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Nintendo Suffers $21M Patent Infringement Award

Posted by timothy on Thursday May 15, @11:55AM
from the patent-rolling-your-eyes-derisively dept.
CowTipperGore writes "The AP reports (via Yahoo!) that Nintendo of America Inc. has been ordered to pay a small East Texas gaming company $21 million for infringing on a patent while designing controllers for its popular Wii and GameCube systems. No stranger to lawsuits over controller designs, a Nintendo spokesman said the company will seek an appeal. The suit was originally filed in 2006 and included Microsoft. Microsoft's aggressive legal push back apparently helped as they reached a (confidential) settlement agreement before the case went to trial."

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  • by nuzak (959558) on Thursday May 15, @11:57AM (#23418880) Journal
    I'd like to "suffer" a $21 award.
    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      Actually a $21M award would be better. What a difference a letter makes.
      • by LordSkippy (140884) on Thursday May 15, @12:04PM (#23419004)
        The title is badly worded. The $21M award went to Anascape Ltd., the people suing Nintendo. So, Nintendo does suffer the award to another company. The wording of the title does make it sound like Nintendo is both the receiver and sufferer of the award.
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      Meh, it's good enough to point out that this was the value awarded, not the value sued for. It comes out to less than a dollar per Wiimote...
  • At least they wiil appeal the ruling.
    • Re:Well... (Score:5, Funny)

      by oahazmatt (868057) on Thursday May 15, @12:06PM (#23419030)

      At least they wiil appeal the ruling.
      Why bother? It'd be easier to auction off a few Wiis under assumed eBay accounts to make-up the difference.
      • At least they wiil appeal the ruling.

        Why bother? It'd be easier to auction off a few Wiis under assumed eBay accounts to make-up the difference.


        I can see it now:

        When contacted for comment, Nintendo of America issued this press release:

        "Wii would like to P
  • I know its been said many times before, but how are any of these patentable? A 3d controller with vibration - how can a patent office and a judge believe that qualifies as non-obvious and novel? Not only that, but on all of these controllers surely all of
    • Re:Patentability (Score:4, Informative)

      by hansamurai (907719) <hansamurai@gmail.com> on Thursday May 15, @12:14PM (#23419168) Homepage Journal
      Actually it doesn't seem to have anything to do with motion control.

      The jury found that Nintendo infringed on Anascape's patent while designing its Wii Classic, WaveBird and Gamecube controllers.

      Scibettra said Nintendo was pleased no infringement was found with the motion-sensing technology used in its wandlike Wii and Nuncheck controllers, which mimic movements by users in games such as tennis and boxing.
      None of those controllers have motion sensing in them.
      • Oh sorry, I thought you said motion not vibration.
        • The real question here is, how stupid is this Judge. Its not hard to look at the "evidence" and realize this company is a front for a patent troll, yet here we go again a judge with no technical background is smoke-screened by a company who makes no produc
    • A 3d controller with vibration - how can a patent office and a judge believe that qualifies as non-obvious and novel?
      Only the claims of a patent, not its title, have legal force. But I did read the list of patent titles from "suit was originally filed [joystiq.com]". Taking into account the aspects infringing products (Xbox controller, GameCube controller, and Wii Classic Controller) and the titles of the patents, I guess that the patents cover some aspect of the analog L and R shoulder buttons on those controllers. The claims of U.S. Patent 6,344,791 appear to cover specifically the tactile detent that the player feels when pressing the GCN controller's L and R buttons all the way.
  • Dumb patents abound (Score:5, Interesting)

    by CogDissident (951207) on Thursday May 15, @12:55PM (#23419846)
    Well, you do know Nintendo owns the patents on both: Water reflections in a video game The concept of "high score" Of course, they're not dumb enough to use them, but as part of their star fox 64 patent, they included those as sub-technologies that were patented, and it was approved.
    • I also heard that Nintendo owns the patent to the "Sanity System" from Eternal Darkness. That one's a doozy, especially if you want to make a Call of Cthulhu game. :P
  • how? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Dart524 (1273640) on Thursday May 15, @12:57PM (#23419906)
    iv'e never seen a controller by these people how can they have a patent for something that no one has seen or heard about thats like me thinking about making a special kind of rocketship getting a patent then scrap the idea and sue anyone who tries to make the idea
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      Thats the problem with the current patent system. You could potentially do just that. Its not fool proof but that is pretty much what these companies are doing. They will buy or create a patent and then sit around until some company makes something clos
    • That's the way the patent system works. You patent your design, not a physical product (though the concept of "design" has gotten pretty loose these days).

      The original intent was to reward little guys who came up with ideas that they wouldn't otherwise be
    • When NVIDIA sues ATI over patent infringement, ATI just turns around and says "oh yeh, well you're violating all these patents of ours". But the beauty of being a patent troll is that you can't be in violation of the defendant's technology patents if you
  • by archammer2 (1041754) on Thursday May 15, @01:26PM (#23420516)
    After doing a 30-second search for "Anascape", the only thing I could find on them are the law suits. Though, to be fair, most every gaming news site is covering this one. Still, who are these people? Have they done anything besides file the patents and then smack down anyone that uses "their technology"? Side note: Something the summary doesn't mention. Anascape originally sued Sony over the Playstation controllers. Then, they went after Microsoft and Nintendo at the same time. They don't seem to have any problems with the wiimote yet. Just the classic controller and the Gamecube controller.