Sony and Activision Get (Patent) Trolled Pages PREV 1 2 3 NEXT | |
Honestly, I don't think Uniloc is being stupid here, this is a chance to get a lot of cash, they're a business, so they're going for it. The stupid people are the ones who issued them such a disgustingly broad patent. Wouldn't it be great if all DRM systems ceased and desisted because of this? LOL! | |
Exactly, it seems that way, but they probably do have a right to sue, because they do have the patent. The people who did something wrong here are the ones that approved such an insanely broad patent. | |
Uniloc lose. The end. But seriously I am getting sick and tired of these patents that small companies supposedly made decades ago. | |
Hope they win, after all SONY, Activison and Co. are "infringing on their Copyright" considering this patent and it'd just be poetic justice... | |
The only thing worse than DRM is software patents. Linux geeks have been trying to tell you this for years. | |
One would think a patent would be so specific it would be difficult to prove someone is copying and/or infringing upon, but with all these patent infringement suits I have to wonder if I could do a ten worded essay on my concept for "Purple People Eater Containment Systems" and have it made from then on. (see diagram ab-23 for further details) | |
See also: Tim Langdell. I think DRM is too vague a thing to sue people over. It's like the bicycle company suing cars because they stole the idea of a wheel-based transportation vehicle. | |
To be honest, I'm not sure which I hate most, frivolous lawsuits that have no purpose than to serve the greed of the plaintiff, or DRM... I am at a moral quandary... | |
It may require further investigation, but I wouldn't be surprised if Tim Langdell is somehow involved. Or those folks who sued Microsoft for Word being XML compatible. | |
Uniloc invented serial keys and has been using them since 1992 up till about 2002, with it's main licensee being sega. In other words, they actually used their patent for something until bigger corporations fucked them over. I hope they win. Not only because they are right for once but also because it means the end of DRM. | |
This is a bit stupid really, I mean it's so vague and ambigous that they shouldn't have a case at all. | |
GO UNILOC! SecuROM sucks. It's annoying, it restricts the honest customer needlessly(I own GTA IV, but I have to crack it in order to run it with Daemon Tools, a perfectly lawful program, running), and it does exactly nothing to stop pirates. Perhaps with this lawsuit SecuROM will die off entirely.
As much as I'd like to agre with you here the target is SecuROM. I have a particular hatred for SecuROM and anyone who used it. I even have a sore spot with Bethesda because retail Fallout 3 used it, and Fallout 3 is one of my all-time favorite games. GO UNILOC! | |
You ain't seen nuthin' yet. http://www.freepatentsonline.com/crazy.html
So, it's a stick.
Yeah, the ones made more recently and by bigger companies are much better (sarcasm).
So, it's a shop. (Those two are owned by Amazon.com) Seriously, the whole patents system has been a joke for the past 10 or 20 years. You just use complicated-sounding language and you can patent anything you like. In the past, patents were intended to enable people to make a living by inventing. There would not have been as much innovation if inventors knew an invention could be freely ripped off by a bigger company as soon as they got wind it. Society benefitted because when you file a patent, you have to include enough data in the submission for another engineer to be able to build your invention, and after twenty years, the patent's owner loses their right to exclusivity, so the idea becomes public property. It was a trade-off: you give up the secret of how to build your invention, in exchange for being made the only person legally allowed to build it for the next twenty years. If that secret could be easily discovered by reverse engineering, then it's a no-brainer. But now, we have "inventions" that are not only obvious, but are so vague that when the patent lapses, society gains nothing. And the patent owner gains nothing other than another revenue stream from people who independently come up with the same idea, because their "secrets," if they can be called that, are harder to discover by reverse engineering.
Any software engineer will tell you that this kind of extensible event system is an obvious, well-known pattern.
Even though this is an obvious approach to take for updating firmware on a wired device, apprently applying the same concept to a portable device constitutes a brand-new, novel invention.
Any software engineer will tell you that deferred, or "lazy," evaluation and shared resources are obvious, well-known patterns. But because they are here applied to a webpage, they for some reason qualify as a brand-new, novel invention. (Those three are owned by Microsoft) Those are just a sample from the first pages of hundreds of pages of just two companies' patents, because to go looking for more would waste too much of my time, and my point is made. And the European system is no better. | |
You are obviously new to the world of software patents. (See my previous post.)
