PDA

View Full Version : Nintendo Sued for stealing ideas


The_Führer
9th-July-2008, 04:20 AM
Nintendo facing patent lawsuit over DS

Illinois man claims to have touched first.

By Ben Silverman


Thanks to its innovative design and wealth of fantastic games, the Nintendo DS has scrambled to the top of the handheld gaming war, making the hardware wizards at Nintendo the darlings of the games industry.
But what if they don't hold the patent on the touchy tech?
As reported by video game blog Gamepolitics, John R. Martin has filed a complaint alleging that he owns the patent on the system's lauded touch screen. While the patent was updated in August of 2005 -- a full six months after Nintendo launched the DS -- it was originally filed a decade earlier in 1995.

The patent seems to cover the key input ingredient of Nintendo's popular handheld, citing "an improved method of operating a touch screen on a CRT or ICD computer screen [that] uses finger release as input registering" in "an electronic game device system [which] is switchable between an amusement mode and a gaming or gambling mode and is useful for vehicles such as airplanes or boats..."Sounds a little like the DS to us, minus the gambling bit.


Nintendo, however, doesn't see the connection -- the ******* has responded by requesting that the entire suit be summarily dismissed.
This isn't Nintendo's first scrape with patent infringement. Earlier this year the ******* coughed up $21 million to tech ******* Anascape over several Nintendo game controllers, including their famous Wavebird, widely considered the first legitimate wireless game controller.

Yahoo!

Rudolf
9th-July-2008, 05:18 AM
I always thought that when a patent expired it then becomes up for grabs.

The guy was stupid not keeping up the patent.

The end of the patent means that companies who want to use the item/thing no longer have to license it from the firm/owner

shifted
10th-July-2008, 12:59 AM
Either way, would it not be possible for Nintendo to engineer their own by themselves? Even though it will resemble what somebody else may have already made, it doesnt mean they took it from anyone, in a sense.

Like.. what if that guy made that touch screen by himself, and then some Nintendo guy was working on the DS and had the idea and came up with one of his own..

Or even what if I made it? Would it make a difference..

Rudolf
10th-July-2008, 01:20 AM
He will not get a cent. He let the patent expire. Dumb ass !!