List of software patents

From Free net encyclopedia

Notable software patents include:

  • RSA Patent - a famous software patent on the ground-breaking and highly unobvious algorithm for public key encryption, widely used for secure communications in many industries nowdays (RSA)
  • Karmarkar Patent - a famous software patent on the highly non-trivial mathematical algorithm for solving linear programming problems (http://www.apic.jiii.or.jp/p_f/text/text/2-05.pdf)
  • Unisys's patent on LZW compression, a fundamental part of the widely-used GIF graphics format. The controversy that arose when Unisys announced that they would enforce this patent is discussed in GIF#Unisys and LZW patent enforcement.
  • The popular music format MP3 is encumbered by a number of patents, which were only enforced once the format became popular. This resulted in several GNU/Linux systems dropping support for MP3, and in re-development of new audio formats—notably Ogg Vorbis.
  • British Telecom sued Prodigy over Template:US patent, claiming that Prodigy infringed its patent on web hyperlinks. However, after costly litigation, a court found for Prodigy, ruling that British Telecom's patent did not actually cover web hyperlinks. [1] Hyperlinks were first described in 1945 in the landmark paper As We May Think, as well as in the widely-known project Xanadu starting in the 1960s.
  • Cadtrack's Template:US patent covers drawing a cursor on a screen using XOR, which allows removal by XORing it again, thus eliminating the need for backing store.
  • Amazon.com successfully sued Barnes and Noble for violating its "One click buy".
  • Amazon.com's method and system for conducting a discussion relating to an item under United States Patent 6,525,747 [2].
  • Eolas successfully sued Microsoft for $521 million for the "browser plugin patent". See Eolas for details.
  • Compton's NewMedia was awarded a submarine patent in 1993, which had been filed five years before, for "A search system [that] uses a multimedia database consisting of text, picture, audio, and animated data." Compton's announced their patent at the height of the excitement over CD-ROM software and claimed this patent covered all multimedia software, and announced a royalty payment schedule. An outcry ensued that this was an attempt to patent something that had been in active use for many years, and the furor was so great that the Patent Office commissioner quickly started an "reexamination" to re-investigate the claim. It seemed that the PTO had only reviewed existing patents for prior art, and not the wide body of prior art in the field that had not been patented. The patent was voided in 1994.
  • Stac Electronics sued Microsoft for patent infringement when Microsoft introduced a data compression scheme into MS-DOS which resembled (was stolen from Stac, as the jury had found) Stac's Stacker software. Stac was awarded $120 million by a jury in 1994 and Microsoft was ordered to recall versions of MS-DOS with the infringing technology. Subsequently Microsoft and Stac settled the case; Microsoft promised not to appeal, paid Stac $43 million, and purchased $40 million of preferred Stac stock.
  • The Wiki system might be patented by Family Systems Limited, at least according to some interpretations.
  • Microsoft did patent the file structure of the ASF container format and invoked its patent against VirtualDub
  • State Street Bank decision essentially made business methods patentable in the USA.
  • Acacia Technologies claims to have patented compressing video for distribution over the web.
  • Commerce One has many patents that were recently sold.
  • The Microsoft FAT patents were used to collect considerable royalties but were successfully challenged.
  • The Template:US patent owned by Lizardtech, Inc., is claimed to cover JPEG 2000 image compression format. However, Lizardtech, Inc. lost the trial against Earth Resource Mapping.
  • Xerox claimed its Template:US patent was infringed by Palm's handwriting recognition technique called Graffiti. In 2001, Palm was forced to change the software its users had grown accustomed to. In 2004, a judge threw out the Xerox patent based on prior art.
  • The Template:US patent issued to Red Hat for a debugger system.
  • The Template:US patent owned by Forgent Networks is claimed to cover the JPEG image compression format.
  • Template:US patent and Template:US patent are owned by Scientigo and claimed to cover the markup language XML

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