Day Before Patent Reform Was Signed, Mad Dash By Trolls To Sue: 51 Cases Against 680 Defendants
from the in-under-the-wire dept
While we still think that the new patent law that was signed by the President last week won’t do much to make a difference, it does appear that a bunch of trolls who were at least a little concerned about the “joinder reform” part decide to sneak in as many cases against as many defendants as possible before the law went into effect. As you may recall, one of the few useful parts of the law was that it made it harder for patent holders to lump together totally unrelated companies into a single lawsuit. Doing so was popular for a variety of reasons: it’s cheaper, obviously, but also because it made it easier to justify an East Texas (or other preferred) jurisdiction.
Groklaw noted a bunch of last minute patent troll lawsuits being filed right before the bill was signed into law, naming three such trolls that brought 12 cases against 222 companies, but also noting that this didn’t represent all such cases. In fact, the folks at RPX contacted us with more data on this, noting that 85 cases against over 800 defendants were filed in the two week period before the bill was signed into law… and that includes 51 cases against 680 defendants the day before the bill was signed into law. This is in comparison to an average of about 160 companies sued in a “normal” week for infringement.
Filed Under: lawsuits, patent reform, patent trolls, patents
Comments on “Day Before Patent Reform Was Signed, Mad Dash By Trolls To Sue: 51 Cases Against 680 Defendants”
What a parody our system has become. So pathetic.
So wait…is patent reform actually changing something, or are these guys just scared for nothing?
Re: Re:
These guys are scared because they know The Maz is coming for them.
Re: Re:
They’re not scared about their trolling practices. It’s just that they saw their costs were about to go up. This is like buying a bunch of your favorite cereal before the sale ends. It’s not that you’re afraid you won’t be able to buy it after the sale ends, just that you know you can save money now.
The problem, was the joinder reform was the only useful thing in the bill. The patent trolls will still be able to abuse patent law, they’ll just have to pay a bit more because they can’t lump all of the defendants into one lawsuit.
Re: Re:
The law pretty clearly changed the way suits against multiple defendants can be brought, aka joinder. Or, to be exact, clarified that it’s not enough to have an allegedly infringed patent in common. You need something else.
After the law passed, you should* see no more cases filed against 100s of defendants together in a single case. What you’ll see instead is 100s of different cases.
This has potential to be both good and bad for defendants. We shall see. The reasons for this are too numerous and complex to explain in a comment, though.
* I’ll note that there have been several cases naming multiple seemingly unrelated defendants filed after the law passed.
Is the patent system alive and working? Nope, it’s Chuck Testa!
patent reFORM……they just reFORMed the lawsuits into slightly different layouts…the evil scum sucking troll companies that actively want to hurt humanity to make a profit and don’t care if children or the elderly or anyone else die as a result of their license scams will keep filing away, knowing its still possible to suck at the tit of humanity without returning anything of value.
Attention PatentMart shoppers – BlueLight Special on Aisle six. Get ’em while they’re hot.
sorely needed
This new spate of suits indicates that the new disjoinder rules may indeed be sorely needed. At least now no one can say that Congress isn’t doing anything to address the patent troll issue. Even though it’s likely not enough to resolve the problem, at least it seems to be a step in the right direction.
another biased article
Masnick has an unreported conflict of interest-
https://www.insightcommunity.com/cases.php?n=10&pg=1
He sells blog filler and “insights” to major corporations including MS, HP, IBM etc. who just happen to be some of the world?s most frequent patent suit defendants. Obviously, he has failed to report his conflicts as any reputable reporter would. But then Masnick is not a reporter. He is a patent system saboteur receiving funding from huge corporate infringers. He cannot be trusted and has no credibility. All he knows about patents is he doesn?t have any.
It’s the thought of nothing that scares em