Wednesday, September 23, 2009

7. Dissent

7. Dissent
The case was decided with a 7 to 1 majority in favor of Microsoft. The judge that dissented was Justice Stevens.Here is what he had to say:

I disagree with the Court's suggestion that because
software is analogous to an abstract set of instructions, it
cannot be regarded as a "component" within the meaning
of §271(f).Whether attached or de-
tached from any medium, software plainly satisfies the
dictionary definition of that word.'Component' is commonly defined as `a
constituent part,' `element,' or `ingredient'. And unlike a
blueprint that merely instructs a user how to do something, software actually causes infringing conduct to occur.

A master disk is the functional equivalent of a warehouse of components ... that Microsoft fully expects to be incorporated into foreign-manufactured computers.

http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/scripts/getcase.pl?court=US&vol=000&invol=05-1056

http://www.pdfdownload.org/pdf2html/pdf2html.php?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.supremecourtus.gov%2Fopinions%2F06pdf%2F05-1056.pdf&images=yes

6. Your own argument. (Microsoft VS AT&T)

6. My Argument
Microsoft won this case based on the theory that their master disc they sent out overseas was not directly used in the products AT&T produced. They argued that copies were made from the master disc, and because Microsoft didn't produce these copies themselves, they are not at fault because it was the companies overseas distibuting copies of Microsoft's software.

I believe that Microsoft won in a clever loophole, but I must say that is was directly Microsoft's fault because it was the intention that brought this case at hand. Microsoft sent out the master disc knowing that there would be copies made, so there should be some blame on Microsoft's end. I do however think that it was fair that Microsoft won the case based on the fact that they themselves did not distibute the copies, only the abstract.

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

The Supreme Court

The Supreme Court consists of nine justices, one of which is the Chief justice. It is nine people so that there is always a majority and no ties. What would happen if there were only eight justices and they came to a 4 – 4 decision? So because there is an odd number there will always be a majority. The Supreme Court has the power to create explain and apply the laws at hand. They decide whether or not something is illegal or unconstitutional.

One of the powers the Supreme Court has is called ‘judicial review’ which allows them to overturn state laws and also laws passed by congress. In one of my previous posts and the legal system, the Supreme Court is part of checks and balances system, so that not one branch of government has power over another.

I think the supreme court should have varying opinion because all nine justices were conservative, they have would conservative viewpoints, and the same goes for liberal views and even gender based views. It’s good that women have been appointed as a justice because it shows a step in the right direction. This also applies to different religions and races. We need different viewpoints so that the decisions aren’t clouded by a majority but by careful thought, reason, and historic or past events. The fact that the Supreme Court is something that has power over another just means that there must be variation.

In the movie “First Monday In October,” there has been a female appointed as a court justice. She is very conservative and by the book. On the other hand, one of the male justices is very liberal and a humanist. They have conflicting viewpoints which are clearly set apart from one another. Because of the conflicting viewpoints there will be more thought process put into the overall decision. And that is a very good thing in my opinion because if everybody agreed on the same thing, then there would be no point in going over the subject at hand.

5. Rule of Law (Microsoft VS AT&T)

5. Rule of Law
As the Supreme Court has found, software remains patentable, but any code that must be reinterpreted to become functional is not – and scholars will interpret that to include source code as well.
http://www.betanews.com/article/Microsoft-Wins-in-Supreme-Court-ATT-Ruling-Overturned/1177944397

Software in the abstract is not considered a component of a software patent, therefore unless there is actual working code, or machine code, it doesn’t infringe upon the software patent. Until is it interpreted into a computer readable copy, such as a CD-ROM disc, it has no power and can only be expresses as pseudo code (or fake code).

