Patently nonsense: smartphones, scanners and open source
By Simon Bisson & Mary Branscombe in Editorial
Posted in Hardware, Windows Mobile, Server, Security, Microsoft, Mobile, Apple on
The latest patent idiocies could put phone prices up and increase your security bill. And only one of the cases would be fixed by my own theory of patents (if you don’t yourself manufacture the item or use the process protected by a patent, I think you shouldn’t be able to benefit from the patent by extorting money from companies that do go to the effort of actually making something).
That would get rid of the patent trolls who buy up IP and sneak it past the patent office. Take the owners of the ludicrous new smartphone patent, which seems to ignore more prior art than I could shake a phone battery at. Read through http://patft.uspto.gov/netacgi/nph-Parser?Sect1=PTO2&Sect2=HITOFF&p=1&u=%2Fnetahtml%2FPTO%2Fsearch-bool.html&r=1&f=G&l=50&co1=AND&d=PTXT&s1=7,321,783&OS=7,321,783&RS=7,321,783 and you’ll find it’s not Nokia, RIM, Microsoft, HTC, Palm, Apple, Symbian, Sony Ericsson, HP or Motorola claiming to have invented the smartphone; it’s one Ki Il Kim of Minerva Industries, Los Angeles.
Minerva is part of a company called Gigatech, which claims to hold patents on “user-operated cell phones for audio/video and sensor event reporting” - and on air bags and seat belts. The company is also claiming patents for memory cards, connecting phones by USB and putting a mobile phone holder and charger on the dashboard of your car.
Minerva/Gigatech claims that CEO John Kim was 2003 Businessman of the Year - although the link that’s supposed to say who gave him the award reloads the same page and Google can’t find any reference to the honour. 2003 was, however,
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