AfterDawn: Tech news

Streaming patents upheld by court

Written by Petteri Pyyny @ 17 Jul 2003 2:42 User comments (2)

The streaming patents that a rather unknown company called Acacia Research holds, gained their first seal of approval by a Californian district court.
Acacia claims to own patents that cover virtually all core technologies that are used in providing streaming audio or video online. Company has sued several small companies, mostly adult entertainment companies, accusing them of using patented technology without valid licenses.

If Acacia's patents actually hold water once they start attacking major players on the Net, it would mean that virtually every single website that provides multimedia content in any form, would be liable of paying licensing fees to Acacia.

Court awarded Acacia a temporary injunction against five adult entertainment companies. The injunction bans the sites from using any streaming audio or video material on their websites and also bans them from linking to any site that provides such content.



The named five companies failed to defend themselves or show up in the court hearing, so the case isn't exactly the best possible case study to prove Acacia's patents perfectly valid.

According to Acacia, it is currently negotiating with bigges fishes, such as cable TV companies and other major corporations in order to get a licensing agreement with them -- and avoid litigation against major corporations that would have enough money to make their case a very, very expensive one.

Source: News.com

Previous Next  

2 user comments

118.7.2003 03:07

This is bad.....

220.7.2003 09:55
rpeckhoff
Inactive

If any idiot can come in and claim that he made something, that really has been the collaborate effort of many large corperations over a long period of time, then the world is in trouble. Also, those Porn sites didn't show up in court? IDIOTS.

Comments have been disabled for this article.

Latest news

The era of cheap AI is about to end - consumers and companies may experience a harsh reality very soon The era of cheap AI is about to end - consumers and companies may experience a harsh reality very soon (19 Apr 2026 12:58)
AI companies have allowed both consumers and businesses to use their developed AI models at a significantly lower cost than their actual expenses. A clear change is now coming to this, which could significantly alter the market.
Defunct companies started selling their former employees' email and Slack messages to AI companies Defunct companies started selling their former employees' email and Slack messages to AI companies (18 Apr 2026 12:27)
Technology companies that have gone bankrupt or have simply been shut down have found a new way to make a little more money at their final gasp. The companies are selling their employees' Slack, Teams, and email messages as training material for AI compan
Google starts penalizing sites that hijack the browser back button Google starts penalizing sites that "hijack" the browser back button (18 Apr 2026 2:35)
Google has announced that starting from June 2026 it will begin penalizing websites that hijack the browser back button.
Installing a fresh Windows 11 is now up to half an hour faster Installing a fresh Windows 11 is now up to half an hour faster (17 Apr 2026 11:11)
The update to Windows 11 released in April 2026 changes the way Windows is installed on a computer for the first time. User can now skip the previously mandatory updates during the installation phase.
EU age verification app humiliated: Researcher bypassed protections in two minutes EU age verification app humiliated: Researcher bypassed protections in two minutes (17 Apr 2026 9:57)
The official EU age verification app released this week is reportedly easy to crack. Security researchers claim that it can be circumvented within two minutes.

News archive