4. Reasoning of the court (Microsoft VS AT&T)

4. Reasoning of the court:
The court’s opinion in detail becomes even more explicit:
“This case poses two questions: First: when, or in what form, does software qualify as a ‘component’ under [Section] 271(f)? Second: were ‘components’ of the foreign-made computers involved in this case ‘supplied’ by Microsoft from the United States?”
“Software, the ‘set of instructions, known as code, that directs a computer to perform specified functions or operations...can be conceptualized in at least two ways. One can speak of software in the abstract: the instructions themselves detached from any medium (such as source code, which has no power in actual software). One can alternatively envision a tangible ‘copy’ of software, the instructions encoded on a medium such as a CD-ROM. Until it is expressed as a computer-readable copy, e.g. on a CD-ROM, Windows software - indeed any software detached from an activating medium - remains un-combinable. It cannot be inserted into a CD-ROM drive or downloaded from the Internet; it cannot be installed or executed on a computer. Abstract software code is an idea without physical embodiment, and as such, it does not match §271(f)’s categorization: ‘components’ amenable to ‘combination’.”

http://www.betanews.com/article/Microsoft-Wins-in-Supreme-Court-ATT-Ruling-Overturned/1177944397

The Chief Justice took no part in the consideration or decision of this case.
The Court had no trouble finding that a physical piece of software (such as a disk) can be a component of a patented invention, but reached a different result as to software in the abstract. The Court compared software in the abstract to a blueprint or a tool. Blueprints and tools can be used to manufacture a component but does not make the blueprints and tools themselves components. Similarly, software in the abstract can be used to create a disk containing the software, but the software in the abstract is not a component. Only a physical embodiment of software qualifies as a component.

The Court further held that Microsoft did not supply a component of the invention from the United States, because the exported physical software, the master disk, was not directly used in the invention – a computer running Windows. Instead, the recipients of the disk made copies, and used only the copies in the computer. The plain meaning of 35 U.S.C. § 271(f), according to the Court, only applied to the inclusion in the computer of components supplied from the United States. The statute could not be read to cover the inclusion of copies of components, when the copies were not themselves supplied from the United States.

A concurring opinion by three justices would have added another ground. The concurring opinion observed that the disks used to further copy the software onto the computer hard drives were then removed and thus did not become a physical part of the completed computer. Since the disks were not physically present in the final apparatus, the concurring justices felt those disks could not be a component of the apparatus. The other justices in the majority, however, did not reach that issue.

http://www.wolfgreenfield.com/newsstand/client-alerts-122

3. Decision of the court (Microsoft VS AT&T)

Decision of the court:
In a 7-1 decision, the Supreme Court held that Section 271(f) of the Patent Act does not extend to cover foreign duplication of software.
There is no such thing as a world-wide patent. Rather, patent law is territorial. A US patent covers infringing acts that occur in the US but generally disregards extraterritorial activity. The lone statutory exception is Section 271(f) of the Patent Act, which calls for infringement liability for the unauthorized supply of "components" of a patented invention for "combination" abroad.

AT&T is the assignee of a patent covering a computer for encoding and compressing recorded speech. In the United States, a computer with Microsoft Windows installed infringes this patent. The question in this case, is whether the foreign installed software can be considered a "component" supplied from the United States under 271(f).

The question before us: Does Microsoft's liability extend to computers made in another country when loaded with Windows software copied abroad from a master disk or electronic transmission dispatched by Microsoft from the United States? Our answer is "No."

AT&T’s argument boiled down to the notion that patented software could essentially be decomposed by a supplier (Microsoft) and recomposed by a foreign manufacturer abroad (for instance, Acer). In such a situation, AT&T argued, Microsoft would be liable for the infringement. Microsoft argued that in exporting an installation disc to foreign manufacturers, it was shipping an "abstract" form of the software, not the patented mechanism itself.

Although Microsoft had obtained a license to AT&T’s speech software and was using it in Windows XP and Vista, AT&T claimed that license did not extend to Microsoft the right to export Windows – and thus export the software with it – to other manufacturers who would then install the software on their own computers, and then sell those computers and pocket the proceeds.

“Abstract software code is an idea without physical embodiment,” reads the syllabus of this morning’s historic decision in AT&T v. Microsoft from the US Supreme Court, “and as such, it does not match [the] categorization “components” amenable to “combination.”

