Begin forwarded message:

From: Dewayne Hendricks <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: November 28, 2006 6:29:07 PM EST
To: Dewayne-Net Technology List <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [Dewayne-Net] re: Wi-Fi standards face patent threat
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

[Note:  This comment comes from reader Mark Laubach.  DLH]

From: Mark Laubach <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: November 28, 2006 10:11:23 AM PST
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED], "Dewayne-Net Technology List" <dewayne- [EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [Dewayne-Net] re: Wi-Fi standards face patent threat

I did a little checking through and old grapevine.  CSIRO and/or
Radiata apparently did the right notifications with the IEEE standards
group at the proper time back then.  Which is, filing a statement
with the IEEE which commits to licensing on a "non discriminatory
basis" and for "reasonable terms".  This is required practice with
the IEEE for moving a draft to standard status.  (This could be the
evidence that was mentioned....[?])

Having said that.  My own personal guess is that companies here
in the U.S. decided to try to ignore the Auzzie patent holder with
respect to obtaining a license for a reasonable fee.

Therefore nothing sinister or a "threat".  This is just normal business
of a known patent holder with known licensing terms whacking someone
else to pay attention.

Mark

At 12:50 AM -0800 11/21/06, Dewayne Hendricks wrote:
[Note:  This comment comes from reader Robert Berger.  DLH]

From: "Robert J. Berger" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: November 20, 2006 9:38:54 PM PST
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [Dewayne-Net] Wi-Fi standards face patent threat


On Nov 20, 2006, at 7:49 PM, Dewayne Hendricks wrote:

The judge in the case issued a summary judgment, which indicates the court is wholly convinced by the evidence, to the point where there are no questions of fact. In general, a summary judgment is rare in patent disputes.

it would be nice to know why the Judge said that. It seems very rare for this to happen. Does anyone know if this Judge is particularly cluefull or not? According to the article its for some basic OFDM tech, but that's all that mentions. Couldn't we get CSIRO and WiLan to fight each other to their mutual death over OFDM?

By the way, I believe that CSIRO (the entity that is claiming infringement) was the entity that spun out the early 802.11a chipmaker Radiata which was purchased by Cisco in 2002 or so. WiLan has been going around suing people over OFDM since at least that long ago.

Also like the following line in the original article not in the snippet:

Furniss said he doesn't expect CSIRO to sue everyone using the 802.11a, 802.11g and eventually the 802.11n technology. In fact, CSIRO is focusing only on obtaining licensing fees from equipment makers, such as Netgear and Microsoft, and not chipmakers, such as Broadcom, Intel or Atheros. He claims the chips themselves don't infringe on the patents; it's only when the technology is used in a specific device. How could it not infringe in the chip but it does in devices that use the chip if the "infringing" tech is baked into the chip only? Sounds like a patent troll's approach to me...

Patents need significant regrooving. They have become so not what the founding fathers had in mind when they hardwired them into the constitution....







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