Did anyone realize that someone had a patent out for virtual worlds?!
I didn't. I wonder if the head honchos at all of our favorite MMORPG companies did?
Looks like Worlds.com has the patent, and is suing the pants off NC Soft- for starters! It's ready to go up against all the big guys, including WoW and Second Life.
Wow, copyright infringement feels so nineties...
Here's the article by Eric Krangel on Silicon Valley Insider:
(Or hit the jump...)
Worlds.com CEO Thom Kidrin is putting the entire virtual worlds industry on notice: His company claims the idea of a scalable virtual world with thousands of users is its patented intellectual property, and Thom told us he intends to sue anyone who refuses to enter into licensing negotiations -- including giants such asSecond Life and World of Warcraft, a property of Activision Blizzard (ATVI). Already, Korean gaming firm NCSoft, maker of City of Heroes and Guild Wars, has been sued by Worlds. (In East Texas no less, a jurisdiction infamous in intellectual property circles for plaintiff-friendly rulings in patent cases.) Thom told us if he succeeds in his litigation, he "absolutely" intends to pursue follow-up suits against industry leaders Second Life and WoW. Last December, when hitherto-unknown Worlds.com claimed to hold a patent for the virtual worlds idea dating from the 1990s, we were highly skeptical. Whatever one thinks of Second Life, there's no doubt that service was the brainchild of Linden Lab founder Philip Rosedale, who pitched the idea around Silicon Valley for years But Worlds.com's Thom filled us in on his backstory: Back in 1997, a developer created the Steven Spielberg-backed Starbright World Eventually a collection of Starbright patents, which don't cover virtual worlds per se but an architecture for enabling thousands of simultaneous users in a 3D virtual space, passed from the original creators to the current Worlds.com management. Lawyers from General Patent Corporation Thom insists he's not out to put anyone out of business, he just wants to be paid licensing fees for what he considers his lawful intellectual property. But we can't imagine the potential targets of any patent infringement action will interpret the demand for licensing fees as anything less than a legal shakedown. We consulted legal experts like Virtual Law
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But we'll keep a close eye on this one as it progresses through the courts. Whenever issues of who owns a technology and how much it's worth are decided by judges and juries, the results are always unpredictable.