Eolas' web patent nullified
By Andrew Orlowski in San Francisco
Posted: 05/03/2004 at 23:49 GMT
The Register Mobile: Find out what the fuss is about. Take the two
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In a very rare, but not unprecedented move, the US Patent Office has
nullified a contentious technology patent. A spin off from the
University of California, but described as a "one man operation",
Eolas last year won $521 million from Microsoft for breach of what
the former describes as its "web application platform". US Patent
5,838,906, granted in 1998, protects the execution of remote code
embedded in hypertext pages.

The decision by an Illinois court to award the verdict to Eolas last
year was widely condemned across the industry, and co-inventor of
the World Wide Web Tim Berners Lee said the decision would "impair
the usability of the Web for hundreds of millions of individuals
in the United States and around the world." Microsoft had already
promised to modify Internet Explorer code, although an injunction
last month allowed it to wait until the Patent Office's review
process was complete.

Eolas Technologies has 60 days to appeal.

Who's the one man in the One Man Band? Founder Dr Mike Doyle was
formerly director of the Academic Computer Center at UCSF and is an
adjunct professor at two other universities, and is a veteran
scientific advisor to public institutions including the National
Museum of Health and Medicine. �

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