Fight ends over European music downloads

NEWS
New York company E-Data said on Tuesday that it has settled a patent infringement suit that it filed against Microsoft and others, based on music download services in Europe.

Last October, the small company sued a European division of Microsoft, along with the HMV Group, Internet service provider Tiscali and digital music company On Demand Distribution (OD2), charging them with violation of a patent that covers the downloading of information onto a tangible object such as a CD. Music download services operated by the four companies allowed consumers to burn downloaded music to a CD.

The settlement terms include past and future rights to use the patent anywhere in the world, E-Data said in a statement. Financial terms were not disclosed.

"We are quite pleased with this settlement, as it further reinforces the scope and validity of (our) patent in Europe," said E-Data chairman Bert Brodsky in a statement. "While the OD2 service is still in the nascent stage… the agreement sends an important message to other companies infringing upon our intellectual property."

The patent is one of several that cast some financial uncertainty over the young digital media business. Other companies, including Acacia Research and SightSound Technologies, have said that they own broad rights to such processes as streaming digitally archived media such as music or video, or even selling access to audio and video over a telephone line.

E-Data is characterising the suit's settlement as an explicit shot across the bow of other download services -- Brodsky specifically cites Apple Computer's iTunes -- that are planning to enter the European market.

"We are currently in talks with a number of prominent companies in Europe infringing upon our intellectual property, and may seek injunctions against these companies if necessary," Brodsky said.

Talkback

I must be missing something here but since Micros appeared we have been writing programs to upload and download files which have been stored on different end media types from paper tape, cassette tape, floppy Disc etc for end user usage, even editing and resubmission all using telephone lines and fixed comms lines. where is edata that different, or if i can show the existence of my programs in the 70's and 80's can I get a slice?

via Facebook 22 January, 2004 11:47
Reply

These litigous patent holding companies are nothing more than leeches on ecommerce, and everyone who uses it, as they add NO value. They are demanding license fees for processes that are obvious in this age to any competant programmer. They are protecting no-one, and harming innovation, especially for smaller tech companies. Vote NO to EU software patents!! http://demo.ffii.org/letter.html

via Facebook 20 December, 2004 12:21
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