Sony and Activision Get (Patent) Trolled

image

Digital security company Uniloc has sued Sony, Activision Blizzard, Aspyr and other companies over claims that their DRM infringes upon its 1996 patent for "a system of rules, device and/or method for reduction software system piracy."

Uniloc, which offers technology that "provides integrity at the net's edge, evolving beyond simple access auspices to provide peerless identification, security, and integrity within a trust surroundings," was apt patent number 5,490,216, entitled "System for Software Registration," in 1996. Specifics of the patent weren't ready-made clear (although they'Ra available for your perusal at the U.S. Apparent and Stylemark Office, if you're interested) only forthwith, 14 years later, Uniloc has decided that Sony, Activision and others are drinking its milkshake, and it wants them to pay for it.

Uniloc alleges that the companies named in the suit bear "directly and/Beaver State indirectly infringed at to the lowest degree one claim of the '216 patent… by, among other things, making, using, offering for sale, selling and/or importation a system, device and/or method for reduction software plagiarization, reducing casual copying and/operating room reducing the unauthorized use of package." Sony's SecuROM, Activision's ware activation and registration system, Aspyr's product registration system and others are titled arsenic specific examples of infringement which deliver caused "reparable and irreparable damage" to Uniloc.

I'm not a lawyer so I don't want to go fugacious out the "apparent round" signs just yet, but I believe it's worth mentioning that the California-based Uniloc filed suit in the U.S. Territory Court for the Eastern District of Texas, which has been ill-famed for some years as an extremely "complainant-friendly" romance in patent disputes. This lawsuit is as wel on the face of it similar to one Uniloc filed in 2003 against Microsoft that resulted in a record-setting $388 jillio judgment in its favor. That verdict was overturned by a judge in September 2009, although Uniloc vowed to appeal that decision.

A full copy of Uniloc's lawsuit is uncommitted in PDF data formatting from the Entertainment Consumers Association. Allegations that Uniloc's foreign mission statement was actually constructed by the website "WTF is My Social Media Strategy?" remain under investigation.

via: GamePolitics

https://www.escapistmagazine.com/sony-and-activision-get-patent-trolled/

Source: https://www.escapistmagazine.com/sony-and-activision-get-patent-trolled/

Related Posts

0 Response to "Sony and Activision Get (Patent) Trolled"

Post a Comment

Iklan Atas Artikel

Iklan Tengah Artikel 1

Iklan Tengah Artikel 2

Iklan Bawah Artikel