back to article US Patent Office returns to Microsoft-Eolas fray

Microsoft is getting another chance to prove to the US Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) that the disputed Eolas patent for browser plug-ins is invalid. The two companies have fought for eight years over the ownership of running executables in a web browser. US courts have awarded Eolas over $500m in the fight, but the …

COMMENTS

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  1. Fred

    A crime has been committed

    I don't care whether the patent was valid or not. ActiveX was a crime against humanity, and they need to be punished, preferably eternally.

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  3. Matt

    But...?

    I suppose it would depend how Wei released viola. Part of course/project work => belongs to UC. Done in own time as a personal project -> I think it belongs to him. If it was part of course/project work and therefore belonged to UC then can the prior art argument be used at all, seeing as they themselves owned it (by extenstion)?

  4. Eduard Coli

    The check finally cleared

    This is doubtful at best.

    M$ came in late on the Internet so if they do have a patent it would have been though acquisition.

  5. Christopher E. Stith

    Univ. of Calif. is not necessarily UC Berkeley

    The University of California system has ten campuses with over 200,000 active students and over 1.4 million alumni. Unless the prior art was turned in as a major assignment, there's not really any reason for the Regents of the university system to have ever even heard of the project.

  6. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Better check the MS 'Evidence'

    Microsoft is not above manufacturing evidence if it thinks it will help with it's court cases.

    Remember the manufactured demonstrations from the IE-Bundling lawsuit(s) ?

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