The first ever Linux lawsuit is
ready to explode! The theoretical debates over open source software and the
patent laws are ready now to be discussed also in court, as the most important
Linux sellers, Novell Inc. and Red Hat Inc., have been sued for patent
infringement.
IP Innovation represents a
subsidiary company of the Californian company called Technology Licensing
Corporation; IP Innovation has sued on Tuesday Novell Inc., as well Red Hat
Inc., as it has claimed that the two important Linux selling companies’ products
infringe the United States Patent No. 5,072,412 for a User Interface with
Multiple Workspaces for Sharing Display System Objects, which was issued back
on the 10th of December 1991. IP Innovation has claimed that the
companies’ products infringe also two other similar patents. The company that
has filed the lawsuit against Novell Inc. and Red Hat Inc. is seeking damages
as well as a permanent injunction prohibiting any further infringement.
IP Innovation represents a
business unit of Acacia Technologies, which has licensed patents to a wide
range of companies, such as Hewlett-Packard, Dell, Intel, General Electric,
Samsung and others. It has revenue of about $46.8 million from the third quarter
of 2006 through the second one of 2007, but what’s most important is that it
has also some former Microsoft executives inside. Just days before filing this
lawsuit Acacia has employed even more former Microsoft executives, which is a
thing that many Linux fans already say that is significant.
However, IP Innovation is
claiming that the two companies have infringed the patents in the Red Hat Linux
system, the Novell SLES (SUSE Linux Enterprise Server) and the Novell SLED
(SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop). Although the battle has just begun, this case
is likely to travel well beyond the particular case that involves Novell, Red
Hat and IP Innovation.
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