I guess the Patent Officers have been smoking more crack than usual.

I can't imagine that this would pass anyone's non-obvious/non-trivial test.

I sincerely hope that someone has the guts, and vast legal resources, to stop this sort of nonsense before it gets out of hand!

Frank Keeney wrote:

By Nancy Gohring Special to Wi-Fi Networking News http://wifinetnews.com/archives/002848.html

A patent awarded to Nomadix last week could force hotspot operators to pay
royalties to Nomadix or change the way their networks work: Nomadix
received a patent for technology that it claims it developed first which
allows hotspot operators to redirect customers to a sign-up page, often
referred to as a "gateway" page, when they first fire up their computers.
"We're the first to develop this technology and we've been doing it for a
while," said Joel Short, chief technology officer and senior vice
president for Nomadix.

Many hotspot networks, particularly the larger ones that charge for
access, redirect customers to a specific home page where they can sign in
or pay for access. Often their methods for redirect were developed
in-house. Redirection involves the access point or back-end system
capturing any Web page request from an unauthenticated user on the network
and redirecting them to a page that contains login or usage information.

"Some have copied what we've done," Short said. "We stand behind our
intellectual property and now we're going to encourage those folks who
provide that method to license the technology from us."

STSN, Hilton Hotels, and some McDonald's restaurants have licensed Nomadix
technology, but T-Mobile, Wayport, Cometa, Surf and Sip, and other hotspot
operators don't have licenses. STSN and Nomadix have both received
investments from the Intel Capital wireless fund.

Most of the non-licensed operators have been reluctant to discuss the new
patent. Cometa declined to comment on the matter. T-Mobile has been
working on a comment since the middle of last week but has yet to provide
a reaction to the new patent. Wayport and Surf and Sip are looking into
the issue further before commenting.

If Nomadix chooses to pursue companies that use redirect without licensing
its technology, the operators will either have to pay license fees, argue
the reasonableness of the patent in court, or forgo using redirect.
Redirection allows new or existing customers to avoid installing client
software for connecting to a network, although some networks are moving
towards requiring special hotspot software, which would sidestep this
issue.

Many free community networks have also used redirection as a method of
asking users to acknowledge that they are agreeing to a set of principles
to use the free networks. Schlotzsky's Deli and many free or sponsored
commercial networks also employ the method.

Companies are not required to enforce patents as they are trademarks; a
patent holder can cherry pick specific targets for licensing or litigation
without losing the use of the patent.

http://www.nomadix.com/company/pressroom/pressrelease.asp?id=PR01200401
http://patft.uspto.gov/netacgi/nph-Parser?Sect1=PTO1&Sect2=HITOFF&d=PALL&p=1&u=/netahtml/srchnum.htm&r=1&f=G&l=50&s1=6,636,894.WKU.&OS=PN/6,636,894&RS=PN/6,636,894


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