AOL Money & Finance

IBM sues, gives Amazon.com a taste of own IP medicine

More

When at first (and second, and third) you don't succeed, sue. According to the news this morning, that's IBM's strategy. International Business Machines Corp. (NYSE:IBM) filed two lawsuits against Amazon.com, Inc. (NASDAQ:AMZN), claiming that Amazon was violating five of its patents, including those for technology that provides customer recommendations, advertising, and the way data is catalogued.

Not only had IBM tried to negotiate license fees with Amazon -- which Big Blue says everyone else simply pays -- but it had tried "over a dozen times" with zero response from the internet retailer.

Has Jeffrey Bezos lost his marbles? No media outlet was able to garner a response from the company at this early hour on the West Coast. But it's certainly well-known that Bezos has a history of staking his claim, but big, in the world of IP -- most recently, demanding license fees from everyone who tried to copy their one-click ordering system (I feel I should put "copy" in quotes as many pundits and lawsuit subjects believe there is significant prior art here, which the US Patent & Trademark Office plans to soon review).

In my knowledge of the IP world, IBM's ownership isn't much challenged here. The customer needs prediction algorithms are used by many different companies and taught in statistical marketing courses. While Amazon.com's use of them is considered smart, I've never heard claim that it's of the company's own design. Is Amazon.com a wronged innovator, or is the company's management just playing dirty pool?

Symbol Lookup
IndexesChangePrice
DJIA+30.6910,464.40
NASDAQ+6.872,176.05
S&P 500+4.981,110.63

Last updated: November 26, 2009: 01:24 PM

BloggingStocks Exclusives

Hot Stocks

DailyFinance Headlines

Latest from BloggingBuyouts

TheFlyOnTheWall.com Headlines

BioHealth Investor Headlines

WalletPop Headlines

My Portfolios

Track your stocks here!

Find out why more people track their portfolios on AOL Money & Finance then anywhere else.

BloggingStocks Partners

More from AOL Money & Finance

WalletPop Headlines