The week’s news that courts had ruled against HTC in favor of Apple was a tidy little victory for Apple. But HTC is just an initial skirmish in a much larger fight. The real war is against Android, and if Apple wins that, we’ll all lose.
The iPhone was like nothing that came before. And Apple should be able to protect its innovations and intellectual property. But the Cupertino Crew doesn’t just want to do that; it wants to kill Android. It wants Google’s mobile OS to go away. No settlements. No licenses. Dead. Jobs said as much, very explicitly.
There are two avenues Apple can take to achieve this victory: the marketplace and the courts. I’d be all for Apple winning fair and square in the marketplace. It’s okay for consumers to decide the victor in this fight. But it’s not okay for a handful of judges and lawyers to dictate the direction of technology.
For Apple to win in the marketplace—and I mean total dominance here, the kind of thermonuclear war that an apoplectic Jobs described in Walter Isaacson’s biography—it would require both innovation on a massive scale, and real price competitiveness.
Realistically, that’s not going to happen. It’s already impossible, at least in the next three years. Android’s foothold with consumers is already too strong. Its phones are too inexpensive, and Google and its device manufacturing partners are too committed to Android for it to fail completely.
So that leaves the courts, where Apple keeps pressing its case—largely against device manufacturers. That’s not okay. The patent system is broken. Deeply, and profoundly so. The system that was created to foster and protect innovation, now serves to strangle it dead. Apple has real innovation. And real invention. So why act like a cheap patent troll, taking advantage of a body of under-qualified legal professionals to make decisions about which technologies consumers will be able to use? Does that bother anyone else?
Granted, the iPhone was a sea change. So was the iPad. And Apple ought to be able to protect the innovations and intellectual property that set those devices apart. If Apple was only competing on iron-clad patents—if it was just forcing its competitors to think way out side of the box, that would be great for innovation. But it’s not. Apple is playing the same stupid games everyone does in the patent wars today.
A little bit about patents: For something to be patentable, it must be (or at least it should be) novel and non-obvious. You should not be able to find existing examples of it in prior art—in other words, when you look at the history of similar products, whatever you’re patenting needs to be unique.
Now, certainly, some of Apple’s good stuff is novel. No one had ever seen anything like the iPhone prior to 2007. Yet clearly some of the things Apple is gunning to protect are, well, obvious.
What Apple won the rights to in this most recent HTC case, was basically a patent on the act of recognising patterns and acting on them—like when you tap on a phone number in an email to launch your dialer and make a call.
Thing is, Google was recognising numerical strings (including phone numbers) and tailoring search results to them long before the iPhone came out. Dating back to at least 2006 (maybe earlier) you could enter a UPS tracking code into Google, and it would parse that number, ping UPS and return tracking information at the top of the search results. It would do the same thing with phone numbers. It basically did everything the iPhone did, short of make calls.
Was it non-obvious for a mobile phone to do what a search engine was doing? I don’t know. I certainly think it’s debatable, yet this is the issue that Apple just beat HTC on.
Likewise, the iPad also had many novel features—like that genius subtle backside curve that makes the device so easy to pick up off a flat surface. But if you look at what Apple wants to get Samsung to drop—the bezel and the rounded corners and the rectangular shape and even the color—it’s clear that Apple wants Samsung to try to make something that goes against good design principles established well before Apple rolled out the iPad.
I think a lot of this can be blamed on Apple’s past history. It lost big in the courts once before. And it’s determined not to do so again. In some ways, Apple is becoming the George Wallace of technology companies.
In 1958 George Wallace lost the Democratic gubernatorial primary in Alabama to his opponent John Patterson, who campaigned on a more virulently racist pro-segregation platform than Wallace had. In response, Wallace said he’d never be out-segged again. Nor was he. In 1962, Wallace stormed into the Governor’s office and national stage on a campaign of “segregation now, segregation tomorrow, segregation forever.”
Apple’s Wallace moment came in 1994, when it lost a massive legal battle after the courts ruled that it could not prevent Microsoft and HP from shipping computers with graphical user interfaces that used the desktop metaphor. Apple argued that its copyrights were being violated, but the court decided Apple’s copyrights weren’t afforded patent-like protections
(Of course, it didn’t help that Apple wasn’t the first company to ship a computer with a graphical user interface, mouse and a desktop metaphor. That was Xerox, which had all that on its Alto. In fact, the original plan for the Macintosh business unit was written surreptitiously on a Xerox Alto during off-hours at Xerox PARC. So it goes.)
