Adding insult to injury: One Laptop Per Child sued for patent infringement
It's unclear where Lagos Analysis Corp. (LANCOR) expects the One Laptop Per Child project to come up with the money, but it has sued OLPC, anyway, for patent infringement. To make matters more complicated, the suit was brought in the Nigerian-owned company's backyard in Lagos, Nigeria. I'm sure the court will have no bias whatsoever....
LANCOR is seeking big money damages because, um, it has lost millions selling $100 PCs to developing nations (???):
The patent infringement lawsuit was filed on November 22nd, 2007 as a result of OLPC's [alleged] willful infringement of LANCOR's Nigeria Registered Design Patent # RD8489 and illegal reverse engineering of its keyboard driver source codes for use in the XO Laptops.
LANCOR is seeking substantial damages as well as a permanent injunction to prevent OLPC from continuing to unlawfully manufacture, sell, distribute or offer for sale the XO Laptop, and any other products infringing on the RD8489 and using the illegally acquired keyboard driver source codes.
Given that OLPC has struggled to come up with the money to manufacture its laptops in high volumes, this seems like the poor robbing the also-poor. Note to LANCOR: OLPC doesn't have any money. You'd do better to sue Intel or Microsoft for their efforts to help children in developing markets.
LANCOR makes SCO look like Santa Claus.
Matt Asay brings a decade of in-the-trenches open-source business and legal experience to The Open Road, with an emphasis on emerging open-source business strategies and opportunities. Matt is vice president of business development at Alfresco, a company that develops open-source software for content management. He is a member of the CNET Blog Network and is not an employee of CNET. Disclosure. You can follow Matt on Twitter @mjasay. 




I haven't checked myself, but if we believe the reporting work done by the Wall Street Journal, they do, actually.
<http://online.wsj.com/article/SB119586754115002717.html> states " Robert Fadel, its director of finance and operations, says the nonprofit has enough funding to last years. ... As of September, it had $8.7 million in cash on hand, an internal document indicates."
So maybe LANCOR did this little research before filing suit?
How much does anyone want to be that there's a bit of MSFT's money that's getting fed into this one, a'la SCO?
/P
If you DO have much spare time to care about the OLPC relative, please focus on how many poor kids can get it. And does the OLPC really help the poor kids in learning.
- by komrad7800 March 23, 2008 6:08 PM PDT
- Thanks for this article. Really helpful.
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