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Updated from earlier today...

BY PAUL MALONEY
Firms in Internet radio and other industries that make use
of audio or video delivery over the Internet may soon need to
secure new licenses for that technology. Newport Beach, CA-based
Acacia
Media Technologies says it owns patents on several popular
systems used in Net radio and other fields, and is aiming to enter
license agreements in which webcasters would pay to use their Digital
Media Transmission, or "DMT" technology.
Top-rated webcaster radioio
has made public a January 28th letter from Acacia (a subsidiary
of Acacia Research Corporation), which informs the webcaster that
after an analysis conducted by its engineers, Acacia has determined
that radioio services "are covered by DMT patents," and
would be subject to a licensing agreement.
Included with the letter is a proposed contract which sets
the royalty term at three-quarters of one-percent
(0.75%) of a licensee's "music related" revenue.
According to Acacia, DMT technology covers "the transmission
and receipt of digital audio and digital video content, commonly
known as audio on-demand, video on-demand, and audio/video streaming,
and is supported by 5 U.S. and 17 international patents. "
Mike Roe, president of ioMedia Partners,
owner of radioio, thinks Acacia's
assertions and demands are ridiculous. Roe accuses Acacia of
selectively enforcing its patent rights, targeting the "low-hanging
fruit" of small businesses like his that don't have the resources
for protracted legal battles, while ignoring more formidable foes
like Microsoft
and AOL.
"They know that the fee that they wish to impose is insignificant
compared to the expenses that I would incur in a legal battle. It's
extortion," Roe (pictured at right) commented in a press statement
released this morning.
Senior Vice President General Counsel at Acacia Rob
Berman told RAIN that while a deal struck in December
with Radio
Free Virgin for the
company's DMT technology is in fact the only successfully-secured
license with a webcaster so far, it won't be the last.
In response to Roe, Berman insisted his company is not
targeting anyone.
"Being a public company, we won't comment on specific
companies we're in negotiations with," Berman told RAIN
early this afternoon, "we have indeed contacted small, medium,
and large companies in the Internet radio field, as well as in other
industries."
Acacia announced today that they have licensed the DMT tech
to a Mexican company called Grupo
Pegaso.
"We are a technology licensing company -- this is what
we do," Berman explained. "Our engineers analyze a company's
media delivery systems, and if we think the service uses technology
for which we hold the patents, we contact the company, and show
them exactly why we think that. We'll show you how you're infringing,
we'll give you -- for free -- a document you need to show you what
we're saying. We give you everything you need to make a smart business
decision on whether to enter into a license agreement with us or
not.
He added, "It's unfortunate that Mr. Roe thought it
was better to send out a press release than to spend the time conducting
the due diligence necessary for a smart business decision."
(The visual below is an engineering drawing taken from Acacia Media
Technology's site, displaying a web site streaming to a PC as a
communication system for which Acacia owns patents.)

At the end of 2001, Acacia bought out a company called Greenwich
Information Technologies, of which it had already owned a share.
It was while working for this company that technologists Paul
Yurt and Lee Brown
devised the systems for which Acacia now owns the patents in question.
By mid-2002, after a period of research and preparation, Acacia
began approaching companies in the adult entertainment industry
for licensing.
According to an ExtremeTech
report from December 20 (here),
the company had sued at least 25 adult entertainment companies in
later part of last year.
Other webcasters, fearing they may be targeted next by Acacia,
have suggested that the company has no claims against Internet radio
operators, who enter licensing deals for their transmission technology
with companies like Real
Networks and Microsoft for its Windows
Media tech. A "Frequently Asked Questions" document
included with the Acacia contract, however, says that these agreements
do not mean "certain uses
of the products" won't infringe the patent rights of others.
"It's the user of tech that is liable under patent law,"
added Berman. "There are several large companies that actually
cite our patents in their patent documentation, like Real."
Acacia Research itself was once a player in the Internet
radio field. It invested nearly $10 million into the now-defunct
Soundbreak.com. The webcaster
closed in February, 2001.
The Acacia letter to radioio and the enclosed contract are
available in Adobe Acrobat (.pdf) format on radioio's website here.
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The lesson here is: consult a good patent lawyer. Companies
like Radio Free Virgin and some of the adult entertainment groups
might just find it easier to pay what amounts to a pretty small
toll (0.75% of revenue, which means if you're not making money,
you don't pay!!) than to bother with it in court.
On the other hand, these patents seem awfully vague and
general. Look at the engineering diagram in the body of the
story: it looks like it could represent any sort of digital
transmission of compressed audio or video. Are they saying they
have a patent on the entire idea? Isn't that kind of like Bill
Gates patenting "ones" and "zeroes" (from
The Onion, here)?
On the third hand, I'm not going to pretend for a moment
that I'm intimately familiar with Acacia's claims, and I'm hardly
an expert on patent law. Berman supported the validity of the
claims by stressing that not only does the company have the
five U.S. patents, but 17 other countries deemed the idea which
Acacia now owns worthy of patent protection. -- PM
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From the San Jose Mercury News: "In the days
since Columbia broke up over Texas, the e-mail box at TaZa
Radio has become
a Silicon Valley version of the memorials rising outside the NASA
space centers in Houston and Florida. Instead of flowers, the Internet
radio station's listeners are leaving messages of mourning and admiration
for Kalpana Chawla, the India-born
astronaut who perished Saturday with six others.
Krishna and Ram
Bapu, brothers who started TaZa Radio to help Indians
around the world connect with their homeland, have been reading
the messages as fast as they can.
"'People have been bombarding us, trying to express
their feelings,' says Krishna, who adds
that e-mails are averaging 450 a day, up from about 200 on a typical
day...
"Chawla, who was 41, came to the United States from
India. She came to pursue her goal. She persevered despite growing
up in a time and place that sometimes discouraged women from dreaming
big dreams. Chawla persevered and became a pioneer in a field of
pioneers. Her
success was a very big deal to many Indians, including many who
also came to the United States to follow their dreams...
"Krishna and Ram Bapu had planned to interview Chawla
soon for their weekly show 'Listen to Achievers.' Today, they are
scrambling to produce a two-part remembrance that will air instead."
Read this entire article from the San Jose Mercury News
online here.
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