Create Account

Username
Password
Remember me
Email
 
1
HariSeldon
HariSeldon

Apple Hit With Playlist Patent

2 comments, 209 views, posted 2:28 pm 09/02/2012 in Business by HariSeldon
HariSeldon has 3851 posts, 2100 threads, 116 points
Uber God

A Texas shell company, Smart Audio Technologies, has filed a suit claiming Apple’s iPod Nano and other devices violate its patent for random song playlists.

The suit comes just six months after a jury found Apple violated the playlist patent of another Texas entity, Personal Audio LLC, and ordered the tech giant to pay $8 million. Apple is appealing that decision.

The new case turns on US Patent 6185163 which appears to cover the ‘random’ function common to MP3 players:

Quote:

A method is provided for altering a play list of a Random Access Player without interrupting the generation of output by the Player.

The patent was issued in 2001 and since obtained by Smart Technologies which, according to Texas state records, was formed last year.

While these type of “patent troll” lawsuits are filed everyday against Apple and other technology companies, this one is notable because Smart Technologies is represented by a new law firm founded by Joseph Farnan Jr., a former federal judge who worked in the same Delaware court where the lawsuit was filed.

Farnan is not the only one to quit the bench to represent patent plaintiffs. Last year, the judge who helped create East Texas’ famous ‘rocket docket’ left to join the patent law firm run by his son.

Patent litigation has become huge business in recent years and has attracted major investments from private equity firms.

A Texas-based attorney for Smart Technologies, Steven Geiszler, declined to comment on which investors are behind Smart Technologies.

Playlist patents are becoming a major nuisance for tech companies. In November, Personal Audio LLC filed a suit claiming Amazon’s Kindle products violated the same patent that it used to obtain the $8 million jury verdict against Apple.

Smart Audio playlist lawsuit


Comments

1
2:41 pm 09/02/2012

thecrookedman

My CD player in the '80s had a shuffle button, so...

0
3:45 pm 09/02/2012

mohit_117

What does a patent mean exactly? If you discover something... why can't other people improvise in it? If you've got a patent for 5 years, then that's the limit, right? After 5 years companies are allowed to create their own modifications... is that correct??

I've never discovered anything beyond a playboy magazine at school and that's mostly it... so don't know much about patents...

Add Comment

Log in via teoti, or register to add a comment!


Teh NookMayrHayasdanJaranWebAngryShirtsGoneGeekEat Liver