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  • Linux activists take on Microsoft with TomTom patent prior art hunt


    29 April, 2009, by Team Outlaw

    The Linux-protecting intellectual property activist group Open Invention Network (OIN) has asked its members to help invalidate Microsoft-owned patents at the heart of a recently settled dispute.

    OIN has asked the public to find and submit material that might indicate that technology covered by the patent had been invented before by other people, thus rendering Microsoft's patents invalid.

    Microsoft has long claimed that the open source operating system Linux infringes patents that it owns. It said in 2007 that the system infringed 235 of its patents.

    Three of those patents were part of a dispute earlier this year between Microsoft and in-car navigation device maker TomTom, which uses Linux in its devices.

    The device maker defended its use of the technology at first and joined OIN, a network of Linux-supporting companies that pool patents and in return agree not to assert any patent rights against Linux. TomTom later changed its approach, though, and agreed to pay Microsoft patent licence fees for five years.

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    OIN has now asked people to find and submit earlier examples of the technology covered by the patents. Such examples are known as 'prior art' and can invalidate a patent.

    "OIN's mission includes encouraging the Linux community to review patents-of-interest that may be of suspect quality or riddled by questions regarding prior art. Accordingly, the patents used in the recent TomTom patent action have been posted by OIN for review and submission of prior art by the Linux community," said an OIN statement.

    "The patent vetting activity offered by the [OIN-run] Linux Defenders portal offers a unique opportunity to bring to bear the collective knowledge, passion and ingenuity of the Linux community to better explore the validity of the patents that were the subject of the recent action against TomTom," said OIN chief executive Keith Bergelt. "I encourage active participation from the entire Linux community so that other companies seeking to advance Linux strategies can be better informed about the quality of these patents."

    Continued on next page Tags: Legal issues, Linux, Microsoft, Tomtom
    Team Outlaw
    Posted by
    Team Outlaw
    on 29 April, 2009

    This article was contributed by OUT-LAW.COM, part of international law firm Pinsent Masons. See http://www.out-law.com for further details.
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