So because it is an abstract form of software, that is being distributed to OEM's, who then recomposes the software and ships it abroad, Microsoft has no control over how the OEM's distribute the software, making Microsoft not liable for AT&T's patent.

http://www.patentlyo.com/patent/2007/05/microsoft_v_att_1.html

http://keznews.com/2778_Microsoft_Wins_in_Supreme_Court__AT_T_Ruling_Overturned

http://www.betanews.com/article/Microsoft-Wins-in-Supreme-Court-ATT-Ruling-Overturned/1177944397

Wednesday, September 9, 2009

2. Issue of the case (Microsoft VS. AT&T)

2. Issue of the case
At issue is whether Microsoft can be held liable for violating an AT&T patent on technology that condenses speech into computer code, similar to that found on Microsoft's Windows program. Microsoft admitted it infringed the AT&T patent on computers sold domestically but contends that it is not liable for its programs installed by computer manufacturers overseas. In 1984, Congress amended the patent law to forbid companies from shipping components of patented inventions overseas and having the parts assembled elsewhere in an attempt to skirt patent laws. So in this case, justices are looking at whether digital software code can be considered a "component" of a patented invention and if so, whether it was "supplied" from the United States.

Seth P. Waxman, AT&T's lawyer and a former Clinton administration solicitor general, told justices they should uphold two lower courts' rulings in the company's favor. Waxman said there is no dispute that Microsoft sends Windows code from the United States, via the "golden disk" or electronic transmission, to be installed in foreign computers.

"Those facts resolve this case," Waxman said. "Microsoft has 'supplied' a 'component' that when 'combined with hardware' enables the practice of AT&T's invention."

But Microsoft's lawyer, former Bush administration solicitor general Theodore B. Olson, countered that the code is copied outside the United States and installed on computers overseas. Thus, U.S. patent laws don't apply, he said.
"Those are computers that are sold abroad," Olson told the court. The components the law refers to, he said, were all manufactured overseas.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/02/21/AR2007022100087.html

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/02/21/AR2007022100087_2.html


The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, in July 2005, ruled against Microsoft, saying that software copies made from a master version sent from the U.S. are not shielded from patent law, which prohibits circumvention of infringement through the exporting of products.
Microsoft argued that it had sent one master copy of Windows overseas on a so-called golden disk to be copied onto PCs sold outside the U.S. Microsoft shouldn't be liable for patent infringement for the hundreds of thousands of copies of Windows made from that master disk, its lawyers argued.
Microsoft, which agreed to an undisclosed settlement with AT&T in March 2004, also argued that software object code isn't a component of a patented invention. The agreement allowed the software vendor to appeal the case.
http://www.infoworld.com/d/security-central/supreme-court-review-att-vs-microsoft-patent-case-61

Illicit

Illicit trade is going on throughout the world 24/7, 365 days a year. It happens everywhere but there are places where it happens more often such as Hong Kong, China. Products ranging from fake Rolex watches knock-off designer hand bags, and even pharmaceutical drugs. And buyers are either unaware of the things they are purchasing or are ignorant in the fact that they don’t care if they are fake, they just want to have the product by whatever means necessary. Sometimes the fakes are so good that even people in the company can't tell the difference between them and the real thing. And consumers, who buy the more affordable fakes to obtain the social and fashion status the brand names bring, are willing to pay more for the improved copies. It is a disease that is growing at an exponential rate. It doesn’t seem that there will be a stop to illicit trade.

As far as consumers go I can’t say that it is their responsibility to not buy the product, but a lot of the time they are unaware that they are buying illegal merchandise. You have to leave it to common sense: is it really legitimate that the bag you’re buying is one hundred dollars when it actually costs three thousand dollars? People aren’t the smartest when it comes to these kinds of things and if they are smart enough to know better than they could be people who are easily influenced into buying because of the deal they are given. In my personal opinion the vast majority of people have given up their sense of perspective when it comes to buying. People nowadays trust commercials and people if they can give you a reasonable explanation why they should buy the product. People forget to read in between the lines when it comes to buying. Is the consequence greater than the profit? Sure I sold some fake Gucci bags, but if I’m caught I could be fined or even sent to prison (just an example). A person is smart, but its people who are dumb and ignorant.

