. veteran this comapny is actually…

Getting capital to pay large salaries to their corporate execs to pursue thin air and golf each day while dangling hopes of a fat pay off.

They are commiting crime and will be exposed for whom they are. Watch for the opposition web site comming soon!

Chronno S. Trigger says:

Didn't we go off on these people already?

“WIRELESS DIGITAL MESSAGING
This patented technology generally relates to transmitting digital content to wireless devices, such as cell phones, PDAs, MP3 players and laptop computers, including wireless systems that deliver digital content, such as images, graphics, photographs, image-embedded e-mail and facsimiles. Among the primary applications for this technology are mobile phone picture messaging and email/fax delivery.”

Directly from there website, they own the patent on txt messaging.

Matt says:

They've Already Obtained Settlements Over This

“March 15, 2007 — Acacia Research Corporation announced today that… [it] has entered into a settlement agreement with McAfee, Inc. covering patents relating to portable storage devices with links. … The portable storage devices with links technology generally relates to products sold or distributed on CDs or DVDs that include a link to retrieve additional data via the Internet”

Joe Smith says:

Re: They've Already Obtained Settlements Over This

Yeah but do they say what the settlement was: maybe it was just “we’ll buy you a cup of coffee and we won’t call the cops”

and yes, yes before the lawyers all chime in I know that as a general rule it is inappropriate to expressly or impliedly threaten criminal proceedings for the purpose of settling a civil claim.)

redkendrick says:

Acacia can sue MPAA

I have DVDs (legally purchased ones too;) that open up additional content over the web when they’re played in a PC. Seems like that might be covered by this patent. Acacia can now throw themselves against the biggest corporate legal department on the planet. I think I might enjoy watching that one. Have fun guys!

James says:

Where does the insanity end?

That’s the problem with corporations, they will roll over like a cheap hooker. It is easier to pay these slime balls $100K to go away, then fight it. More than like McAfee settlement was one of: Here’s 100K, go away and bother us no more. We admit to no wrong doing and Arcadia agrees to never bring the subject up again.

Now, this time maybe different, if I know Uncle Larry (Larry Ellison) he will not take kindly to veiled threats from piss ant company like Arcadia. He just might spend a few hundred million to crush them, just to prove a point.

Andrew D. Todd (user link) says:

Where to send Prior Art.

Folks, if you have any prior art which is relevent to this or any other similar patent matter, pass it along to Dan Ravicher at the Public Patent Foundation. It’s his job to see that it gets where it needs to go.

Write up as detailed a description as possible, citing names, dates, serial numbers, whatever.

http://www.pubpat.org/

RoadRunner says:

Amateur radio look out

Hello,

I guess amateur radio is next. Amateur radio operators can transmit pictures and text messages with only a radio, computer, antenna, and electrical power. They also have been sending slow scan television images for 30 to 40 years so Acacia needs to get over itself and pull its head out of its six o’clock.(A$$)

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