back to article US tech industry backs Buffalo in Wi-Fi patent spat

America's computing industry are lining up behind Buffalo Technology to support its appeal against a US import ban of its 802.11a and 802.11g kit. In June, a US court stepped in to stop the sale of Wi-Fi equipment from Buffalo Technology based on technology that infringes patents held by the Australia-based Commonwealth …

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  1. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Nothing new here ... (patent-wise)

    The very building I'm sitting in was paid for by Manchester University successfully suing IBM for an infringment of our Virtual Memory patent. Ahhh, those were the days: university administrators with the cajones to take on the big fish.

    Depending on jurisdiction, it looks like there might be some case law to back CSIRO's position.

  2. Paul Young
    IT Angle

    Wanna Buy Some WiFi Kit?

    To All you Americans out there

    I can sell you all the 802.11a and 802.11g Kit you require

    Let me know your requirements and I will happily send it

    with a customs declaration of GIFT!

    Can't say fairer than that can I?

    I've recently noticed that our local school has removed all it's WiFi equipment and installed some CAT 5 Cabling!

    <Nice Touch>

    Actually I've got so much WiFi junk sitting around, I'm Thinking of dumping the lot at a Car Boot tomorrow.

    £2.00 for a Router

    £0.50 for a Wireless Network Adapter

    All Proceeds to our local school

    It would be a safer community, without all this Radio Interference, now wouldn't it?

  3. Nick Stallman
    Flame

    Thieves

    Stupid companies trying to rip us Aussies off.

    Why wont they just shut up and pay us the money they owe us?

    Then CSIRO can get back to work developing awesome technology.

  4. Maverick
    Happy

    @ Nick Stallman

    IMHO "awesome technology" is not a phrase that springs to mind when talking about any 802.11 wireless technology

  5. Mark Burton
    Happy

    Raise AND Call?

    Really! You should know better. You can either raise OR call, you can't do both!!!

  6. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Shouldn't these patents be in the public domain anyway?

    Dunno about CSIRO, but surely Manchester University is funded by public funds -- and therefore, any patents it develops should belong to the taxpayers who funded it (and therefore, available to all to use for taxpayers benefit) instead of being used to exhort money from companies and therefore forcing up the price that the same people have to pay when they buy their products or use their services.

  7. lucmars

    University and public domain, still connected?

    @ Anonymous Coward

    Frankly, the Universities are still funded by the public fund but the trend is to reduce this part for some privates funding. Hence, what can be the part which should return to the citizens and the part which should stay in the stakeholders' hands?

    Don't search: tables, chairs, bricks and mortars will stay to the public domain while the most valuable part will go to somebody else.

  8. Nick Stallman

    Title

    @Maverick: It was pretty cool in the mid 90's when CSIRO made the tech.

    Now its pretty ordinary.

    @Anonymous Coward: Are you a Australian tax payer? :P

  9. Bob Davis

    Pooing in Own Nest?

    CSIRO is neither a non-competitive nor educational institution. It's one the best scientitifc research and development bodies on the planet. It has multiple research streams - and good hunks of its pure science research depend on fund flows from commercialising some of its applied R&D. The ICT industry NEEDS the pure science! When the ICT industry starts belittling institutuions like CSIRO, they're pooing in their own nest.

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