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Monday, November 12, 2012
Consumes Without Producing Anything?
"Since 2008, Dallas, Texas attorney Erich Spangenberg and his company
TQP have been launching suits against hundreds of firms, claiming that
merely by using SSL, they've violated a patent TQP acquired in 2006.
Nevermind that the patent was actually filed in 1989, long before the
World Wide Web was even invented. So far Spangenberg's targets have
included Apple, Google, Intel, Dell, Hewlett-Packard, every major bank
and credit card company, and scores of web startups and online
retailers, practically anyone who encrypts pages of a web sites to
protect users' privacy. And while most of those lawsuits are ongoing,
many companies have already settled with TQP rather than take the case
to trial, including Apple, Amazon, Dell, and Exxon Mobil. The patent has
expired now, but Spangenberg can continue to sue users of SSL for six more years
and seems determined to do so as much as possible. 'When the
government grants you the right to a patent, they grant you the right to
exclude others from using it,' says Spangenberg. 'I don't understand
why just because [SSL is] prevalent, it should be free.'"
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