I don't see why not. These are all real United States patents: | |
Hey I hate Activision, and the companies that support the DRM. However, sueing a company just to earn a buck is just as bad if not worse. At this time I'm not gonna side with either company. There is probably a lot more to this story. | |
Word. I've known how vague and ridiculous patents are in general since Jack Palance hosted Ripley's Believe It or Not!
I will have you know that my method for swinging sideways is the best way! | |
If this means that DRM will dissapear completely, GO AHEAD! If it will just partially kill the devious device, then someone should burn their offices... :E | |
Exept that the company doing the suing INVENTED the DRM in question. Praising them isn't any better than praising activision if I understand this correctly. | |
HAHAHAH Unilocks strategy makes as much sense as actual copyright: ideas are not created in a vacuum, and yet it is legal to own them without crediting sources, so long as you hit the patent/copyright register on your way to the bank. Thus, by copyright law logic Unilock has an actual case here. | |
companies wait until it hits its peak, then they sue. its like a harvest but the harvest is money. | |
I don't care for diablo 3 not for sony not for any of them and i Sincerely hate DRM luckily microsoft has been thru this so I can happily continue gaming for a long while :D I Hope they win | |
Anyone who seriously thinks this case could in any way result in the end of DRM is seriously deluded. Just sayin'. | |
That's exactly what I was thinking the second I heard that, though I'm pretty sure the concepts are unrelated. Unless Uniloc phrased it like this: If I have a anti-piracy technology patent, and you have an anti-piracy technology patent, and I have a convoluted lawsuit that stretches acrooooooooss the late 90's and early 00's, to your anti-piracy technology patent, then I -- drink -- your -- milkshake! I drink it up! *copious slurp* Only instead of getting beaten to death with a bowling pin, I image Sony and the rest will respond with a far more appropriate boot up the ass. | |
Please do not make me side with Sony and Activision...-sigh- Seems stupid. This is like suing someone over adding a clock to it. Its security. They want to protect their stuff, and just having a patent over protecting digital media seems too general to really apply. I do not want Uniloc to win this (not that I want Sony or Activision to gain either) | |
Anyone else find it ironic that a lawsuit made in attempt to protect a company's innovations may potentially make it very difficult for companies to protect their innovations? Otherwise I find this very amusing. It might just set DRM back for little while... | |
Unless they also invented CD keys Blizzard is going to be unaffected, I'm not sure about the details but I'm fairly certain that them and Activision are the same company but really two separate companies. So Blizz gets to do what ever it fucking wants and Activision gets to convert it's HQ to solid platinum from the WoW profits. | |
This looks to me like one more example of an over reaching patent. A device or method to reduce illegal copies?!? This could conseviably include every CD/DVD ever released since they are harder to copy than floppies that's a device that reduces copies. It could include any software that requires a log in, like facebook or WoW or the Nuclear Regulatory Commition's data base. I am just amazed that these patents made it though, it's like apples patent on "power regulation in digital camera's" This effectively gives apple a patent on digital cameras since they all need power regulation of some kind, being electronic devices. Pray this patent gets shot down HARD, and the patent office starts getting much more restrictive on patents. I really don't want to see a patent on "cloth made of fibers"....Smuckers has already patented the PB&J sandwich. | |
So very true. Anyway, I have to go run to the office and try and patent hot water now. If this works I am so going to rape people. | |
Litigation. Cos going out and doing some fucking work is just beyond some people. OT: If this leads to the abolition of DRM and all that kinda crap, then I might suddenly be all changed around on the subject. Though I can't see that happening. | |
I've never rooted for a patent troll before, but there's a first time for everything! Go Uniloc! | |
Successful troll is SUCCESSFUL! | |
Funny. I thought those systems are specific examples of things that have caused irreparable damage to the whole civilization. | |
Did you miss the part where they sued Microsoft in 2003 and made $383 million out of it?! What have they done to that money meanwhile?! EDIT: That lawsuit actually was just settled last year so obviously this is far from being a last shot but instead a: "Hey, it worked against Microsot! So look how many more big companies using our DRM technology we can still milk". | |
The irony is that Uniloc *has* does something in the field of DRM in the last few years: specifically, Sega's adopted them as their DRM of choice for PC games (for Alpha Protocol and AFAIK the recent Football Manager games, and probably a few more). | |
I understand your perspective, but what I am trying to say is that at least let the big-ass publishers stop using it because they have to pay another party for this. So far I know and checked, the one that invented DRM isn't really using it. But maybe I am an utter fool and don't know jack. I just want Activision and the like stop implenting this anti-consumer friendly draconic meassures. | |
Pages PREV 1 2 3 NEXT |