Microsoft VS. AT&T

1. This case concerns the applicability of §271(f) to computer software first sent from the United States to a foreign manufacturer on a master disk, or by electronic transmission, then copied by the foreign recipient for installation on computers made and sold abroad. AT&T holds a patent on a computer used to digitally encode and compress recorded speech. Microsoft’s Windows operating system has the potential to infringe that patent because Windows incorporates software code that, when installed, enables a computer to process speech in the manner claimed by the patent. Microsoft sells Windows to foreign manufacturers who install the software onto the computers they sell. Microsoft sends each manufacturer a master version of Windows, either on a disk or via encrypted electronic transmission, which the manufacturer uses to generate copies. Those copies, not the master version sent by Microsoft, are installed on the foreign manufacturer’s computers. The foreign-made computers are then sold to users abroad.

AT&T holds a patent on a computer used to digitally encode and compress recorded speech. Microsoft’s Windows operating system has the potential to infringe that patent because Windows incorporates software code that, when installed, enables a computer to process speech in the manner claimed by the patent. Microsoft sells Windows to foreign manufacturers who install the software onto the computers they sell. Microsoft sends each manufacturer a master version of Windows, either on a disk or via encrypted electronic transmission, which the manufacturer uses to generate copies. Those copies, not the master version sent by Microsoft, are installed on the foreign manufacturer’s computers. The foreign-made computers are then sold to users abroad. AT&T filed an infringement suit charging Microsoft with liability for the foreign installations of Windows.

http://www.supremecourtus.gov/opinions/06pdf/05-1056.pdf

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/02/21/AR2007022100087.htm

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

What Are Your Rights as a Property Owner?

In the movie "Pacific Heights," a landlord has to deal with a tenant who is not paying rent, has changed the locks to the apartment, and has no intent on moving out. The rights of the landlord should cross this threshold as to being able to evict the unruly tenant. Because the landlord owns the property, he/she should have undeniable grounds to evict a tenant not paying their rent and has made modifications to their property without consent. The movie is very loose on actual law and there was not much interpretation of the law, other than saying that because the tenant is now living there (even without a lease or rent) the tenant has a right to stay there unless a certain amount of evidence has deemed them able to be evicted or is dangerous.

Some rights that the landlord is entitled to are:
The Right to Prompt Payment- You have the right to receive the rent on the first of each month unless the parties otherwise agree.

The Right to Have Compliance With Tenancy Agreement - You have the right to have the tenant abide by the terms of the tenancy, whether it is oral or written. If the tenant breaches terms of the tenancy, for example by having unauthorized sub-tenants, pets, smokers, or other prohibited uses such as raising pigeons in the apartment, you have the right to terminate the tenancy and to move to evict.

With these said, it would seem that the landlord has rights to evict his tenants if they don’t issue rent and/or have breached terms of tenancy. But the tenant in the movie has not agreed or signed any contract, so because he hasn’t done these things, he may be exempt from the contract and is living there on a purely word of mouth basis, in which the landlord has given the tenant the key to the apartment and agreed to live there. But the details are sketchy.

3's About Me

3 Names I have been called: Iv’e been called Noodle, because one of my friends said my name was similar to Ramen Noodles (Raymond) so him and some other friends call me Raymond Noodle. I’m also called Dawgfather because that is my alias on multiple online sites, along with xbox live. And I’m also called Lil Brother constantly by my sister because she’s older than me.

3 Jobs I have had in my life (include unpaid if you have to): First would have to that I am a full time student, which takes up most of time time. I also do freelance work such as logo design and web design on the side. A third job would be a house cleaner because it seems that I am the youngest in the house, therefore I have to do the majority of the cleaning.

3 Places I Have Lived: I have lived in California for most of my life until I finished high school. I then moved out to Las Vegas, NV where I have been staying for the past year. I am moving back to California at the end of September to Menifee, CA where I will continue to go to college at the Art Institute of San Diego.

3 TV Shows that I watch: I watch “Family Guy” as a comedy series. One of my favorite shows is “Dexter” which is shown on the showtime network. And a third show I watch is “House M.D.” because it has very interesting characters.

