-- Leo's gemini proxy

-- Connecting to gemini.techrights.org:1965...

-- Connected

-- Sending request

-- Meta line: 20 text/gemini;lang=en-GB

● 03.20.10


●● Patents Roundup: Android/Linux Defended by HTC; Monsanto and Ghana


Posted in Apple, Bill Gates, GNU/Linux, Google, Microsoft, Patents at 6:13 am by Dr. Roy Schestowitz


Cher Wang, Chairwoman of HTC (source)


Summary: News about patents where the system has gone awry (the Apple-HTC case and GMO in Africa)


●●● Android/Linux


YESTERDAY we highlighted HTC's press release where it responded to Apple’s lawsuit against Android [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6] (and few argue Chrome OS too, which makes GNU/Linux a target as well). There is some press coverage based on this press release, including:


HTC's press release

1

2

3

4

5

6


HTC ‘Disagrees Strongly’ With Apple’s Patent ClaimsHTC to Fight Apple Patent SuitsHTC Responds to Apple’s Patent Lawsuit, Rejects AccusationsHTC Vows To Fight Apple SuitHTC fires back at Apple patent complaintHTC to fight against Apple’s lawsuitHTC Feels Insulted by Steve JobsHTC: Hey Apple, You Are So WrongHTC Vows to Defend Against Apple Patent SuitHTC Boss Slams Apple LawsuitHTC ‘Disagrees’ With Apple Suit, Vows FightHTC claims innovations long before Apple’s patentsNokia and Apple begin long haul to court over patents disputeHTC hits Apple with wet noodlesHTC says it will fight Apple suit


Microsoft supports Apple’s action [1, 2, 3], which is already casting some shadow on Android. Take this new article for example. It’s about Virgin Media and it says:


1

2

3

↺ this new article


> Google launched its first Android phone in September 2008, and since then it’s become a favoured platform for smartphone enthusiasts. Earlier this month Apple took steps to sue HTC over its range of smartphones with Google software over allegations of infringing hardware and software patents, but it’s a platform that only seems to be gaining momentum over time.


Now that Google prepares a product for television viewing (it uses Android), one might wish to recall Microsoft's recent lawsuit against TiVo (which uses Linux). The following news may be of interest:


Microsoft's recent lawsuit against TiVo

↺ following news


> Verizon Figures If It’s Already Involved In A Patent Lawsuit With TiVo, Why Not Sue Cablevision For Its DVR Too[...]Ah, the patent wars. As you’re probably aware, TiVo spent years fighting a big legal battle with EchoStar/Dish Networks over some patents on DVR technology. TiVo won big, and then immediately turned its patent lawyers on some other companies including Verizon. In Verizon’s response to TiVo’s lawsuit, it went nuclear back, accusing TiVo of violating Verizon’s patents on DVR technology — including a patent that the world’s biggest patent hoarding firm, Intellectual Ventures, gave Verizon for the purpose of being used against TiVo.


●●● Seeds


A new article from Salon sheds light on the effect of genetic engineering (read: patents encumbrances) on Ghana:


↺ new article from Salon


> In the case of GMOs we are dealing with a remarkable concentration of intellectual property ownership in just a handful of corporations. Like all well-endowed corporate actors, these companies do not shy from vigorously lobbying governments in favor of putting into place place legal frameworks that are designed to maximize profits and minimize caution.[...]If you google Ghana and genetically modified crops, you will very quickly run into the name Walter Alhassan, a consultant for the Accra-based Forum for Agricultural Research in Africa (FARA), and a strong advocate for the position that Ghana’s government “needs to speed up the passage of the Biosafety Bill to the global trend to improve agriculture and food security.”


Glyn Moody added (based on the above):


↺ added


> I’m conscious that I’ve written a lot of negative posts about genetically-modified organisms on this blog. That might lead readers to believe I’m against them. That’s not the case: I am naturally pro-technology, and GMOs are potentially an important tool for addressing many of the world’s most pressing problems. But I have my concerns, and I was pleased to find that Salon’s Andrew Leonard not only shares them, but has expressed them rather well: I don’t actually have a position on whether GMOs are by definition good or bad for the environment or human health or even the challenge of alleviating hunger in the developing world. My basic stance, in fact, is pro-science: I believe technological advances have greatly advanced human health and affluence, and will continue to do so, if properly regulated. My concern re GMOs has always stemmed from a profound skepticism that profit-seeking corporations can be trusted to responsibly serve the public good. One need look only at the constant stream of reports detailing unethical and criminal behavior by major pharmaceutical companies to realize that this is hardly a hypothetical concern. In the case of GMOs we are dealing with a remarkable concentration of intellectual property ownership in just a handful of corporations. Like all well-endowed corporate actors, these companies do not shy from vigorously lobbying governments in favor of putting into place place legal frameworks that are designed to maximize profits and minimize caution.


Earlier this month, Greenpeace revealed that Switzerland stays away from genetic engineering. What do they know that others do not know? It’s possible that genetically engineered crops are overall not better, they just happen to be owned by a corporation that markets them as “better” (so it’s privatisation of nature).


↺ revealed that Switzerland stays away from genetic engineering


> The Swiss Parliament has just extended its ban on the cultivation of genetically engineered (GE) plants for three more years. Originally enacted in 2005, Switzerland will stay GE-free until at least 2013.


As we pointed out before, with its support and investments in Monsanto, the Gates Foundation continues to show its patent agenda that puts African lives at risk (Microsoft does the same type of thing that creates dependence). Bill Gates’ attempts to promote Monsanto in India are still met with skepticism and there is even a lawsuit because Monsanto is a pact of bullies who spread experimental, patents-encumbered seeds just to expand their monopoly. We’ve covered the subject in many posts, such as those that we list below. █


↺ the Gates Foundation


Related posts (about Monsanto):


Gates-Backed Company Accused of Monopoly Abuse and InvestigatedHow the Gates Foundation Privatises AfricaReader’s Article: The Gates Foundation and Genetically-Modified FoodsMonsanto: The Microsoft of FoodSeeds of Doubt in Bill Gates InvestmentsGates Foundation Accused of Faking/Fabricating Data to Advance Political GoalsMore Dubious Practices from the Gates FoundationVideo Transcript of Vandana Shiva on Insane PatentsExplanation of What Bill Gates’ Patent Investments Do to Developing WorldBlack Friday Film: What the Bill Gates-Backed Monsanto Does to Animals, Farmers, Food, and Patent SystemsGates Foundation Looking to Destroy Kenya with Intellectual MonopoliesYoung Napoleon Comes to Africa and Told OffBill Gates Takes His GMO Patent Investments/Experiments to IndiaGates/Microsoft Tax Dodge and Agriculture Monopoly RevisitedBeyond the ‘Public Relations’UK Intellectual Monopoly Office (UK-IPO) May be Breaking the Law“Boycott Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation in China”


Share in other sites/networks: These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages.


Permalink  Send this to a friend


Permalink

↺ Send this to a friend



----------

Techrights

➮ Sharing is caring. Content is available under CC-BY-SA.

-- Response ended

-- Page fetched on Sat May 18 18:09:10 2024