Hot Topics | |
---|---|
FG Lurker wrote:Well, it looks like Google has found the answer to their patent woes, they just dropped $12.5 billion to buy Motorola Mobility.
Motorola Mobility has about 17,000 patents, mostly related to mobile communications. They have many key antenna technology patents and a lot of 3G and 4G patents as well.
This is definitely a big "F YOU!" to Apple and Microsoft and a major re-balancing of the patent status quo. Android is looking a lot safer from litigation today than it was yesterday.
Coligny wrote:sumthing tells me this kind of sale need to be approved first...
Coligny wrote:sumthing tells me this kind of sale need to be approved first...
FG Lurker wrote:Google ... pushing for serious patent and copyright reform.
American Oyaji wrote:Motorola has been trying to dump their mobility unit for 3 years now.
American Oyaji wrote:To misquote Inigo Monotya, "I don't think that company is gonna do for you what you think it's going to."
Google got chumped on this one. Just watch.
Coligny wrote:Seriously, same should go with patent on just ideas or concept without a working prototype... It's ridiculous...
FG Lurker wrote:I'd go even further. If a company is not actively using a patent they should lose it after a much shorter period than 20 years. Patents were supposed to allow businesses (or inventors) to profit from their innovations. If they aren't actively doing so the patent should become invalid.
Russell wrote:Well, companies have to pay maintenance fees to keep their patents, and if they stop paying, they will lose their patent rights in less than 20 years. So, in practice it already kind of works like you proposed. Only the valuable patents (i.e., those by which they can make money) will be kept in this way.
FG Lurker wrote:I was more aiming for patent trolls who do nothing with the patents they own except sue other companies for license fees. This was not the idea behind the patent system and I don't think it should be allowed to continue. Many of the patents involved are frivolous at best but companies pay up because patent litigation is so expensive.
If it's patents that Google was after, it would have been a lot smarter for them to have just licensed the patents from Motorola Mobility. Those patents are probably of little value in protecting Android anyway which is probably why Google didn't go that route. If they had any real value, you would expect Motorola Mobility to have been making profits licensing them the last few years, which would have made up for the fact that the company can't make money selling handsets.FG Lurker wrote:Android is looking a lot safer from litigation today than it was yesterday.
Doctor Stop wrote:If it's patents that Google was after, it would have been a lot smarter for them to have just licensed the patents from Motorola Mobility. Those patents are probably of little value in protecting Android anyway which is probably why Google didn't go that route. If they had any real value, you would expect Motorola Mobility to have been making profits licensing them the last few years, which would have made up for the fact that the company can't make money selling handsets.
Russell wrote:Basically you are right, but in practice it works different for almost all companies. If a company has a patent (call it A), other companies try to get patents related to it, aiming to build a wall of patents around patent A. Now if the first-said company wants to develop a product based on patent A, it may violate the patents set up around it. As a result it has to negotiate with the other companies. The outcome may be payment of license fees or exchange of rights of its other patents with the other companies.
To prevent a wall being built around your patent, it is best to formulate it as wide as possible, even if the technology has not been completely developed. I think this is probably the way a small inventor or company should go.
I wouldn't describe MS or Apple as being patent trolls. Companies like Lodsys, yes.FG Lurker wrote:Google has found they need defensive patents to stop the attacks and patent trolling of MS and Apple.
Doctor Stop wrote:I wouldn't describe MS or Apple as being patent trolls. Companies like Lodsys, yes.
[Full article on The Register]Has Google wasted $12bn on a dud patent poker-chip?
Larry Page's Moto bluff fails to convince
Analysts I've spoken to are already wondering how much due diligence Google performed before the announcement, or whether the Motorola acquisition will turn out to rival Terra's legendary, rushed purchase of EMI. Here's why.
Android is a copycat platform. The APIs copy Java, and the UI copies Apple's iPhone. Oracle believes Google has violated Java IP, which it acquired with Sun Microsystems. Google says the language, and a third of Android's API's are "derivative" of Java. On the other warpath, Apple has launched three dozen lawsuits relating to usability and UI. Apple is hurling these lawsuits at Android licensees, rather than at Google itself. Google has refused to indemnify its partners, causing much nervousness.
These radio and design patents of legacy manufacturers such as Motorola or Nokia really aren't worth quite as much as their owners think they are.
Google has paid $12.5bn for a negotiating chip that appears to be almost impossible to redeem.
Doctor Stop wrote:Android is in serious trouble, FG. Even without the patent and trade dress lawsuits.
I'm also curious to know how Android could be in trouble.Doctor Stop wrote:Android is in serious trouble, FG. Even without the patent and trade dress lawsuits.
Doctor Stop wrote:You guys are talking about market share, I'm talking profits. All those Android phones aren't really making the manufacturers any money. Apple makes more money selling smartphones than all the other smartphone makers combined.
Android manufacturers are in competition with the all the other Android manufacturers, not with Apple. Apple's not going to lower the price of the one new phone they come out with a year because there's a few new Android phones coming out every month.
It's the Android makers that are under pressure to undercut the other Android makers on price. That's a recipe for even lower profits.
Doctor Stop wrote:You guys are talking about market share, I'm talking profits. All those Android phones aren't really making the manufacturers any money. Apple makes more money selling smartphones than all the other smartphone makers combined.
Android manufacturers are in competition with the all the other Android manufacturers, not with Apple. Apple's not going to lower the price of the one new phone they come out with a year because there's a few new Android phones coming out every month.
It's the Android makers that are under pressure to undercut the other Android makers on price. That's a recipe for even lower profits.
Doctor Stop wrote:You guys are talking about market share, I'm talking profits. All those Android phones aren't really making the manufacturers any money. Apple makes more money selling smartphones than all the other smartphone makers combined.
Doctor Stop wrote:You guys are talking about market share, I'm talking profits. All those Android phones aren't really making the manufacturers any money. Apple makes more money selling smartphones than all the other smartphone makers combined.
Android manufacturers are in competition with the all the other Android manufacturers, not with Apple. Apple's not going to lower the price of the one new phone they come out with a year because there's a few new Android phones coming out every month.
It's the Android makers that are under pressure to undercut the other Android makers on price. That's a recipe for even lower profits.
They're going to need it because they're going to see a lot of those profits eventually going in other companies' pockets.2triky wrote:A firm like HTC has doubled its profits in the span of a year to the tune of $600 million dollars on $4 billion in revenue shattering the company's previous record.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 1 guest