3 places I have been: I have been to many places. Iv’e driven all the way east on the I-40 freeway, hitting some states like North Carolina, Tennessee, and Arizona, among many other states.

3 People that e-mail me regularly: My sister Lezette, her fiancée Bryan, and myself. I email myself often to sites that I need to remember.

3 of my favorite foods: Shrimp, Swordfish, and Pizza. I love seafood very much and I eat it whenever I can.

3 cars I have driven: My Ford F-150 truck, my sister’s Ford Focus, and my dad’s Ford Windstar. I know…were a Ford family.

3 things I am looking forward to: Graduating college, getting a respectable job, and owning my own house.

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

Greed Is Good

In the movie Wall Street, the character Gordon Gekko says that “Greed is good.” Greed, according to Merriam-Webster dictionary: is the selfish and excessive desire for more of something (money/power) than is needed. But to what extent is greed good? I believe that the initial intention of greed arose from the desire to obtain more than what they had, but rose to an elevated intention of power instead of acquisition of needs. Because as our history shows, money means power. The more you have the more power you can obtain. This country was not based on greed, but to advance and improve upon a system of government where there was greed and corruption, which led America to adopt the system of a free market.

With the recent recession our country is facing and the huge so called “bailouts” that the government is handing out, people are wondering what went wrong? I am not too sure on the details because it doesn’t matter at this point. All that matters is correcting the problem. But people became outraged when some people, such as John Thain, used the money from the bailouts for themselves. John Thain, who was the last chairman and chief executive officer of Merrill Lynch before its merger with Bank of America, spent $1,000,000 from a so called “bonus” to redecorate his office. Despite the dreadful year that Wall Street experienced in 2008, some questionable bonuses were paid to already well-off employees, and that set off the outrage. And with these questionable bonuses is the act of pure greed on their part. Why did he need to spend one million dollars to redecorate his office? I’m sure that there was no valid reason other than the fact that he was greedy and thought he could spend taxpayer’s money for something trivial. Greed is good, but is taken too far, and it leads to bad things.

Mini-Me ModelWorks makes a toy called the Smash-Me Bernie doll, depicting Bernard L. Madoff in a red devil suit and pitchfork. It comes with the doll itself along with a hammer to smash the doll with. If I had to make a smash-me doll of someone, it would be our previos president George Bush, because if it wasn’t for him and his cabinet, our recession would not be as bad as it is today, and there would never have been a war in Iraq, which in my opinion has now become an act of greed for oil, among other things.

Wednesday, August 12, 2009

What my classmates think of the Legal System.

I think the government in general has too much bearing on our lives as individuals, I think there are many issues in this country today in which it should be left up to the individual to decided whether its right or wrong. For example, I think that all drugs should be made legal and it should be a matter of personal responsibility, not a matter of law. (Jonathan Boyer, http://damnationcreative.blogspot.com/ )

My definition of the, legal system is a panel of individuals that are deciding on your punishment to your decision of an act. (Gustavo Ibarra, http://legionsphotography.blogspot.com/ )

The law works wonderful in the way it establishes a set order and standard of operation that allows for the coexistence of many interacting individuals. (Andrew Veliz, http://sincidkid24.blogspot.com/ )

My opinions on these three individuals are different from each point of view. Jonathan Boyer states that some things, like drugs, shouldn’t be governed by our legal system. While he has a valid argument, there are just some things that just need to be governed. The reason why drugs are illegal, such as cocaine, is because of the harmful effects that may be resulted from. While other drugs, such as marijuana, have no need to be regulated because they are not a serious drug and like he said, should be left up to the individual.

Gustavo thinks that the government is a cruel world where a group of people decide your punishment, but that is wildly exaggerated. There is the other side to the story. What about the people trying to prove someone is guilty because they are, what about the criminals that deserve the punishment they are given? While there are times when innocent people were punished for no reason, or there are people who were punished unfairly, there are many positive aspects to the way or legal system works.

And I completely agree with what Andrew says. It goes back to how I explained the legal system with checks and balances and the three branches of government.