Intellectual Property Roundup

Government Study Calls For Tougher Patent Reviews (The Hill)
The Government Accountability Office (GAO) released a report recommending the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office should do more to ensure that unclear and overly broad patent applications are rejected.

Harvard Law Professor Lessig Sues Record Company, Claims Copyright Threat Violated Law (ABA Journal)
A Harvard law professor who is an expert on copyright issues decided to sue after an Australian record company accused him of infringement by using a French band’s song in a lecture posted on YouTube.

Apple is the Patent Trolls’ No. 1 Target, With 171 Suits Since 2009 (Fortune)
Of all the companies sued over the past five years by so-called non-practicing entities, or “patent trolls,” Apple got hit the most, with 171 patent lawsuits as of June 2013.

Microsoft Sues Israeli Businesses For Copyright Infringement (Globes)
Microsoft has filed lawsuits against five Israeli businesses for copyright infringement on the sale of computers with unlicensed Windows operating systems and unlicensed Office programs.


Keith Kupferschmid is General Counsel and SVP, Intellectual Property Policy & Enforcement at SIIA. Follow Keith on Twitter at @keithkup and sign up for the Intellectual Property Roundup weekly newsletter here.

Five publishers win Windows 8 apps with Stonewash

Wanderlust new Windows 8 app

Wanderlust new Windows 8 app

As mobile platforms proliferate publishers need to widen their reach – just like getting physical distribution in new retail outlets. Five publishers have won free app builds on Microsoft Windows 8 with digital publishing solutions provider Stonewash. All are now available to view on the Windows App Store. [Read more...]

IIS Breakthrough Recap: Titans of the New Information Order Chasing Each Other

Written by Deborah Richman, Consultant, Zions Bank

Deborah Richman, Consultant, Zions Bank

What do titans like Apple, Amazon, Facebook, Google, Microsoft and possibly Twitter have in common? Of course, they offer platforms where users access and share content. As titans, they also aspire to become each other – while currently delivering different value from their platforms.

During the Information Industry Summit, key publisher and digital leaders offered clear-eyed views of these companies and their intrinsic rather than market value. “There are more interesting things than making a ton of money in the last quarter,” declared Esther Dyson, EDVentures principal.

The titans were not getting judged by form factors, such as the computing, mobile or operating systems. While that’s important to the companies and shareholders, the IIS leaders focused on how titans should improve their connections to users.

Sell people a mirror

Most of the titans know they should personalize their offerings and “show you what you didn’t know you wanted to know,” said David Kirkpatrick, Senior Technology & Internet Editor at Fortune. It comes down to algorithms based on their platforms.

Of course, Facebook leads in capturing social connections and friend links. Google is trying to keep up through its own G+ social circle. Yet they are challenged by defining relevant content. Friend or content sources may be throttled or controlled through personalized Facebook feeds or Google search results.

Will the titans succeed in selling mirrors? Will these mirrors show relevant content and connections? Esther Dyson wondered “how far these companies can go before they start annoying their customers.”

Use commercial insights

Google, Apple and Amazon bring powerful, highly-scaled advantages due to their search, shopping and/or buying functions. Google’s search and online advertising hegemony not only creates value for consumers and businesses, but also keeps those shopping behaviors tight to its vest.

Meanwhile, Apple and Amazon bring their own online retailing powers. Apple makes so-called razor sales, offering media and other apps through its operating system. Amazon makes money from its blade sales, along with enterprise efforts. It will be interesting to see how these titans take further advantage of their “big data” capabilities regarding buyers, products and services, and credit cards.

Future of the titans

All the titans grew with their founders at the helm. While some, like Apple and Microsoft, have next generations in charge, Amazon, Facebook and Google are run by their founder entrepreneurs.

Dyson voiced her concerns about the titans’ abilities, explaining “they’re all really badly managed inside.” By contrast, Forbes CEO Michael Perlis felt the titans would continue “making each other better. They all have aspirations to [become] each other.”

Thomas Glocer, ex-Thomson Reuters, wasn’t sure how the titans would work together or with other content providers in the future. He asked, “who’s in front, behind, the Trojan horse?”

Impact on publishers

Perlis, from Forbes, explained that consumers aren’t that interested in who wins. As a publisher, he has different content distribution or advertising relationships with all the titans. “We have experienced collapse, avoided relapse [and] don’t relax. You can’t just coast,” he cautioned.

Glocer shared his concern about living “in a world at multiple speeds including repressive regimes, and platforms. I do worry about the lowest common denominator where the platforms [have] content geared for wherever.”

“Everyone will have to constantly re-evaluate paths,” said Fortune’s Kirkpatrick. “The pace of change requires every [publishing] company to think of themselves like a software company. Be unbelievably curious and not afraid.”

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Debby Richman spent her formative years at D&B, leading the reference business from print to online and web offerings. She has since held digital leadership roles at Overstock, About.com, Looksmart, Starz, Collarity and Zions Bank.

 

Mobile Platform Bio by Nate Philip, SIIA

SIIA All About Mobile is all about the next step in the transformation of the software industry!
For more information on SIIA All About Mobile, or how to submit your own video content to the blog, contact Nate.

Mircrosoft: A Sense of Urgency for Software Companies

Partnering for Success in the Cloud

For more Cloud Computing resources from Microsoft, visit www.microsoft.com/splussincubation

Mobility Webinar: Navigating the New Mobile Application Development and Distribution Models

With over 7 different mobile operating system and an everchanging device landscape, software developers face numerous challenges in designing for the mobile world. Should you build natively for a particular OS, should you design for the web or both? How many operating systems make sense? What is the role of the carrier in this new environment? This session will discuss what companies should consider when designing for a fragmented landscape.

Panelists:
Anthony Deighton, Senior Vice President, Products, QlikView
Mike Kirkup, Director, Developer Relations, Research In Motion
Anand Iyer, Senior Product Manager, Windows Phone Developer Team, Microsoft