What are the patents?
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Thank you for asking that question. That was the primary reason I was going to read the article. Since it doesn’t explain that, I won’t bother.
Presumably patents relating to the implementation of bad management strategies
Maybe it’s a patent about painfully slow product development. They’re both pretty great at that.
Maybe the real patents are the friends we made along the way?
It's not mentioned in the filing, so we can only speculate.
...on March 18, 2024, Nokia Technologies sent us a letter indicating they believed that Reddit infringes certain of their patents. We will evaluate their claims.
That's all we've got to go on.
Can't seem to find that anywhere, but there's a totally organic and not at all sus post on Reddit calling Nokia patent trolls.
Good question.
Nokia has a patent on making things out of bricks, and the CEO of Reddit has a brick for a head. Case closed if you ask me.
This "article," if you can call it that, might as well have just been a tweet. There is 0 other relevant information like what the patents actually are.
It basically is a tweet. It's a quick post, which is designed for The Verge writers to write a quick thought or link to a story using a website they control instead of posting it on Elon's website.
Right but then why would I bother going to the verge anymore, when they link to a pay walled website? Why not go directly to that website? I am by no means advocating Twitter, but a tweet makes sense because it might reach an audience it normally wouldn't.
These comments are kind of silly. There are 0 details about the patient claim, but a bunch of people are picking sides based on how they feel about a brand name. Classic Lemmy.
Classic?
Classic.
That 'article' is garbage. The headline is more imformative than the actual article.
Nokia, of course, leaned into, ahem, patent licensing and networking equipment as its business.....
Who puts "ahem, in an informational article?
Also how is "patent licensing" a part their new buisness. They submit patents for whatever they're doing just like everyone else.
I hate patent trolls, but I will say "it couldn't have happened to a nicer company". I hope they both go broke on legal fees.
Genuine question: does Nokia have a bad history with patent trolling?
To me Nokia is just that old cell phone company that never quite made it even though they were iconic.
They’ve been bought and sold to the point that all that’s left is their patent portfolio. Their current business strategy appears to be “patent troll”. They’ve been holding industry telecommunications methods hostage instead of negotiating fair use fees.
Google “nokia lawsuit fair use”.
Why are we mad about an active tech company protecting their IP?
Patent trolls buy up more patents than any company could ever be able to use in actual products in order to make money sueing everyone under the sun or striking extortionate licensing deals.
Nokia Oyj is the part of Nokia that Microsoft didn't buy, and it is a telecom company that does its own RnD to this day, and is perfectly open to doing reasonable licensing deals. How tf does this make them a patent troll, unless this is over something dumb and frivolous, which we don't know yet?
We don’t even know what the suit is about, so I don’t know how anyone can pick a side about anything.
I'll be ready to flip the second it comes out if this suit is BS.
But I'm initially siding with Nokia Oyj here because they have a decent track record of actually doing the legwork on their tech, advancing the science, and sharing that with the industry through sane licensing.
Also the company is one of the success stories of my country, so maybe I'm biased, but then that hasn't stopped me from hating exploitative pieces of shit like Rovio and Supercell.
I’m just going to wait until I hear the details of the suit. At this point I don’t really understand the point of picking a side when we have almost no information.
Fair enough. And I'm absolutely far more interested in convincing people to just not jump to "patent troll" with this little to go on.
And preferably not spreading misinfo like "nokia is just a microsoft puppet" when this is about the part of the company that MS never even acquired.
How does their current logo "remind" is about their focus on patent licensing and telecom...?
Seems like they switched to this logo:
It does kind of feel like the logo of a consultancy/legal/finance group to me. But I could also imagine this looking decent when embossed onto a phone...
Some lines were taken already?
They wanted to write Aocia in fake Greek font.
Their logo is trash, but it's still so much better than the damned "KNI" (KIA) logo I see all around town.
I can't believe I have to defend reddit for once.
I’m not rushing to pick a side until someone posts the actual patient claim. Both of these parties suck, and I’m not giving anyone the benefit of the doubt.
Nah, fuck spez. Patent trolls suck, but I hope they all go down together.
LET THEM FIGHT!
How can they flex a networking parent on a SaaS? Doesn't that fall under some clause that's standard for doing business?