William Shatner will have to start negotiating some lower prices on lawyers. Inside Counsel reports that IBM has filed a lawsuit against Priceline, OpenTable, and Kayak for infringing on four of IBM’s patents. (Priceline recently acquired both OpenTable and Kayak.)
Believe it nor not, two of the patents at issue go back to something completely unrelated: the pre-Internet online service Prodigy, which started in the late 80s and died quietly in 1999.
Prodigy was a pre-Internet online service with its own proprietary content, back in the halcyon days of America Online (when it was called that) and CompuServe. It began as a collaboration between IBM and Sears.
Before the use of modern Internet protocols, IBM invented a new way to quickly present content to users that cut down on the use of network resources by having the client computer, rather than the server, render images and process data (remember, this was back in the time of the 14.4 kbps modem, which is at least 1,000 times slower than your Internet connection now).
Another patent handled the way advertising was inserted into content presented to the user, and a third patent allowed a website to save the state of a customer’s transactions and resume later.
An Offer You Can Refuse, Apparently
IBM claims that Priceline uses this technology on its website, and, indeed, also claims that it sent Priceline a letter in 2011 to let it know that. According to the complaint, which was filed earlier this week in federal court in Delaware, IBM made repeated attempts to negotiate a licensing agreement, but “Priceline has refused to engage in any meaningful discussion on the merits, resorting instead to delay and non-responsive answers.”
MoneyWatch also speculated that the suit took so long to come to fruition because IBM just has too many patents to keep track of, which can happen when you have 43,000 of them. Policing all this intellectual property poses a concern for the legal department, which not only has to fight existing patent infringement, but also has to find a way to proactively discover who else might be infringing on a patent. If IBM can invent a computer that can beat Ken Jennings at “Jeopardy!,” it will probably invent a way to ferret out the infringers, too.
Related Resources:
- E-Commerce Patent Battles: Are the Scales Starting to Tip Back? (Internet Retailer)
- Could Teva Pharmaceuticals Ruling Benefit Patent ‘Trolls’? (FindLaw’s In House)
- Is Medical Device Patent Trolling on the Rise? (FindLaw’s In House)
- Microsoft Settles With Patent Holding Co. VirnetX for $23M (FindLaw’s In House)
You Don’t Have To Solve This on Your Own – Get a Lawyer’s Help
Civil Rights
Block on Trump’s Asylum Ban Upheld by Supreme Court
Criminal
Judges Can Release Secret Grand Jury Records
Politicians Can’t Block Voters on Facebook, Court Rules