After searching the New Zealand Patent office (Now know as the Intellectual
Property Database) to find the New Zealand Patent pertaining to DE Technologies
(DET) http://www.iponz.govt.nz/search/cad/dbssiten.main
( International Application Number PCT/US98/26220) I find that due to this
Patent being issued, the New Zealand patent office May be liable to
buy a licence.
As they have a database driven service offering both documents, and
invoices to international companies, this is evident as they have the ability to
receive and supply document to International parties who wish to secure a patent
in New Zealand using international transaction services.
Does this mean that OUR hard ear'nt tax dollars that pay for all government
services will be indirectly paying for a licence to comply with the patent THEY
ISSUED!
Food for thought
Yours in success,
Gary Rimell Director of Marketing [EMAIL PROTECTED] Phone: 03 328
7203 Fax: 03 328 8204 Mobile: 021 138 5809 ICQ 21631223
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----- Original Message -----
Sent: Friday, 11 July 2003 11:21
Subject: [csforum] more patent info
FYI, more coverage on the patent fight in the Herald
at:
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/storydisplay.cfm?storyID=3511840
(Anyone
seen if the Press has picked this up?)
The story says that "the
Ministry of Economic Development said the only action that could be taken
was by those questioning the patent's validity.
"This is a commercial
matter. If people wish to dispute the validity of the patent there are
mechanisms in the Patents Act (1953) for them to seek to have the patent
revoked."
The most common grounds for a patent being revoked are where
it can be shown that the invention is not new or that "the invention
claimed is an obvious progression of what has gone before".
So the
patent was granted in New Zealand in June 2002 -- anyone else got any
examples of use before then? Or, following on from Fraser's
posting, ideally from 1997? Is it really distinctly different to
undertaking the same process with a person on the end of a phone line? Or a
fax form?
Sounds like it's going to cost a lot to find out -- the
Herald story notes that attempting to have a patent declared invalid could
cost up to $150,000!
More info here:
http://www.fightthepatent.co.nz/
Cheers, Vicki
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