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HILARIOUS....
next couple of days?
OK, we'll check back with you on Wednesday....
Yes it is SO HARD to find links to the Gil Amelio offer....LMFAO
https://www.globenewswire.com/news-release/2019/04/16/1804501/0/en/Voip-Pal-s-Board-of-Directors-Has-Rejected-a-Formal-Offer-from-Dr-Gil-Amelio-and-Associates-to-Purchase-CEO-Emil-Malak-s-Shares-and-Take-Over-Control-of-the-Company.html
https://www.telecompaper.com/news/voip-pal-rejects-management-bid-from-amelio-and-associates--1289124
https://insight.rpxcorp.com/news/9958
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/voip-pal-board-directors-rejected-090000094.html
Looks like the case is being appealed to the Federal Circuit which just reversed a District Alice 101 ruling that has similarities to Voip Pal...
Not crushed.....only delaying the victory for Voip Pal
LMFAO
2 lawsuits now @ Federal Circuit
not true
I will love it when we win our Alice appeal
I will love it when we get into court for claims construction
The PTAB doesn't take 18 months just to determine if the patents are yours,
Everything you posted is Inaccurate...
How many times have they won at the PTAB? EVERY TIME
How many patents were they granted despite prior art? EVERY ONE
How does a company that owns IP make money? -THEY LICENSE It
What is it called when companies use your IP without licensing it? INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY THEFT
Rubbish
PTAB matters
12 times, it matters
don't need to ...they are obvious
many paths to success
They Won all PTAB hearings.
the US Senate voted the IPR/PTAB process for post grant review of validity
VPLM won 100%
WRONG
Everything regarding assets is transparent. Patents are published. PTAB wins unanimous. one Judge will NOT determine VPLM's future
WRONG
no wins?
PTAB
VPLM. 12 wins
Apple and others. ZERO
WRONG
WRONG......AGAIN
it shows nothing. Submitting a press release means that the site is a paid pump site??
give me a freakin break.
TOTAL BS
The Federal Circuit is much more likely to consider the USPTO's careful examination of obviousness (Chu, et al.) and their unanimous conclusion about the validity of the patents, rather than relying entirely on Judg Koh.
That is complete BS. ANYONE who has read IP Watchdog knows that it is a highly reputable online venue for IP lawyers and other stakeholders to discuss the latest cases, legislation etc...
Your comments is simply astounding.....and 100% wrong
This is FAR from over.
Eventually, VPLM will receive licensing fees
100% False
If Apple and others license the IP, THAT is the main source of potential revenue.
That's what MANY owners of IP do - they license their IP.
“In my view there’s no single issue that’s more important or more damaging to the patent system today than the fact that nobody has any idea what a patent means until you spend eight years and $10 million litigating.” – Professor R. Polk Wagner
"Over the last 12 years, the U.S. patent system largely has become a compulsory licensing system, and increasingly so. This obviously has ramifications for all patent owners." Following are remarks delivered by Gene Quinn during the ITech Law 2019 European Conference in Dublin, Ireland. The three-day conference included discussion of various technology and legal issues ranging from how technology is disrupting the legal world to privacy and data matters and blockchain enabled innovation and fintech.
https://www.ipwatchdog.com/…/mess-recapping-us-p…/id=115657/
There is NOTHING "simple" about the IPR process, nor is there anything trivial about VPLM winning 8-0.
that's true of just about any verdict, isn't it.
not respected by everyone...far from it...she favors Judicial Exception
Really? Most expect?
Most have taken a lot of time to ask EVERYONE.....
nope- not Game over at all...
what we are seeing is Judicial Exception at work, rather than following the regs.
WRONG- the cases are being appealed.
Why isn’t Congress Upset about Judicial Exceptions to Patent Eligibility?
By Gene Quinn
November 1, 2018
....................The Alice/Mayo framework – named for the two seminal patent eligibility cases of the past decade – requires the decision maker, whether a patent examiner, administrative tribunal or reviewing court to ask and answer a series of questions before determining whether the claimed invention constitutes patent eligible subject matter. The first question (commonly referred to as Step 1) is whether the patent claim covers an invention from one of the four enumerated categories of invention defined in 35 U.S.C. §101 (i.e., is the invention a process, machine, article of manufacture, or composition of matter). If the answer to this question is no, then the patent claim is patent ineligible. If the answer is yes, the decision maker must move on to the next inquiry.
It is important to note that this first inquiry under the Alice/Mayoframework is the only question that finds textual support in the statute. The Supreme Court has knowingly and intentionally usurped the power and prerogative of Congress and has added additional hurdles to patent eligibility. The simple, straight-forward, statutory test established by Congress is no longer the complete test for patent eligibility in the United States. The test for what is patent eligible is an extra-statutory test that superimposes the will of the Supreme Court over the collective wisdom and wishes of Congress.
Of course, that is not what the Supreme Court is supposed to do, but it is what they have done in the patent realm. Even the Supreme Court refers to its own test for patent eligibility as embodying judicial exceptionsto patent eligibility, which by the very nomenclature used to characterize the additional steps admits to being beyond the statutory requirements and outside the proper authority for what the federal judiciary is supposed to do under the American Constitutional form of government.
