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AT&T, Apple slapped with suit over visual voicemail

By Ed Oswald, BetaNews

December 3, 2007, 5:23 PM

Klausner Technologies has sued the two companies, claiming one of the signature features of the iPhone violates two of its patents.

While many patent cases have little prior case law to work with, the firm has already litigated successfully with two other companies who later licensed the technology. Both Vonage and AOL have struck agreements with the company.

Filed in US District Court for the Eastern District of Texas, the suit asks for damages and future royalties estimated to be $460 million. It has also filed separate cases against Comcast, Cablevision, and Skype parent company eBay for royalties totaling $300 million.

All of Klausner's defendants are acuused of violating Klausner's patents in the voice mail field. In the case of the non-iPhone defendants, all their systems allow users to select which voicemails they would like to hear through an on-screen display -- a method which Klausner says its portfolio already covers.

"We have litigated this patent successfully on two prior occasions," Klausner's legal counsel Greg Dove said in a statement. "With the signing of each new licensee, we continue to receive further confirmation of the strength of our visual voicemail patents."

Klausner's suits are leading some to call it the "next NTP," which embroiled RIM in lawsuits for years before eventually settling for $612.5 million in March 2006.

Technology pundit Larry Dignan was one of those people equivocating Klausner to the infamous patent holding company. "Translation: Hey it worked twice already why not extract more cash. These things add up," he wrote in a blog entry Monday.

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By Briantist

posted Dec 4, 2007 - 8:21 AM

How bloody stupid. How can you claim a patent on "choosing something from a list"?

Score: 0

By Golden Falcon

posted Dec 4, 2007 - 9:41 AM

Yea its a little bit over-board... Everyone wants money these days.

Score: 0

By Diam0nd

posted Dec 4, 2007 - 7:08 AM

"Looks like Apple was using the photo copy machine again"
loooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooool

Haha! They always HAVE done so, I mean literally for AGES. I hope they go bankrupt.

Score: 0

By Realist

posted Dec 4, 2007 - 3:02 AM

Looks like Apple was using the photo copy machine again.

Score: 0

By mdotwills

posted Dec 4, 2007 - 2:39 AM

Boo hoo Klausner Technologies! Go tell someone who cares. I'm sick of these greedy get rich scheme's with little prompt in the first place, however it is deserved by some corporations like M$.

Score: 0

By Realist

posted Dec 4, 2007 - 11:58 AM

I'd withhold judgement unless you have all the details. If you had a company (big or little), hired and paid employees to develop something, took the effort to patent it...you would expect to own it. Looks like two different courts have examined all of the evidence and have ruled in favor of the patent holder in this instance. Read the transcripts and then come back with your educated opinions.

Score: 0

By pitdingo

posted Dec 3, 2007 - 9:57 PM

Hey Beta News, i have a patent on "...a system to allow users to select which news items they want to read through an on-screen display...".

I want my damn $$$$!

Score: 0

By siryak

posted Dec 3, 2007 - 6:37 PM

Maybe I should patent driving to work and sue everyone that doesn't pay me a royalty...

Score: 0

By iamtux

posted Dec 3, 2007 - 6:06 PM

Yet another ridiculous patent lawsuit over a concept from a company that probably didn't even release a product in the first place. Apple took an idea and put it into practice, you didn't. That's your own fault. Go cry about it why don't you.

Score: 0

By GoodThings2Life

posted Dec 3, 2007 - 5:53 PM

No, no, no... everybody *KNOWS* that Apple is the first and only company to have that feature. They said so in their commercial with the nerdy business guy who talks about how he ignores his customers' calls. Everybody else is just copying Apple, and how dare they claim otherwise!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1 one eleventy!

OK, OK, in all seriousness, I hate patent lawsuits. Not that I like Apple, but these lawsuits are ridiculous, since they're always copyrights for the most absurdly obvious ideas. Enough is enough. It's time that Congress quit wasting time on non-binding resolutions and pass some patent reform. Oh wait, I forgot, they're too busy whining about Bush, the war, and socialized medicine to worry about the things that keep our businesses afloat.

Score: 0

By Program86

posted Dec 3, 2007 - 5:46 PM

Everyone wants a bite of the apple...

Score: 0

By hiyoag

posted Dec 3, 2007 - 5:34 PM

Am I reading this right? They have a patent on a list?

Score: 0

By billweh

posted Dec 3, 2007 - 5:44 PM

These things are getting ridiculous. It's about time someone steps up and just null and voids all software patents.

What a crock of crap - "If you display a voicemail in a list - we own you."

Score: 0