Apple sued over mobile Safari as email retention policy questioned
Apple is facing a new lawsuit over the iPhone's Safari web browser just as the company's lax policy on employee email retention is brought into question regarding a separate suit.
EMG Technology, LLC on Monday filed a formal complaint in the Eastern District of Texas (Tyler Division) accusing Apple of patent violation through "the way the iPhone navigates the Internet."
The suit comes a little more than a month after EMG was granted the rights to U.S. patent No. 7,441,196 titled "Apparatus and method of manipulating a region on a wireless device screen for viewing, zooming and scrolling internet content."
Los Angeles-based real estate developer Elliot Gottfurcht is listed as one of the patent's investors. As the lone managing member of EMG, he's retained the services of JMBM's Stanley Gibson, one of the lead trial attorneys who won a $1.35 billion payment in the patent infringement case against medical technology firm Medtronic.
A copy of EMG's suit was not available as of press time, though Gibson claims the patent in question covers "the display of Internet content reformatted from HTML to XML on mobile devices -- the industry standard currently displayed by the iPhone."
Additional patent claims in the suit, which seeks unspecified damages, include technology for manipulating a region of the screen for zooming and scrolling, Gibson said.
Meanwhile, the Standard is taking Apple to task for its employee email retention policy, or lack thereof. The publication reports that a recent filing in the Psystar vs Apple antitrust case reveals that Apple employees are responsible for maintaining their own documents such as emails, memos, and voicemails.
"In other words, there is no company-wide policy for archiving, saving, or deleting these documents," the Standard said. "This could pose a problem in the event of a lawsuit. In recent years, companies have been fined millions after failing to retrieve old emails and other files required as evidence."
The report goes on to cite an e-discovery lawyer who says Apple's lack of "organization or coordination" in regards to its employee email retention policy essentially makes it "incapable of compliance" with legal requirements surrounding document retention.
EMG Technology, LLC on Monday filed a formal complaint in the Eastern District of Texas (Tyler Division) accusing Apple of patent violation through "the way the iPhone navigates the Internet."
The suit comes a little more than a month after EMG was granted the rights to U.S. patent No. 7,441,196 titled "Apparatus and method of manipulating a region on a wireless device screen for viewing, zooming and scrolling internet content."
Los Angeles-based real estate developer Elliot Gottfurcht is listed as one of the patent's investors. As the lone managing member of EMG, he's retained the services of JMBM's Stanley Gibson, one of the lead trial attorneys who won a $1.35 billion payment in the patent infringement case against medical technology firm Medtronic.
A copy of EMG's suit was not available as of press time, though Gibson claims the patent in question covers "the display of Internet content reformatted from HTML to XML on mobile devices -- the industry standard currently displayed by the iPhone."
Additional patent claims in the suit, which seeks unspecified damages, include technology for manipulating a region of the screen for zooming and scrolling, Gibson said.
Meanwhile, the Standard is taking Apple to task for its employee email retention policy, or lack thereof. The publication reports that a recent filing in the Psystar vs Apple antitrust case reveals that Apple employees are responsible for maintaining their own documents such as emails, memos, and voicemails.
"In other words, there is no company-wide policy for archiving, saving, or deleting these documents," the Standard said. "This could pose a problem in the event of a lawsuit. In recent years, companies have been fined millions after failing to retrieve old emails and other files required as evidence."
The report goes on to cite an e-discovery lawyer who says Apple's lack of "organization or coordination" in regards to its employee email retention policy essentially makes it "incapable of compliance" with legal requirements surrounding document retention.
Comments
EMG Technology, LLC on Monday filed a formal complaint in the Eastern District of Texas (Tyler Division) accusing Apple of patent violation through "the way the iPhone navigates the Internet."
The suit comes a little more than a month after EMG was granted the rights to U.S. patent No. 7,441,196 titled "Apparatus and method of manipulating a region on a wireless device screen for viewing, zooming and scrolling internet content."
This doesn't say when the patent was submitted, but the iPhone was demonstrated in January of 2007 and has been for sale since the summer of 2007. Unless the patent was submitted in early 2006, I doubt that Apple saw the patent when it was pending and copied it.
Oh well... I guess we'll see how this plays out.
Edit: I found the link to the patent here. It says that the patent was applied for on March 13, 2006. I guess this company could have some merit.
this patent is sort of vague, it seems to me all it is is basically having special websites for mobile phones that are easier to load, and also zooming and scrolling.
Edit: I found the link to the patent here. It says that the patent was applied for on March 13, 2006. I guess this company could have some merit.
"A method of navigating the Internet, comprising: displaying on-line content accessed via the Internet, the on-line content reformatted from a webpage in a hypertext markup language (HTML) format into an extensible markup language (XML) format to generate a sister site, the sister site including a portion or a whole of content of the web page reformatted to be displayed and navigable through a simplified navigation interface"
Erm, has anyone on the plaintiff's team actually used an iPhone?
IANAL, but this patent appears to describe a slicing service, whereby you visit a proxy site that divides up the web page you want to see into smaller chunks. How exactly this patent applies to any of Safari's inventions... which involve the site itself, no sister site, and no slicing... well, my soul would weep if the court found in the plaintiff's favor on this.
