[Ecommerce] Gaming patent system: Webcasters under attack from Acacia's patents

James Love james.love@cptech.org
Thu Feb 6 08:03:04 2003


-------- Original Message --------
Subject: PATNEWS: Webcasters under attack from Acacia's patents
Date: Wed, 5 Feb 2003 17:57:00 -0800
From: clients@bustpatents.com
To: srctran@bustpatents.com


!20030204  Webcasters under attack from Acacia's patents

     The latest assertion of dubious patents concerning the network
transmission of compressed data is coming out of Acacia Research.  One
of the targets, webcaster radioio.com, is trying to organize an effort
to fight back.  Acacia is asking for a royalty of three quarters of one
percent (0.75%) of music-related revenue, which sounds small until you
realize that music webcasting has very low profit margins, if they are
making any money at all.  Attached is press release from radioio.com.
A bit of advice to the webcasters people - the Acacia patents affect
businesses, but they are not business method patents.  The Berman bill
gambit (dead, and rightfully so for being very ill-defined), probably
isn't the best way to go.

                                       ====

But first, what is Acrapia asserting?  The priority date is January 
1991, and while it cites lots of prior patents, it cites very little 
non-patent prior art.  Here is claim one from the first patent in the 
chain, with Greg sarcasm (and yes, I available to do invalidity searches :-)


    US Patent     5,132,992                              (filed Jan 1991)
    Audio and video transmission and receiving system

    1.  A  transmission system for providing information to be 
transmitted to remote locations, the transmission system comprising:
        (Greg note: nothing interesting here)

    library means for storing items containing information; 
identification encoding  means  for  retrieving the information in the 
items from the ibrary  means  and  for assigning a unique identification 
code to the retrieved information;
        (Greg note: a server library of music and videos that can be
        searched - universities and cable companies were doing this
        in the 1980s)

    conversion  means,  coupled  to the identification encoding means, 
for placing  the  retrieved  information  into  a  predetermined format 
as formatted data;
        (Greg note: reformatting data - not novel in light of the many
        such techniques developed for multimedia in the 1970s and 1980s)

    ordering  means,  coupled  to  the  conversion  means, for placing 
the formatted data into a sequence of addressable data blocks;
        (Greg note: most network transmission protocols from the 1980s
        had schemes to organize packets to be transmitted, such
        orderings often optimized for network conditions, or error
        correcting conditions)

    compression  means, coupled to the ordering means, for compressing 
the formatted and sequenced data blocks;
	(Greg note: please, shoot anyone in the 1990s claiming compressing data 
for network transmission.  This subject was published to death in the 
1980s.)

    compressed  data storing means, coupled to the data compression 
means, for  storing  as  files the compressed, sequenced data blocks 
received from  the  data  compression means with the unique 
identification code assigned by the identification encoding means; and
        (Greg note: looks like some sort of buffer or queue before
        transmission onto the network.  In any event, this technique
        was boring in the 1970s)

    transmitter  means,  coupled to the compressed data storing means, 
for sending  at  least  a portion of one of the files to one of the 
remote locations.
        (Greg note: yea, whoopee shirt.)

I am sorry, but I question the ethics of anyone asserting this patent
without first having even a decent prior art search done to be used for
a reexam filing, BEFORE asserting this patent in letters to others. I
mean, there are entire IEEE conferences and journals on this type of
technology, a ton of publications barely cited in the non-patent prior
art section, as follows:

                               Other References
         Ernie Ohrenstein, "Supercomputers Seek High Throughput
           and Expandable Storage", Computer Technology Review,
           IEEE Spectrum, May, 1990, pp. 33-43.
        Patricia A. Morreale, et al., "Metropolitan-Area Networks",
           IEEE Spectrum, May 1990, pp. 40-43.

At network specific conferences and journals in the 1980s, university
and corporate groups disclosed their activities in sending compressed
multimedia data out over networks. (Greg note: a prior art searchers
trick - anyone citing solely from IEEE Spectrum is pretty much conceding
their patent is invalid.)

So I suspect Acrapia is going to go after small fry, since any well
funded company can afford to prevail in patent litigation.  If I am
overly harsh, it is because of the ongoing psychic trauma and bouts
of depresssion and nausea I have been suffering from the last three
years over being sued for a similarly pathetic compressed data patent
(conditions I hope I can count on someone of you to testify about :-).

                               ====================

PRESS RELEASE
For Immediate Release
February 04, 2003

         Acacia Research Targets Top-Rated Webcaster 'radioio'
         Once again webcasters appear to be under attack.

Today ioMediaPartners made public documents (www.radioio.com/acacia.pdf)
that it had received from a publicly traded company known as "Acacia
Research Corporation" (www.acaciaresearch.com/main.html) that claims
ioMediaPartners and its top-rated internet only station, radioio.com
         (ranked #2 December by Arbitron -
         www.arbitron.com/newsroom/archive/article1.htm)
are in violation of one or more patents owned by Acacia.

The worldwide patent portfolio includes five issued U.S. patents and a
pending U.S. patent, which will provide coverage until 2011. The U.S.
patents include: U.S. Patent No. 5,132,992, U.S. Patent No. 5,253,275,
U.S. Patent No. 5,550,863, U.S. Patent No. 6,002,720, and U.S. Patent
No. 6,144,702.

"They are basically alleging that they own patents that cover the
*transmission* of audio over the internet like those used by radioio and
all webcasters to 'broadcast'. They may, but it's just another example
of someone seeking to extend patents for an old tech to "fit" to cover
completely new tech. This is covered under a piece legislation that was
introduced by BOTH Reps. Berman and Boucher. Business Method patent is 
on the block for reform and this type of behavior is NOT what patents 
are intended to promote. Its past time for Congress to act." says 
Michael Roe, President of ioMediaPartners and founder of radioio.com.

"They have notified me and my company that their engineers and attorneys
have assessed the website of our property 'radioio' (www.radioio.com) 
and that they have determined that by operating an internet radio 
station we are violating Acacia's patents for "accessing or downloading 
digital video and/or audio over the Internet", and that we must license 
the technology. It's absurd."

"They appear to be selectively enforcing possible infringements on its
patents by targeting smaller business entities like radioio - businesses
that possess the resources to operate and expand, but that do not have 
the resources required to engage in any serious legal dispute with 
Acacia. They know that the fee that they wish to impose (3/4ths of 1 
percent) is insignificant compared to the those expenses that I would 
incur in a legal battle. It's extortion."

                               ====================

Greg Aharonian
Internet Patent News Service



-- 
James Love, Director, Consumer Project on Technlogy
http://www.cptech.org, mailto:james.love@cptech.org
tel. +1.202.387.8030, mobile +1.202.361.3040