But something changed in between the time the Macintosh was released in 1984 and when the iPhone rolled out in 2007: software patents. They weren’t widely applied until the 1990s. This happened to co-incide quite nicely with Steve Jobs’ return to Apple. And by the end of the first decade of the twenty-first century, it was game on.
And so, in 2007, when Steve Jobs announced the iPhone, after scoring big points with the crowd on the iPhone’s features, he did a little endzone dance for the competition, crowing that the company had patented the Bejesus out of its fancy new phone. It had learned its lesson in fighting Microsoft on copyright rather than patents, and was clearly determined to out-patent anyone else in the then-nascent smartphone market.
Now we’re seeing the fruits of those patents. They’ve afforded Apple some significant victories. But if you look at the past as prologue, as Apple seems to be doing, I don’t think it’s so clear that it would ultimately be good for Apple to kill Android in the courts. And it certainly won’t help consumers.
Try this thought experiment: Imagine Apple had been successful in its suit against Microsoft. Imagine Microsoft had been prohibited from shipping Windows 2.0 or Windows 3.0—or, by God, Windows 95—without licensing the hell out of it from Apple. Where would we be?
Without Windows there to pressure Apple to Build Something Better, things would be very different in Cupertino today. After it lost its case with Microsoft and saw its market share dwindle to nothing, Apple had to innovate like crazy.
Had Apple won, it never would have had to transition from the System 7-era to Mac OS X. It never would have had to buy NeXT. It never would have had to bring prodigal son Steve Jobs back into the fold. Without Mac OS X, there would be no iOS. And without iOS, no iPhone, no iPad.
George Wallace used segregation as a bludgeon, quite effectively, to win elections. But today, it’s clear that he ultimately injured himself, Alabama, and the nation as a whole for very many years to come.
I’m all for seeing Apple defend its intellectual property. But Android is a healthy force in the marketplace. If Apple can destroy it there, more power to Tim Cook and company. But if Apple beats Android in the courts rather than the marketplace—if it out-segs Google instead of out-innovating it—that may be great for Apple, but it will be bad for society, bad for technology, and ultimately bad for Apple.
And of course, the great irony is that so much of the amazing innovation that Apple pulled off over the past three decades can be traced back to its willingness to swipe ideas from Xerox. Steve jobs was fond of quoting Picasso, saying “good artists copy, great artists steal.” If Apple does succeed in crushing Android in the courts, where will it get its next great idea? My guess is that it won’t come from a lawyer.









Who exactly are the “body of under-qualified legal professionals” mentioned in this article?
I hope the author of the article isn’t referring to patent attorneys who are in no way “under-qualified”…
Welcome you are, young padawan, in rejecting the ways of the dark side you have a great journey begun.
A market monopoly would definitely not go down well for Apple – anyone remember the European Union vs Microsoft? Patent trolling HAS to be a case for anti-competitive practices!(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/European_Union_Microsoft_competition_case)
Great article, very insightful, after this and your Twitter hijack shenanigans you have won not only my respect, but I will also be looking forward to your next articles.
A shame when a dead man’s hatred of his competitors causes such a sad state of affairs. As you point out, if “great artists steal” then the so-called imitation by its competitors should be seen as the greatest form of flattery.
As usual, the end consumer ends up worse for any decision, creating a lack of choice of different products and not prompting companies to innovate to succeed.
Apple are on the way out so I wouldn’t worry about it, without Steve Jobs they will lose their fan base slowly as Apple was Steve Jobs and fans brought the products because of him. Everyone else is just buying them because they’re in fashion thanx to the fans. Now they have lost their leader they will struggle to go in the direction they need to.
10 years from now Apple will be nothing.
I agree, even pokemon managed to die to some extent.
A few iphone beaters every year and the launch of the new apple is going to seem less and less important to the media.
Once they release a new iphone that is worse then current andriod offerings then they are on the way out.
Wait a second…..
dos andriod have speling chek?
Wow a well written article on Gizmodo?! Congratulations Sir. I do love how all the tech sites are calling this a big win for Apple even though HTC already have a work-around ready to go, and have until April(?) next year to implement it..
It is a big win for Apple of they eat into the profits of HTC due to the payments they may be due!
This article is a joke.
Allow me to fix it….
“The week’s news that courts had ruled against Android in favor of Apple was a tidy little victory for Apple. But HTC is just an initial skirmish in a much larger fight. The real war is against Android, and if Android wins that, we’ll all lose.
