« Sauce For The Goose | Main | Carded »
June 21, 2008
Spread Spectrum
Ottawa-based
Wi-LAN, holding spread spectrum patents
5,282,222 and
RE37,802, thinks it has a lock on wireless standards 802.11 and CDMA2000. Wi-LAN
has over 25 companies under the gun, including Apple, Sony, HP, and Intel.
Earlier this week Wi-LAN stuck it to a fellow Canadian company, everybody's favorite
wireless patent piƱata, Research in Motion (RIM), as well as Motorola and UTStarcom.
The latest suit was filed in the Eastern District of Texas.
Tiny Wi-LAN, with a stock market valuation of $164 million, is fattening its calf with an enforcement campaign that has already found feed. Quite a few small Chinese and Korean companies have taken licenses.
Standards committees, such as (most especially) IEEE, have been negligent in failing to investigate the patent repercussions of adopting particular technologies as part of their standards. Only recently has IEEE started to have its participants in standard-setting committees show their patent cards. IEEE has yet to adopt careful vetting with regard to inadvertently adopting patented standards.
Posted by Patent Hawk at June 21, 2008 12:52 PM | Patents In Business