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Re: RJ5 post# 9590

Thursday, 10/06/2011 1:36:15 PM

Thursday, October 06, 2011 1:36:15 PM

Post# of 80403
Arrival star is suing everybody and settling for pennies, they are just a frivolous lawsuit troll.

Regarding the lawsuit against GM and Ford, let not jump quickly to that conclusion. The claim is not about GPS or tracking, we will all agree OnStar has been around much longer before the patent. The claim is about "remote management of vehicles from handheld device" It is also important not to confuse keyfob with handheld device using network access. i.e GSM network. Key fobs work from 100 ft to 200 ft. However when you are able to do this function while in another country or on a plane? this is the claim ECDC has against GM. I read this very carefully did very in-depth research and I am convinced there is a huge pay day for ECDC on this technology not just from GM, but Ford and Chrysler as well.

Everyone should read New York Article on this technology when Kay used it on his own son, you will understand why this claim is going to be huge:

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/10/27/technology/27tracking.html

"the new use is tracking teenage drivers. Brian Aladesuyi, 17, received a new Jeep in exchange for a promise: he would never drive it outside his hometown, Kennesaw, Ga. His father, Kayode Aladesuyi, chief executive of the security firm EarthSearch Communications, used EarthSearch’s Web site to map Kennesaw’s boundaries into the Jeep’s onboard computer, surrounding the entire city with an electronic fence.

But when his father took a business trip to Brazil, Brian decided to try his luck, Mr. Aladesuyi said. Brian drove to Marietta, a neighboring town. Seconds after Brian breached the invisible wall, his father received a text message on his mobile phone.

Mr. Aladesuyi sent a message commanding the computer to disable the Jeep’s engine as soon as Brian switched it off. When the Jeep would not restart, Brian had to call his father and confess he had broken their agreement.

“I don’t think Brian really understood I could do that from Brazil,” Mr. Aladesuyi said.

That tracking system became available this spring. The onboard computer costs $229, installation included, and the service costs $19.99 a month. Mr. Aladesuyi uses a similar EarthSearch system to disengage the engine of his own Mercedes E500 sedan, making it “virtually impossible” to steal, he said".

These are the fundamentals Kay always said he was building, patents and products that will yield results long term. that's the reason I am a long on this one.

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