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Microsoft Patents RSS. Or Tries To. Maybe.

2007 January 4

post on someone else’s appar­ently try­ing to RSS:

The applic­a­tions, filed last June but just made pub­lic yes­ter­day, cover sub­scrib­ing and dis­cov­er­ing what Microsoft calls “ feeds.” That comes as a bit of a shock to any­one who’s been work­ing on RSS, which has its ori­gins in a format developed seven years ago at Nets­cape .

Microsoft exec­ut­ive Don Dodge, while not involved in the pat­ent applic­a­tions, says he sus­pects the fil­ings were made to defend the com­pany against “pat­ent trolls”. (The fil­ings were made shortly before Microsoft announced plans to build RSS into its upcom­ing oper­at­ing sys­tem.) Still, if gran­ted, the pat­ents would give Microsoft a cudgel to wield against other using RSS.

Well. They do have a point. Gen­er­ally speak­ing, I don’t think pat­ent trolls (those that basic­ally file overly broad pat­ents and then sit on them in a dark cave until someone who actu­ally does some­thing use­ful, and there­fore has deep pock­ets, unwit­tingly infringes, at which point the troll comes out and clubs them over the head with a law­suit or set­tle­ment) are a good thing. That being said, its ironic that Microsoft feels the need to abuse the sys­tem in the same way as pat­ent trolls in to pro­act­ively defend itself. will be inter­est­ing to see how things turn out.

Unfor­tu­nately, I’m not necesar­ily sure that prior art would neces­sar­ily inval­id­ate these pat­ents — after all, most of NTP’s pat­ents were more or less con­sidered invalid, but that didn’t stop them from col­lect­ing sev­eral hun­dred mil­lion from RIM. And its not like there haven’t been other, um, rather broad pat­ents asser­ted in the past. You know, like back in 2002, when Brit­ish Tele­com asser­ted own­er­ship of hyper­links (which they lost) though of course BT doesn’t quite fit the descrip­tion of a .

Then again, it begs the ques­tion as to who or what should or shouldn’t be con­sidered a pat­ent troll — for example, its well known that has a huge, gigantic, enorm­ous arsenal of pat­ents at its dis­posal. also act­ively licenses these pat­ents (and of course threatens where it believes its are being viol­ated), but it isn’t neces­sar­ily the case that would oth­er­wise have exploited these pat­ents in what I’ll call “act­ive”  — i.e. mak­ing and selling some­thing based on the pat­ent as opposed to primar­ily seek­ing roy­al­ties and licenses from those do — even though does do so in some cases. So does that make a pat­ent troll? What about Philo T. Farns­worth who, argu­ably, never star­ted pro­du­cing tele­vi­sions but instead sought legal claims against others?

My per­haps overly simplistic take on this is that pat­ent trolls are not inher­ently the prob­lem, but rather the abil­ity, primar­ily in the , to register pat­ents that should have never issued in the first place. If someone comes up with a smart, , invent­ive, and truly way of doing some­thing, then they should cer­tainly be free to either pro­duce some­thing with it, or sue the liv­ing day­lights out of someone else who comes along and infringes the even if they don’t (or can’t) make pro­duct­ive use of it them­selves. Not act­ively exploit­ing a pat­ent is not neces­sar­ily tan­tamount to being a bad guy, IMHO.

It will be inter­est­ing to see what hap­pens on this front, if any­thing. If noth­ing does, then I may well turn to draft­ing pat­ents, the first being “Method of Util­iz­ing a Rhythmic Cadence in the Expan­sion and Con­trac­tion of Mul­tiple Mus­cu­lar Group­ings to Facili­ate Indef­in­ite Con­tinu­ation of Meta­bol­ism of Cell Struc­tures.” I like the sound of that. Yes indeed.

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