Microsoft Moves to Overturn Eolas Patent Ruling

By David Worthington | Published June 9, 2004, 5:33 AM

Microsoft has filed a 174-page brief asking the U.S. Court of Appeals to overturn the judgment of a District Court, which holds Redmond liable for $565 million USD in damages for violating a controversial patent held by Eolas.

The University of California granted Eolas exclusive rights to the patent that pertains to a mechanism used by developers to embed and evoke interactive programs from within a Web browser.

The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office is currently re-examining the patent amid claims of "prior art" stemming from early HTML specification drafts authored by W3C chief Tim Berners-Lee and Dave Raggett. Microsoft has refrained from modifying its Internet Explorer Web browser, claiming that compliance with the court's ruling would "break" a multitude of third party Web sites and applications.

The trial has won Microsoft some support from an unlikely ally; the Electronic Frontier Foundation has launched a project to strike down dubious patents where prior art is said to exist and has zeroed in on Eolas in particular.

Due to the uncertainty that has grown out of the Eolas drama, a patch to comply with the injunction will not be included in Windows XP Service Pack 2. Microsoft also has some breathing room; the injunction has been stayed until the appeals court reaches a decision.

A short list of software potentially affected if Microsoft ends up on the losing end includes: Macromedia Flash, QuickTime, RealOne Player, Acrobat Reader, Sun's Java Virtual Machine, and Windows Media Player.

Comments

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Ok lemme get this straight. MS wants to patent the FAT file system, even though they didn't invent it, and basically have no exclusive rights to it.... BUT they have a problem with someone else patenting something that MS uses. Can you say double standard? I knew you could.

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How brief is a "174-page brief?"

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One part of me says, "Ok, so you're the only people who can patent the most vague 'advances' and hold others liable for misuse?"
Another part, how chilling!! What if Al Gore starts charging royalties, oh wait, he didn't patent the internet he just claimed he invented it.

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I'll just say what I always say when things like this happen: apparently (C) and patent infridgement is illegal only if we leave m$ out of the game. When m$ comes into the picture things change: they know the price of the version of truth which makes them the winners; they just file 174-paged briefs, puke out a bag of cash and all their troubles just disappear.

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