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Sat, Nov 21, 2009 - 05:31 AM EST  —  AAPL: 199.92 (-0.59, -0.29%)  |  NASDAQ: 2146.04 (-10.78, -0.5%)

ZapMedia files patent infringement lawsuit against Apple over iPod and iTunes
Wednesday, March 12, 2008 - 04:30 PM EST

ZapMedia Services, Inc. today announced that it has filed a patent infringement lawsuit against Apple, Inc. for unspecified damages related to the company’s iTunes internet site and related media players such as the iPod. The lawsuit comes after multiple attempts by ZapMedia Services to resolve its concerns with Apple over infringement of ZapMedia Services’ patents.

According to ZapMedia Services, "Beginning in the late 1990s, ZapMedia, Inc., the predecessor of ZapMedia Services, created a unique platform and vision for the enjoyment of digital media assets. In connection with this vision, ZapMedia developed a system by which it could provide hardware, software and content to consumers to allow them to gain control over their digital media assets. To protect this intellectual property, ZapMedia has obtained U.S. Patent Numbers 7,020,704 and 7,343,414, each of which is entitled 'System and method for distributing media assets to user devices via a portal synchronized by said user devices.'"

According to ZapMedia Services, "In the course of its efforts, ZapMedia met with many major technology and media companies around the globe, including Apple, describing its vision in great detail. Without asking ZapMedia for permission, Apple subsequently unveiled its own system. Apple announced its iPod MP3 player with an integrated iTunes software application in October of 2001 and its iTunes store in April 2003."

The lawsuit was filed in the Marshall Division of the District Court for the Eastern District of Texas.

MacDailyNews Note: Let's stop here and take a little detour. In February 2006, Sam Williams reported for MIT's Technology Review:

In one federal court in East Texas, plaintiffs have such an easy time winning patent-infringement lawsuits against big-tech companies that defendants often choose to settle rather than fight.

East Texas lawyer Michael C. Smith calls it the "rattlesnake speech." It generally occurs in the early stages of a patent trial in the Marshall, TX, courtroom of Judge T. John Ward, when some attorney has failed to read up on the rules specific to litigation in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Texas.

Like a scene out of the comedy movie "My Cousin Vinny," the speech starts with a polite invitation to approach the bench -- and ends with a stern warning to pick up the pace or else.

"He gives you a real talking to," says Smith, a partner with the Roth Law Firm in Marshall and chairman of the Eastern District's rule committee, a group of local attorneys that works with Judge Ward to set the guidelines for basic pre-trial and trial procedure. "He won't bite you that first time, but if you don't get the message, you'll wish you did."

Judge Ward's toughness is a big reason that Marshall, a city of fewer than 20,000 residents, located 150 miles east of Dallas, has become a destination for patent attorneys around the world.

In the rough calculus of intellectual property litigation, tough judges equate with speedy cases -- and that's exactly what you want if you're a plaintiff with limited cash, but potentially big-time settlement payments or damages from a company you claim is infringing on your patent.

As an example, attorney Smith cites the ongoing case of Laser Dynamics Inc. v. BenQ. It pits a Japanese plaintiff with a patent relating to optical disk drive recognition against a billion-dollar Taiwanese device maker. When defense counsel for BenQ failed to cough up a set of relevant e-mails in the pre-trial discovery phase, Ward, a jurist who has heard more than 160 patent cases in the seven years since his appointment to the federal bench by President Clinton, decided to make an example of the company: BenQ would have to pay a $500,000 fine and forfeit a third of its courtroom time in the upcoming case.


Okay, so back to today's news: "The Complaint alleges that ZapMedia Services’ property is being exploited in a manner which is unlawful, and by law ZapMedia Services is therefore entitled to a reasonable royalty on Apple’s revenues related to the infringement," said Steven G. Hill, of Hill, Kertscher & Wharton, LLP, lead litigation counsel to ZapMedia Services, in the press release.

Dating to June 2006 and continuing through the fall of 2007, ZapMedia made Apple aware of the patents and their availability for license. “When someone takes our vision and our intellectual property without a license after several attempts, we have no option but to protect it through every means available to us,” said Robert J. Frohwein, general counsel of ZapMedia Services, in the press release.

