That patent idea seems really obvious to "a person having ordinary skill in the art" in 1998.
Akamai, Limelight bury hatchet (not in each other) to end patent spat
Internet backbone facilitators Akamai Technologies and Limelight Networks have agreed to end their long-running patent battle, and instead forge a $54m licensing agreement. The deal will see Limelight pay the $54m to Akamai in a set of 12 installments beginning this month. In exchange, Akamai agreed to drop the $51m letter of …
COMMENTS
-
Wednesday 3rd August 2016 09:01 GMT JassMan
OMG!
Who is going to feed the children of those poor lawyers who will no longer making a mint of of patent disputes if this sort of activity should spread? How did the boards of these companies become clever enough to work out that licencing a patent (however dubious) can sometimes be cheaper than paying a firm of lawyers to spend a decade fighting an unwinnable case? For the costs involved in some of these cases, it must surely be cheaper to buy^H^H^H lobby a few politicians to get the patent system fixed.
-
Thursday 4th August 2016 01:24 GMT Anonymous Coward
Akami invented the web proxy server?
"A content delivery service, comprising: replicating a set of page objects across a wide area network of content servers managed by a domain other than a content provider domain; for a given page normally served from the content provider domain, tagging the embedded objects of the page so that requests for the page objects resolve to the domain instead of the content provider domain"; link