The second question in a patent eligibility determination today is where the Supreme Court begins to impose itself over and above the statutory test. This inquiry (commonly referred to as Step 2A), requires the decision maker to ask whether the claimed invention is directed to one of the three specifically identified judicial exceptions to patent eligibility that have been identified by the Supreme Court. Again, although there is no textual support for the creation of any judicial exceptions to patent eligibility in the Patent Act, the Supreme Court has imposed its extra-judicial view of what the statute should require, legislating from the bench in an open power grab.
Thankfully, at the moment the Supreme Court has only identified three judicial exceptions, but since these judicial exceptions find no support in any text, statute or in the Constitution, there are no guarantees that this is an exhaustive list. Indeed, the Supreme Court could choose at any time to expand or extend this judge-made doctrine to render whatever they want to be patent ineligible. But to date, there are three judicial exceptions, which have in and of themselves wrought enough havoc. The judicial exceptions are: laws of nature, physical phenomena and abstract ideas. If the claim does not implicate one of those judicial exception, then the claimed invention is patent eligible. If the claimed invention implicates one of the judicial exceptions, then there is another question that must be answered.
Before proceeding to the final question in the extra-statutory patent eligibility test, it is worth pausing to point out that the Supreme Court has so far refused to define the term “abstract idea” despite the fact that it is singularly important to determining whether software innovations, including innovations relating to artificial intelligence, blockchain and Internet of Things (IoT) methods and systems are patent eligible. Indeed, the Supreme Court has opened Pandora’s box on the next great frontier of innovation while arrogantly refusing to define the critical term in the extra-statutory test of their own creation – saying that they do not need to “labor” to define the meaning of the term “abstract idea.”
As insulting as it is that the Supreme Court refuses to define the term “abstract idea”, the Supreme Court also uses the terms “natural phenomena” and “laws of nature” interchangeably, saying that they do not need to precisely identify which of the judicial exceptions they are using when analyzing the patent eligibility of a claimed invention in the life sciences sector. Again, this is their own test, and the Supreme Court mandates its application but refuses to define the key terms and phrases. How any jurist trained in the American system can believe an extra-statutory test is consistent with norms of American jurisprudence is a mystery, but hiding the ball and refusing to define key terms and concepts is truly unbelievable.
If this doesn’t get your blood boiling, the final inquiry for those claimed inventions that somehow relate to abstract ideas, laws of nature and natural phenomena, whatever they may be in the undefined collective minds of the Supreme Court, asks whether the claim language adds “significantly more” to the claim such that the claim is not merely claiming the abstract idea, law of nature or natural phenomena. Of course, once again, the Supreme Court has refused to define the term “significantly more.”
Some courts have characterized this final inquiry as “the hunt for the inventive concept.” That would make some logical sense if and only if a claimed invention that is novel and non-obvious would be necessarily found to have satisfied the inventive concept requirement. Alas, that is not the case. Under the ridiculously bastardized law of patent eligibility foisted upon us by the Supreme Court it is actually possible for a claimed invention to be both new and non-obvious and to somehow not exhibit an inventive concept under what is considered a proper patent eligibility analysis. Of course, it is a logical impossibility for a claimed invention to be both novel and non-obvious while simultaneously not exhibiting an inventive concept. If something is new and non-obvious it is by definition inventive. This disconnect merely demonstrates the objective absurdity of the Alice/Mayoframework.
So, we are left with a patent eligibility test that finds no support anywhere in the text of the statute or in the Constitution. The critical terms necessary to understand this Supreme Court created extra-statutory test are knowingly and intentionally left undefined. And the test results in the absurdly illogical conclusion that novel and non-obvious inventions can and do somehow lack an inventive concept. Clearly, the Supreme Court is out of its depth. The industry finds itself in need of a life line.
What is remarkable is that as this entire episode has unfolded Congress has been content to watch their Constitutional powers stripped by an overactive Supreme Court that enjoys legislating from the bench. It is shocking that no Member of Congress has used this simple, easy to understand example of the Supreme Court erecting additional extra-statutory hurdles on top of a one-sentence, clear, straight-forward statute as an example of the dangerous expansion in the power of the Supreme Court.
If the Supreme Court can find judicial exceptions to invisibly exist in a simple, one-sentence statute, then why couldn’t they do the same with any other statute? It is time for Congress to reassert itself. The federal judiciary is there to interpret the law, not to make it. If they want to make law they should resign and run for Congress.
Expected it
Will be appealed
Likely overturned - she takes "judicial exception" to a whole new level
her ruling in the VPLM case (first one) demonstrates a clear LACK of understanding about the integration of legacy and modern telecommunications........
It's ok, we will win at the Federal Circuit level
Exactly
No this not the appeal.
The first dismissal is being heard by the Federal Circuit and we should get a ruling in early 2020.
This is a different case and different patents.
She's not interpreting 101 correctly, and I believe we will win our appeal(s)
that is correct...they won a small $ judgement, and NO stock
Nope -they won't keep them
I believe you are 100% correct
Koh, knows she made a mistake in the first one, as she didn’t allow any claim construction. In another of her cases, Federal Appeal over turn it because of that reason.