Source: Business Wire

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Mar 12, 08 - 05:54 pm Comment from: Ampar

"Why in the world is prostitution illegal?"

Better yet, why won't they honor my coupons?

Que, Esai Morales?

Mar 12, 08 - 06:03 pm Comment from: shen

Chrissyone:

if one person pays another for sex, it is illegal.

if 2 more people have sex, are filmed by a crew of several more people, and hand it over to be distributed, everyone gets paid and it is a business.....

what? you don't see the logic?

Mar 12, 08 - 06:03 pm Comment from: Spark

Not sure how this thread turned into a prostitution debate, but as long as we're here....

I remember, as I read the book Shogun by James Clavell, being struck by the civilized manner in which the "need" for prostitution often arises. The need, of course, stems often (not always, so don't send a bunch of exceptions) from marriages in which one or both participants become a bored or otherwise disinterested in sex with their partner. They still love their partner and want to continue the marriage (or other partnership) so splitting up is not the answer. In the book about feudal Japan, the wife selected a concubine for her husband. It was her duty, as household manager, and her choice. The wife still maintained the respect and honor of being the primary woman in the relationship. Of course the reciprocal action of a male concubine for a wife was not tolerated (that's another topic). In short their was an acceptance of the male drive for sex and mechanism in place to maintain a happy home and loving and respectful relationships within a marriage after lust has dissipated.

I think prostitution should be legal and up front, but there has to be a major change wive's of America before that happens. If "hurt" didn't accompany the process it could happen. But for most women their is huge sense of betrayal and hurt involved. Hence the pressure on lawmakers to make it illegal (you shouldn't need to ask where the pressure originates).

Mar 12, 08 - 06:04 pm Comment from: shen

sorry, if 2 OR more

Mar 12, 08 - 06:30 pm Comment from: ChrissyOne

@ shen

Not a bad business, pron.

@ Spark

You should read some Seattle history. At one time, prostitution was something like a third of the city's tax base. Women were given the vote and shortly after they all closed down. So women lost the vote until a-19.

We're a progressive city. But we're a pragmatic one as well.

Mar 12, 08 - 08:03 pm Comment from: ElderNorm

I took a look at the patent. Its a general wish list of any thing you might want to wish you could do, if and when, and maybe how but that is never stated. Just "You can connect with audio data and down load it."

I hope they get their buts kicked big. PS, if they win, every down load site ever should have to pay them millions, then ---- DELETED. Maybe someone can patent how government works and sue the us government to make it cease and desist. LOL grin

Mar 12, 08 - 08:06 pm Comment from: Spark

@ElderNorm
Hey, we're talking about prostitution here. How dare you get back on point.

Mar 12, 08 - 08:47 pm Comment from: Drunk Cheney

Man, MDN has it going on.

I vote for legalized prostitution. Never been to one, but I see no reason it should not be legal.

<b>As for the topic.<> Anyone now how often Microsoft get sued by some small company claiming to have invented something and now they want their cash? I don't really keep up with MS so I don't know.

Seems to happen a LOT to Apple.

Mar 12, 08 - 09:47 pm Comment from: TowerTone

Is Steve getting his mail in Marshall yet?

Incidentally, there ARE some good things about Marshall, TX.
Not many, though....

Lady Bird Johnson
Wiley College- http://imdb.com/title/tt0427309/
Bill Moyers- just kidding.com

Mar 12, 08 - 09:57 pm Comment from: iDon't

I have a patent on hookers.

Mar 12, 08 - 10:04 pm Comment from: ChrissyOne

{Al_Gore}

I invented hookers.

{/Al_Gore}

Mar 12, 08 - 10:14 pm Comment from: ChrissyOne

@ TT
"Wiley College- http://imdb.com/title/tt0427309/"

That school bears a proud, upstanding name. I bet they drink a lot there.

Mar 12, 08 - 10:19 pm Comment from: TowerTone

it does have a ring of familiarity, doesn't it?

I don't know if they drink much, but they probably drink more than Marshall's other college....

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/East_Texas_Baptist_University

of course, I could be wrong.

