After a vicious patent suit, the maker of the BlackBerry--the wireless e-mail gadget that chains the white-collar proletariat to its work--faces the threat of a court-ordered shutdown in
RIM is generally regarded as the victim of an injustice. Founded 21 years ago by two engineering students who still help run it, the company is being held for ransom by a "patent troll". The monster emerging from under the bridge is an entity called NTP, which doesn't actually make or sell anything--it doesn't even have a website, for goodness sake. But it has hired a handful of lawyers to enforce its patents and in settlement talks this week, it was demanding almost 6% of RIM's sales in
The chief lesson of the BlackBerry saga is that patents are there to be protected. If the system is to have any meaning, its integrity must be upheld for the sake of the businesses that rely on it and the public that benefits from innovation.
For a start, RIM itself is the chief author if its own fate. In 2000, barely a year after the BlackBerry was introduced, NTP requested that RIM license its patents (which are based on the work of an inventor who earned around 50 patents over many years). In 2002 RIM suffered so devastating a legal defeat that it was ordered to pay NTP's legal bills. An appeals court largely upheld the judgment against the company this year. During this time, BlackBerry users rocketed into the millions--yet at every turn, rather than license the patents, RIM resisted; and, as it has resisted, the bills have mounted.
Distressed BlackBerry users argue that too many of the world's workers rely on the device for the service to be shut down. But many of their jobs depend on the principle at stake in this case--that the courts should protect intellectual property because it rewards inventors by conferring a real title to an intangible asset. Business requires confidence that intellectual property will be respected and infringers brought to justice, regardless of whether the litigant is using the patent or not. Only with that security will firms patent and license their inventions, thus allowing others to use their ideas.
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