Microsoft's file system patent upheld

By Anne Broache
http://news.com.com/Microsofts+file+system+patent+upheld/2100-1012_3-6025447
.html

Story last modified Tue Jan 10 14:09:00 PST 2006

Two patents covering one of Microsoft's main Windows file-storage systems
are valid after all, federal patent examiners have decided.

The decision, announced Tuesday by the software giant, effectively ends a
two-year saga over the patents and reverses two non-final rulings--the
latest issued in October--in which the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office
rejected Microsoft's claims.

In their latest action, filed last week, the examiners concluded that the
company's File Allocation Table (FAT) file system is, in fact, "novel and
non-obvious," entitling it to patentability. Now the office is in the
process of issuing a "patent re-examination certificate," which signals the
finality of the decision, a Microsoft representative said.

The FAT file system, a common means of storing files, was originally
developed for the DOS operating system, but has also been employed in
Microsoft's Windows and on removable flash memory cards used in digital
cameras and other devices. Some Linux- and Unix-related products also use
the system to exchange data with Windows.

The Patent Office agreed to re-examine two patents covering the FAT system
at the request of a little-known public interest group called the Public
Patent Foundation in April 2004.

That organization claimed there was "prior art" that proved Microsoft was
not the first company to come up with the file format.

It also voiced concern that Microsoft would try to seek royalties from
companies that sell and support Linux for using the technology, potentially
posing a threat to the free software community. Under the terms of the Free
Software Foundation's General Public License, Linux cannot be distributed if
it contains patented technology that requires royalty payments.

Microsoft indicated in the past that it would license the file format. In
December 2003, it said it had struck such a deal with flash memory vendor
Lexar Media.

The Patent Office's final decision followed several non-binding decisions
that were unfavorable to Microsoft. After issuing its preliminary rejection
of the patents in September 2004, examiners handed down a similar decision
about a year later.

All along, Microsoft voiced confidence that the patents would be upheld.
David Kaefer, the company's director of business development, said Tuesday
that the company was "very pleased" with the office's final decision. "This
result underscores the validity of these patents but also the importance of
allowing third parties to request re-examinations," he said in a statement.

Public Patent Foundation President Dan Ravicher said his organization
disagreed with the Patent Office's conclusions and offered a broader
critique.

"Microsoft has won a debate where they were the only party allowed to speak,
in that the patent re-examination process bars the public from rebutting
arguments made by Microsoft," he told CNET News.com. "We still believe these
patents are invalid and that a process that gave the public equal time to
present its positions would result in them being found as such."

CNET News.com's Ina Fried contributed to this report.




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