United States of America Patent and Trademark Office has confirmed the
validity of WiLAN Inc's patent for V-chip technology, which enables
objectionable television content to be blocked, the Canadian company said on
Tuesday. WiLAN said the patent office, in addition to validating its existing
claims in patent number 5,828,402, also allowed the addition of 30 more claims.
"This ruling confirms the validity of our fundamental 402 or V-Chip
Patent, and enables our licensing activity to continue with the unlicensed
portion of the market, which is significant," WiLAN's Chief Executive Jim
Skippen said in a statement.
A U.S. judge last month dismissed a lawsuit in which WiLAN accused LG Electronics Inc of infringing the patent. WiLAN, which is based in Ottawa and specializes in patent licensing and enforcement, said its V-chip technology was invented in 1991 by Tim Collings, then a professor at Simon Fraser University in British Columbia, to allow users of TV receivers to filter out programs. All televisions with picture screens 13 inches (33 cm) or larger and manufactured for the U.S. market have since 2000 been required to carry the technology.
A U.S. judge last month dismissed a lawsuit in which WiLAN accused LG Electronics Inc of infringing the patent. WiLAN, which is based in Ottawa and specializes in patent licensing and enforcement, said its V-chip technology was invented in 1991 by Tim Collings, then a professor at Simon Fraser University in British Columbia, to allow users of TV receivers to filter out programs. All televisions with picture screens 13 inches (33 cm) or larger and manufactured for the U.S. market have since 2000 been required to carry the technology.
Source: The Economic Times
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