agriculture | asatru | copywrongs | humor | musings | politics | technology | index haxton.org  
   
MacRaven Logo
MacRaven
Dave Haxton's Weblog

Musings, Reflections, Rants and Comments from a Hoosier Heathen husband, father, grandfather, farmer and software engineer. There's really only one of me ...


Contact Me   


RSS Feed   


August
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
         
28 29 30
31            



The Blogroll
A Mindful Life The Accidental Smallholder Asahel's Search Austro-Athenian Empire Brad Spangler DiRT Dispatches Garden of Thought Hardscrabble Creek The High Seat Knit Together Laudator Temporis Acti Little Heathen Fox Lorrie's Livejournal Masson's Blog Mutualist Blog MyAppleMenu nobody asked, BUT NoNAIS Notes on Religion Numenous Thoughts OrangeGuru Overlawyered Prophet or Madman rogueclassicism Secular Blasphemy Sugar Mountain Farm TMN Thud Factor Wildhunt Blog within the crainium

Page Loaded at

Eastern Standard Time

Support Denmark!

No NAIS!

MLL


lunar phases
 


Click for Thorntown, Indiana Forecast

       

home :: Copywrongs :: Patent_Troll_At...dards.html

Sun, 17 Feb 2008
Patent Troll Attacks Cable, Digital TV Standards

If you're looking for a good argument for reform of the current patent laws, look no further. This suit, assuming it's success, could put the FCC in the uncomfortable position of having mandated adoption of patented technology - efffectively conferring a 20 year monopoly on television signals to these thieves.

A patent troll firm in suburban Philadelphia, Rembrandt IP Management, is trying to force large cable operators and major broadcasters to pay substantial license fees on the transmission of digital TV signals and Internet services. The firm is apparently trying to get 0.5% of all revenues from services that supposedly infringe on the patents. The targeted companies include ABC, CBS, Fox, NBC, Comcast, Time Warner, Cox, Charter and Cablevision. According to MultiChannel News, Rembrandt's assault is especially aggressive, even for a patent troll: 'It is attacking two key technology standards used by the cable and broadcast industries, CableLabs' DOCSIS and the Advanced Television Systems Committee's digital-TV spec. "If they're successful, this could affect everything from the cost of cable service to the price of TVs," said the attorney close to the litigation, who spoke only on condition of anonymity.

(link) [Slashdot]

Sun, 17 Feb 2008 11:43 /Copywrongs | 0 writebacks | permanent link