It's really a shame that someone can get a patent for obvious functions. I'm really waiting for someone to patent breathing as a "Method of extracting oxygen for internal bio-processing and energy production".
I'm really waiting for someone to patent breathing as a "Method of extracting oxygen for internal bio-processing and energy production".
...or that other activity to which filing this lawsuit compares, which I am thinking of patenting as the "bulls' method of dispensing solid waste from internal bio-processing and energy consumption."
This doesn't say when the patent was submitted, but the iPhone was demonstrated in January of 2007 and has been for sale since the summer of 2007. Unless the patent was submitted in early 2006, I doubt that Apple saw the patent when it was pending and copied it.
Oh well... I guess we'll see how this plays out.
Edit: I found the link to the patent here. It says that the patent was applied for on March 13, 2006. I guess this company could have some merit.
If the plaintiff feels they have to file in the Eastern District of Texas, I really don't think they have much credibility.
I can't even find their web site, filter out all the hits with the Apple lawsuit story and it's either to other companies in unrelated fields or a dead web site: http://emgtechnology.com/
This is the entirety of that web page:
<html>
<head>
<title></title>
</head>
<body>
</body>
</html>
They had something, taken down only five days ago:
http://74.125.95.132/search?q=cache:...ient=firefox-a
I got five people hatin' on me today, if I don't have ten people hatin' on me next week then I haven't progressed.
If the plaintiff feels they have to file in the Eastern District of Texas, I really don't think they have much credibility.
Doesn't mean they won't get a favorable ruling. Can't anything be done about this? Who's even accountable to "fix" it?
Edit: Think of emg's webpage when you read this passage "...while the plaintiff license-holder may have few or no documents worth discovering."
Doesn't mean they won't get a favorable ruling. Can't anything be done about this? Who's even accountable to "fix" it?
That's my point, the run of the mill patent troll tries to file from that district because it increases their likelihood of a favorable ruling.
Apple seems to be sued often, first pystar, now they have to turn around and fight this...
this patent is sort of vague, it seems to me all it is is basically having special websites for mobile phones that are easier to load, and also zooming and scrolling.
We just hear about Apple getting sued because we're attuned to Apple news. All large companies get sued every day whether it's over patents, copyrights, or liability issues. Because Apple is renowned for its innovation it's a good target for every swinging dick who thinks they thought of something first. Lawyers make laws for other lawyers to make money off of. Most politicians are lawyers. Almost all judges are lawyers. It's a mutual profit society. Justice and common sense have nothing to do with anything. Apple will most likely end up paying a few million to the lawyers to make this go away. That's how things work the good old USA.
That's my point, the run of the mill patent troll tries to file from that district because it increases their likelihood of a favorable ruling.
Right, I'm in complete agreement, just adding another reference about how little the plaintiff has to lose.
Big business for little Texas town, wish it would come to an end. Funny... the lawyer in the article's picture comes up a lot in these stories.
?At press time?? Really? Where can I find this print edition of AppleInsider?
We live in a digital age that still has hold-overs from the earlier dark ages. Press time means when the article was to be posted, ad there may be some internal deadline that we are unaware of.
Nothing to worry about.
The suit comes a little more than a month after EMG was granted the rights to U.S. patent No. 7,441,196 titled "Apparatus and method of manipulating a region on a wireless device screen for viewing, zooming and scrolling internet content."
So if EMG filed for the Patent on March 13, 2006 and was granted the patent October 2008 or a little over 2 1/2 years after filing AND Apple intro'd the iPhone in January 2007 and Steve Jobs said it had been in the works for 2 years and Jobs said that "boy have we patented it" which would make Apple's patent requests range from January 2005 to December 2006 and if it takes similar 2 1/2 + years from patent request to patent approval which would give Apple until July 2009, is it not possible a similar patent request is floating around the Patent office awaiting approval? And if Apple is granted a Patent for its technology similar to EMG, could Apple then file a countersuit?
(apologies for the long winded, poorly structured sentence)
I found the link to the patent here. It says that the patent was applied for on March 13, 2006. I guess this company could have some merit.
However, the patent wouldn't have been published (i.e. viewable by the public) until around September 2007, so I don't see how Apple could have copied it.
IANAL, but this patent appears to describe a slicing service, whereby you visit a proxy site that divides up the web page you want to see into smaller chunks. How exactly this patent applies to any of Safari's inventions...
This sounds an awful lot like how WAP browsers worked, back in 1998, and how Opera Mini worked, back in 2005 (before EMG's patent filing).
However, the patent wouldn't have been published (i.e. viewable by the public) until around September 2007, so I don't see how Apple could have copied it.
Infringement can't be said to have occurred until after a patent is issued, but it could still be infringement even if Apple had never heard of the patent, patent-holder, or any ideas derived from them until the lawsuit. If the patent is valid, Apple continuing to market the technology is infringing on the patent nonetheless.
However, what's described does seem to be a quite a bit different process from what mobile safari does. This patent is for techniques more complicated than just navigating a web browser on a handheld device.