Android was alot like the iPhone that came before. Android should be able to steal its innovations and intellectual property. But the Google Crew doesn’t just want to do that; it wants to kill Apple. It wants Apple’s mobile OS to go away. No settlements. No licenses. Dead. Schmidt suggests as much very explicitly.
There are two avenues Android can take to achieve this victory: the marketplace and the courts. I’d be all for Android winning fair and square in the marketplace. It’s okay for consumers to decide the victor in this fight. But it’s not okay for a handful of judges and lawyers to dictate the direction of technology.
For Android to win in the marketplace—and I mean total dominance here, the kind of thermonuclear war that an apoplectic Jobs described in Walter Isaacson’s biography—it would require both innovation on a massive scale, and real price competitiveness. Which it actually just doesn’t have.
Realistically, that’s not going to happen. It’s already impossible, at least in the next three years. Android’s sudo foothold with consumers is tentative at best. Its phones are too expensive, and Google and its device manufacturing partners are too half arsed and lacking in innoovation for Android completely succeed.
So that leaves the courts, where Android keeps pressing its case—largely against Apple. That’s not okay. The patent system is broken. Deeply, and profoundly so. The system that was created to foster and protect innovation, now serves to strangle it dead. Apple has real innovation. And real invention. That is why they act like a cheap patent trolls, taking advantage of a body of under-qualified legal professionals to make decisions about which technologies consumers will be able to use. Does that bother anyone else?
Granted, the iPhone was a sea change. So was the iPad. And Apple ought to be able to protect the innovations and intellectual property that set those devices apart. Apple is only competing on iron-clad patents— it is just forcing its competitors to think way out side of the box, that is great for innovation. Apple is playing the same stupid games everyone does in the patent wars today, including Google.
A little bit about patents: For something to be patentable, it must be (or at least it should be) novel and non-obvious. You should not be able to find existing examples of it in prior art—in other words, when you look at the history of similar products, whatever you’re patenting needs to be unique.
Now, certainly, some of Android’s good stuff is novel, but not alot. Everyone had seen this stuff on the iPhone since 2007. Yet clearly some of the things Android is gunning to protect are, well, obviously stolen from Apple.
Thing is, Google was recognising numerical strings (including phone numbers) and tailoring search results to them long before the iPhone came out. Dating back to at least 2006 (maybe earlier) you could enter a UPS tracking code into Google, and it would parse that number, ping UPS and return tracking information at the top of the search results. It would do the same thing with phone numbers. It basically did everything the iPhone did, short of make calls, except not as well and intuitive
Was it non-obvious for a mobile phone to do what a search engine was doing? Yes. I certainly don’t think it’s debatable, this is why Apple just beat HTC .
Likewise, the iPad also had many novel features—like that genius subtle backside curve that makes the device so easy to pick up off a flat surface. But if you look at what Android on Samsung is—the bezel and the rounded corners and the rectangular shape and even the color—it’s clear that Android and Samsung are trying to make something that looks exactly like the iPad
I think a lot of this can be blamed on Android’s past history. It lost big in the courts once before, because Google likes stealing sh1t. And it’s determined to do so again. In some ways, Android is becoming the George Wallace of technology companies.
In 1958 George Wallace lost the Democratic gubernatorial primary in Alabama to his opponent John Patterson, who campaigned on a more virulently racist pro-segregation platform than Wallace had. In response, Wallace said he’d never be out-segged again. Nor was he. In 1962, Wallace stormed into the Governor’s office and national stage on a campaign of “segregation now, segregation tomorrow, segregation forever.”
But something changed in between the time the Macintosh was released in 1984 and when the iPhone rolled out in 2007: software patents. They weren’t widely applied until the 1990s. This happened to co-incide quite nicely with Steve Jobs’ return to Apple. And by the end of the first decade of the twenty-first century, it was game on.
And so, in 2007, when Steve Jobs announced the iPhone, after scoring big points with the crowd on the iPhone’s features, he did a little endzone dance for the competition, crowing that the company had patented the Bejesus out of its fancy new phone. It had learned its lesson in fighting Microsoft on copyright rather than patents, and was clearly determined to out-patent anyone else in the then-nascent smartphone market.
Now we’re seeing the fruits of those patents. They’ve afforded Apple some significant victories. But if you look at the past as prologue, as Android seems to be doing, I think it’s so clear that it would ultimately be good for Apple to kill Android in the courts. And it certainly will help consumers from buying Android crap.
