Comments on: Microsoft wins reversal of MP3 patent decision
Microsoft, pending appeals, will no longer have to pay Alcatel-Lucent $1.5 billion after a judge ruled it had a valid license for a patent related to MP3 technology.
Microsoft, pending appeals, will no longer have to pay Alcatel-Lucent $1.5 billion after a judge ruled it had a valid license for a patent related to MP3 technology.
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something people actually care about. MP3 as a format sucks
anyway.
When it was developed, it revolutionized sound compression. Today it's used by just about everyone and almost every device that plays media will support it. Perhaps that's because no other format was near as good for many, many years. By today's standards it's not the best, but it was the best for over 10 years and is anything but "sucks" even by todays standards. If there was a hall of fame, the MP3 format would be at the top. You should change your nic. "Protagonistic" is nowhere near suitable for ranting dissrespectful garbage.
So if you look at codecs for compatibility, AAC and WMA suck compared to MP3
The judge did the right thing to reverse his previous ruling since he has learned that AT&T and Fraunhofer are co-owners of the technology and each co-owner can license the technology individually.
Licencing any technology cannot be likened to selling a vehicle co-owned because co-ownership of vehicles and that of intellectual property rights may have different aspects, both legally and technically.
- by IPLawyer June 5, 2008 6:41 PM PDT
- Earth to Protagonist -- > I think the market has spoken and MP3 is a lot more popular (and successful) than you'll ever be.
- Like this Reply to this comment
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(20 Comments)DWorkman -- Nice try. Fraunhofer isn't the bad guy here. Patents aren't like cars -- two people can own them and use them at the same time without running into a phsyical issue. So the law (correctly) allows two owners to act freely with the intellectual property.
Two joint owners of a patent have equal right to license the patents. If Lucent had wanted to make sure that FhG couldn't grant a license they could have said so when ownership was being negotiated.
Rock on Fraunhofer.