Mar 12, 08 - 10:52 pm Comment from: tt

This patent is ALL wrong... it does not cover the way itunes works... your computer does not connect to the itunes network to load your ipod when you plug it in, all it does is simply get the content you tell it to get from your 'computer' when you plug it in, I can write a script in 2 minutes that would do that with ANY portable media device..

sure your computer got the content from the internet.. but your ipod is not getting it in realtime from itunes... stupid attorneys.. stupid shi11y companies

Mar 12, 08 - 11:05 pm Comment from: ChrissyOne

@ TT

Oh I'll drink a baptist under the damn water.

{roll_up_sleeves}

Mar 12, 08 - 11:28 pm Comment from: Buster

We should be like the Dutch...make prostitution legal. Brings in tax dollars, reduces the spread of disease, reduces sexual assaults and best of all, its the perfect gift to give to the person who has everything. And yes Ampar, they take coupons.

Mar 13, 08 - 03:50 am Comment from: john

"These and many other morality-based laws (which virtually all laws are based) is to aid in keeping society from degrading all too far and fast."

Then why on earth are GW and his cronies still running this country into the ground? Oh, I forgot; executive privilege. Oh, I forgot again; when you have enough money and crooks behind you to avoid or ignore laws. I think we've been degraded enough in the past 7 years, thank you.

Mar 13, 08 - 04:44 am Comment from: fenman

The simplest and most effective reform to fix the US Patent System which is both broken and the laughing stock of the rest of the world is to "require" the actual invention to be produced within a time frame - say 12 months and failure to produce it would result in the patent being struck out. It would not have to be market ready but a fully working prototype should be available and appropriate evidence of its existence filed with the patent office to keep the patent filing current.

Patents are supposed to protect inventions. An idea is not an invention but an idea if documented can be protected via copyright until it becomes and invention and can be patented.

To follow the logic of these plaintiffs, any business model would only ever be allowed to be used by one business, therefore every business will be a monopoly.

As for that crappy judge in Texas, someone ought to file a suit against him for breach of patent because his actions and behaviour have the precedent of Hanging Judge Jefferies of the 17th Century - a clear precedent.

Mar 13, 08 - 05:02 am Comment from: -hh

I've started to read the patents...unfortunately, don't have time to finish them now.

Two things come to mind:

#1: These patents were IMO written by a lawyer, not the inventor. This suggests to me that the intent was never to protect what the inventor intended to have built, but to be predatory over what someone else invented, to then usurp the claim.

#2: The basic concept does not appear to be original, but is derivative: its essentially "Hey, if we can distribute email text, we can distribute other electronic files too, so let's patent it!"

Thanks, but that's prior art. People (such as myself) were distributing "other than simple text" electronic media back in the 1980s (via UUENCODE / UUDECODE in unix). And it didn't matter which of my "media players" I logged in on: they marked that file as 'read', showing that the data status was synchronized.


-hh

Mar 13, 08 - 07:11 am Comment from: Ludor

(staying off the original topic)

I don't know whether you use the word 'morals' as "get married before you have sex" or "pick a fight with somebody your own size", but in terms of right and wrong, I'd say prostitution belongs in the latter section. Most business deals involves one part winning a bit more, sure. But when you get paid to have sex with somebody, you can be sure it will cost you more than you bargained for.

You want your daughter, or your son, to be a whore?

Mar 13, 08 - 08:59 am Comment from: NCIceman

Jeebus this conversation took a turn....

Back on topic I think this is just another case of a little worm trying to take a bite out of the Apple...fortunately for us Apple rarely caves to these...

Mar 13, 08 - 09:32 am Comment from: ChrissyOne

"You want your daughter, or your son, to be a whore?"

Better an honest whore than a crooked politician.

Mar 13, 08 - 09:39 am Comment from: Ludor

Chrissy: okay then.

Mar 13, 08 - 09:58 am Comment from: Ampar

To Buster:

". . . they take coupons."

I'll be there on double coupon Wednesdays. But I still can't decide on paper or plastic.

Mar 13, 08 - 10:56 am Comment from: Register or Login

I'm tired of everybody suing Apple but me.

Mar 18, 08 - 05:00 am Comment from: Nadia

How do people get a patent on something so easily?

May 21, 08 - 04:53 pm Comment from: Frances T Mccain

Very good! Here is my bookmark of this post! http://www.searchallinone.com/Other/MacDailyNews_-_ZapMedia_files_patent_infringement_lawsuit_against_Apple_over_iPod_and_iTunes/

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