Try this thought experiment: Imagine Android would be successful in a suit against Apple. Imagine Apple had been prohibited from shipping iOS4 or any iOS 5—or, by God, OSX—without licensing the hell out of it. Where would we be? How sad would the world be without the iPad or iPhone?
Without Apple there to pressure Android to Build Something Better, things would be very different in Mountain View, California today. After it lost its case with Apple and saw its market stagnate, Android must now innovate like crazy. Which it is’nt.
If Android would win, we would never see innovations the like of Apples’ System 7-era to Mac OS X. We would never see the likes of someone like Steve Jobs again. Without Mac OS X, there would be no iOS. And without iOS, no iPhone, no iPad. There would be no Apple.
George Wallace used segregation as a bludgeon, quite effectively, to win elections. But today, it’s clear that he ultimately injured himself, Alabama, and the nation as a whole for very many years to come.
I’m all for seeing Android stealing intellectual property. But Apple is a healthy force in the marketplace. If Apple can destroy Android there, more power to Tim Cook and company. But if Android beats Apple in the courts rather than the marketplace—if it out-segs Apple instead of out-innovating it—that may be great for Android, but it will be bad for society, bad for technology, and obviously bad for Apple.
And of course, the great irony is that so much of the amazing innovation that Apple pulled off over the past three decades can be traced back to its willingness to swipe ideas from Xerox. Steve jobs was fond of quoting Picasso, saying “good artists copy, great artists steal.” If Android does succeed in crushing Apple in the courts, where will it get its next great idea to steal from? My guess is that it won’t come from a lawyer. It will come from Apple’s Intellectual Property. If they still exist. “
TOKEN!!! – Behave or I shall have to get Kat to put you on the naughty step. On top of which Santa won’t bring you any presents.
Sorry, here it is…
http://blog.gazelle.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/11/Android-Santa.png
I wasn’t actually trolling. Well, maybe a little
The point of that post, was to show, that, a well written article can go both ways.
While I do get what all the Apple nay sayers are on about, and in fact, agree on most parts. There is currently, on alot of tech sites, a mountain of Apple hate. And alot of what I edited made sense (alot didnt
) but still, even though I think Apple are a bunch douches with their patent cases. They do have a right to protect the IP. It may have gone over the top with the stupid patents theyre defending. But, let’s just be honest for one second here. If they’re not doing it, someone else will be.
So, us, the consumer that is, are left caught between all this. In any case, before I digress too much. Admittedly, this did star out as a troll, and after rereading my work of genius… I dont agree with this article at all. I think Mat let his article digress into Apple bashing rather than the meat of what it should be. That is, the laws regarding patents and intellectual property. While touching only on it briefly. It did come across as an Apple slag fest. Which, to be honest. Is justified. But the same can be said for Google/HTC et al.
Oh
and Merry Gizmas everyone !!!
Wait, does that mean Kat is Santa?
I know you weren’t really making a big statement here (other then a slight troll) but Android does show “real price competitiveness”. It’s the reason I’m pro android. The price Apple would see me pay for a phone or tablet is about what I would spend on a laptop (a good laptop for me). Apple would be quite happy to see me priced out of technology.
Fair points xiandel. I can’t really argue with you on that. Apple’s pricing do tend to lean towards folk of bluer blood than ours :/
To complete what Darrell said, here is a picture of Father Gizmas.
Maybe the way around this for companies like HTC is to separate the hardware from the software! You buy the phone with basic functions only and then download the Android OS once the phone has been purchased directly from google. Surely this removes any wrong doing for the phone manufacturer, googles OS could be aimed at tablet as well as Smart Phones so some of the infringements may not apply. Personally I like the idea of buying a phone and selecting the OS myself in the same way I can on a PC!
Then Apple would just sue Google directly, instead of the manufacturers as proxies for Google. The patents relate to the software itself, not its implementation. Apple are only suing the manufacturers because it’s easier than going after Google directly.
As tomashiles says, apple would end up failing if they take google out directly, google itself is just too powerful for them.
But ssuing the manufatcures are the only real way they can sue without losing.
But Android is best – It has over a bazillion activation’s every second which means they will be Victors by might alone – or does it?
You get what you pay for, there are more Hyundai’s in the world than there are Bugatti Veyrons. Which is best?
Well maybe if Android was actually innovative and original it wouldn’t have that problem.
Good on Apple, let them take down Android, just means Googlebot will be spying on us less.
(I am no Apple fan..)