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I am a co-founder of Notches, an early stage startup currently based in NYC. We are building a free, open reviews network that anyone can participate in and anyone can build on top of. You can find out more on our official blog.

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  • Friday Fun: The perfect car for Manhattan?

    The perfect car for Manhattan - or just an extra from the Transformers movie?
  • How is IP split between separating founders?

    AskTheVC addresses the question of what happens to IP rights when the founders go their separate ways . "Bottom line, you have a strong incentive (as does your former partner) to settle this amicably, otherwise, you both are going to be worse off." I thought it was worthwhile to dig into this a little further, though, and discuss what happens with the various IP rights a startup might acquire. Often you'll hear 3 founders say "we want everything split 3 ways", but joint ownership of IP can be tricky. Rights and duties with joint ownership are poorly misunderstood, even by many lawyers. More importantly, the rights and obligations of each owner vary by the type of intellectual property and from country to country. A joint owner of copyright in the US has different rights from a joint owner in England, and a joint owner of copyright has different rights from a joint owner of a patent. Both copyright and patent rights vest in the original author(s) or inventor(s) respectively, and both can...
  • Licensing the Office 2007 UI - what is Microsoft's IP strategy?

    Jensen Harris announced that the Office 2007 Ribbon UI can be licensed . For the last year or so, one of the questions I've been asked again and again has been: "Can I use the new Office user interface in my own product?" I have to be honest - I'm a bit baffled at this whole thing. Note, they are not providing any common controls for the Ribbon. Rather, they are "licensing ... intellectual property rights in the UI (which cover both design and functionality) and offering a comprehensive Design Guidelines document that is a roadmap for developers implementing the UI." The license is free as long as you follow the guidelines, and is intended "[f]or those that want to build their own UI that takes advantage of our design guidelines." The reason, as Jensen describes, is that "the new Office user interface was a huge investment by Microsoft and the resulting intellectual property belongs to Microsoft." The next question, of course, are what rights does Microsoft actually have with the Ribbon...
  • Netflix sues Blockbuster over business method patents

    NetFlix is suing Blockbuster over two business method patents for having a monthly subscription fee to rent DVDs and to maintain a queue of DVDs to rent subsequently. This is of particular interest given the slew of new rental services such as GameFly and BookFree that use the NetFlix model. ( I use GameFly given the high cost of XBOX 360 games ). The preamble specifically refers to renting movies, but I don't know whether that language would be considered limiting. I would love to hear Dennis and Stephen (and anyone else!) weigh in on this. NetFlix also has a patent on their mailer envelope .
    Posted Apr 10 2006, 07:37 AM by Tim with | with no comments
  • Balthesar's "Rich-Media Application" patent

    Interesting article in Information Week about another broad patent which may lead to a RIM-like showdown. Another big patent fight may be looming. The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office has granted a broad patent that could force tens of thousands of businesses to pay royalties for processes that have become standard at many companies. The patent awarded to Neil Balthaser and his tiny San Francisco Web-site development company, Balthaser Online, covers the use of rich-media applications over the Internet. The patent--issued on Valentine's Day--covers all rich-media technology implementations, including those that employ tools such as Flash, Flex, Java, Ajax, and XAML, when the rich-media application is accessed by any device over the Internet. Balthaser doesn't claim his patent covers the tools themselves, only the rich-media Internet apps they help create. Examples range from interior decorating software to Google Earth to streaming audio. Read the issued patent . According to the article...
  • RIM's long overdue settlement with NTP

    The big news on Friday was the long-overdue settlement between RIM and NTP . RIM paid $612.5M, including $450M already in escrow, to settle all infringement claims and for a perpetual license going forward. Dennis Crouch says the war is over and posts an relevant reader comment. Actually, I’m rather sorry to see this settlement. All the media hype and nonsense, plus the fears of politicians of losing their service, seemed to be greatly contributing to patent reform momentum and to the Supreme Court taking more patent cases. But at least the belated but initially effective RIM reexaminations of the patents in suit served to publicly demonstrate reexamination effectiveness in lowering settlement expectations. And without all the lawsuit publicity the reportedly cited obscure prior art Norwegian university publications would probably never have surfaced. Like most of you, I've said many times that there was virtually no chance of a shutdown. There are generally two remedies that interest NTP...