This is just a case of IBM's left hand not knowing what the right hand is
doing. An official representative of IBM gave statements to the committee
that their contributions were unencumbered. If he honestly was acting in his
capacity as a representative of IBM, and had the authority to make that
statement, then that statement IS permission equivalent to a royalty-free
license to use the patent.
Going through court to prove this could, of course, take years and millions
of dollars, and nobody's going to use the standard until it's resolved, which
is why everybody's groaning that big blue is being either evil or really
really stupid by not just giving in on this one.
It's a PR black eye for IBM ("We're big, we're blue, we're dumb") but doesn't
change the nature of the legal arguments...
Any time ANYBODY sues you, no matter how frivolous, it could easily be long
and exensive. That's why you countersue for damages and get them to pay your
costs for the trial if you win, plus punitive damages, plus pain and
suffering, plus a stupidity tax, plus...)
This topic's wandering a bit far afield. CC: list trimmed...
Rob
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