SCO, RightHaven, and now Eolas have been relegated to the ash-heap of Internet 
patent trolls. -- rick


http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2012/02/interactive-web-patent/

Texas Jury Strikes Down Patent Troll’s Claim to Own the Interactive Web

        • By Joe Mullin
        • Email Author
        • February 9, 2012 | 
        • 5:26 pm | 


Google, Amazon and Adobe defeated a patent claiming ownership over online 
video, image rotation and search auto-complete.

TYLER, Texas — After threatening web companies for more than a decade, Michael 
Doyle and his patent-holding company Eolas Technologies — named after the Irish 
word for knowledge — may be finished.

An eight-member federal jury in East Texas deliberated Thursday for just a few 
hours before concluding that all of Eolas’ asserted claims of ownership to 
technology allowing access to the interactive web were invalid. That means the 
three upcoming trials that were scheduled to rule on infringement and damages, 
for Google, Yahoo and other companies, have been canceled. The eight defendant 
companies who resisted the lawsuits won’t pay anything to Eolas or its partner, 
the University of California, for using the web.

Eolas maintained its patents entitled the company to royalty payments from just 
about anyone running a  website with “interactive” features, like rotating 
pictures or streaming video. The chief issue in the case was whether the first 
computer program that allowed access to an “interactive web” was created by the 
little-known Chicago biologist Doyle, who runs Eolas out of Chicago. Or was it 
one of the web pioneers put on the stand by the defendant companies — such as 
Pei-Yuan Wei and his Viola browser, or Dave Raggett and his <embed> tag?

The dueling teams of lawyers have spent millions creating elaborate 
presentations, trying for the last three days to convince a jury of average 
folks in a federal district court in eastern Texas that their side was right.

If the jury had upheld the patents, there would have been a potentially brutal 
damages phase in which Google, YouTube, Yahoo, Amazon, Adobe, JC Penney, CDW 
Corp. and Staples would have been sued for infringement and been asked for more 
than $600 million in damages, with the majority of that coming from Google and 
Yahoo.

The Eolas patents were denounced for years before this week’s landmark trial, 
but managed to survive repeated re-exams at the United States Patent and Trade 
Office.

However, Thursday’s verdict is likely a setback Eolas can’t overcome. It may 
well be appealed, but that will be a long process, and in the meantime Eolas 
won’t be able to go after new targets.

After the trial, Judge Leonard Davis visited with the jurors a while, as is his 
custom. They were awed, I’m told—as they often are—why such an important web 
case ended up in Tyler.

Apparently they were a little star-struck by Tim Berners-Lee, although you 
certainly couldn’t tell during trial.

At “Rick’s on the Square” opposite the courthouse, defense lawyers were 
celebrating. There was a giddy atmosphere; these folks truly felt like they 
saved the Web today.

As for the winner’s reactions: Yahoo spokeswoman Dana Lengkeek said: “Yahoo is 
pleased with the outcome of the case and the jury’s decision, and we thank the 
jury for their time and commitment to this case. Yahoo respects intellectual 
property and will continue to protect its freedom to operate by defending 
itself against meritless claims.”

Google spokesman Jim Prosser was less effusive. “We are pleased that the court 
found the patents invalid, as it affirms our assertion that the claims are 
without merit,” Prosser said.

Despite winning, Amazon declined to comment.

Lead Eolas attorney Mike McKool did not return a call seeking comment.

As for the many companies that settled with Eolas, they might be regretting 
that pragmatic decision in light of the verdict.

Those companies include: Apple, Argosy Publishing, Blockbuster, Citigroup, 
eBay, Frito-Lay, JP Morgan Chase, New Frontier Media, Office Depot, Perot 
Systems, Playboy Enterprises International, Rent-A-Center, Sun Microsystems 
(bought by Oracle while this litigation was underway), and Texas Instruments.

Joe is an experienced legal reporter, who worked for the national magazine 
group of The American Lawyer, The Associated Press, and The Seattle Times.


---
Just because i'm near the punchbowl doesn't mean I'm also drinking from it.

_______________________________________________
Infowarrior mailing list
Infowarrior@attrition.org
https://attrition.org/mailman/listinfo/infowarrior

Reply via email to