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Vonage Wins Permanent Stay in Verizon Case 104

kamikaze-Tech writes "The US Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit in Washington DC today issued Vonage a permanent stay of a previous court's injunction that would have barred it from signing up new customers. Vonage sought the stay following an April 6th decision by the US District Court in Alexandria, VA enjoining the company from using certain VoIP technology to add new customers."
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Vonage Wins Permanent Stay in Verizon Case

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  • Good! (Score:4, Insightful)

    by norminator ( 784674 ) on Tuesday April 24, 2007 @04:02PM (#18860491)
    Here's to hoping everything goes well throughout the rest of the appeals process.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by jez9999 ( 618189 )
      What is there to appeal against? "The patents system is fucking retarded and you should throw the case out on principle"?
      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        What is there to appeal against? "The patents system is fucking retarded and you should throw the case out on principle"?
        No. Both the structure of Congress, our electoral system, and the absurd extremes of the 1st and 2nd amendment prove that "fucking retarted" doesn't disqualify a law.

        I'd go with the simple "that patent is invalid" argument, and if that doesn't work a "they're a monopoly and should be made to license that patent for a court-determined cost" argument.
        • by maxume ( 22995 )
          Dude, they have everything you want in Canada.
        • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

          as much as I hate to say it, monopolies arent illegal. monopolistic practices are. The government has no right and would set a far worse precedent enforing licensing by a court determined cost. That would be the absolute worst thing that could possibly happen. Next thing you know based on that precedent judges through the land will be licensing patents for people against their will without their knowledge for whatever price they determine. A patent most fundamentally grants you the right to determine th
          • by kcbrown ( 7426 )

            As much as I hate to say it, monopolies arent illegal. monopolistic practices are. The government has no right and would set a far worse precedent enforing licensing by a court determined cost. That would be the absolute worst thing that could possibly happen.

            As opposed to what, letting the monopoly (Verizon, in this case) shut down what little competition it has via patents? That's the very essence of "monopolistic practices". So enforcing licensing by a court order is exactly what is needed here, i

            • by kcbrown ( 7426 )

              I suck. The parent should read thusly:

              As much as I hate to say it, monopolies arent illegal. monopolistic practices are. The government has no right and would set a far worse precedent enforing licensing by a court determined cost. That would be the absolute worst thing that could possibly happen.

              As opposed to what, letting the monopoly (Verizon, in this case) shut down what little competition it has via patents? That's the very essence of "monopolistic practices". So enforcing licensing by a co

            • I think you forget that
              A. Patents expire.
              B. No one is saying Verizon's competition should be shut down. The competition either needs to find or create another way to solve the problem that avoids the patent, license it, or invalidate the patent (which I'm hoping will instead happen)
              C. You have every right not to license a patent because you would want the rights to exclusively do it yourself. Apple doesn't license the Macintosh to be made by others. Should they be forced to do so ending their monopoly?

              H
          • "The government has no right and would set a far worse precedent enforing licensing by a court determined cost."

            And, yet, the most recent Telecommunications Act did just such a thing. It forced providers to open their networks, set standard pricing for the use of those networks and created competition where none was existing.

            I believe numerous lawsuits and new court rulings have castrated it, though, into something so impotent, that Viagra wouldn't help.
    • There is a petition site to add your support...

      Check out http://freetocompete.com/ [freetocompete.com]

      I do not want to lose my voip!
  • by 8127972 ( 73495 ) on Tuesday April 24, 2007 @04:02PM (#18860497)
    ..... Whoo hoo, hoo hoo hoo!
    • ..... Whoo hoo, hoo hoo hoo!

      I hate the commercials too. But I've been a Vonage user since just about Day One, and they have been extremely cool with me. Even overseas (read Lahore) support. I don't like out-sourced support, either, but I cannot dismiss my own experience, based on my, or mob, prejudice. So, I am very happy that the 9th Circuit has injected at least a modicum of common sense into this situation. But... the 'whoo, hoo, hoo' thing? heheh.... no :)
      -Regards,
      Brian Stegner

  • by Anonymous Coward
    i work for a CLEC in NH. Verizon continually changes the rules
    on us to make our lives difficult. I hope vonage wins the day.
    • e.g, please?
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by Shishak ( 12540 )
      I OWN a CLEC in MA and Verizon does NOT change the rules on us. The rules are pretty straight forward, read 'The Act' and subsequent FCC TROs. The FCC DOES change the rules on occasion, sometimes for the good, sometimes for the bad. The biggest problem is that the 2 largest voices against the RBOCS were AT&T & MCI. Those voices have been silenced.

      The single most troubling word in 'The Act' is 'impaired'. The RBOCS must provide a service to a CLEC at Unbundled Network Element (UNE) pricing if
  • by tedshultz ( 596089 ) on Tuesday April 24, 2007 @04:04PM (#18860533)
    This lets them sign up new customers, but they still could be screwed as far as the patent thing.
  • by AltGrendel ( 175092 ) <(su.0tixe) (ta) (todhsals-ga)> on Tuesday April 24, 2007 @04:04PM (#18860543) Homepage
    Wait for the patents to expire?
    • Re:Ok, so now what? (Score:5, Informative)

      by morgan_greywolf ( 835522 ) * on Tuesday April 24, 2007 @04:08PM (#18860613) Homepage Journal

      Wait for the patents to expire?


      They continue the appeals process. If they win on appeal, Vonage continues doing business. If they exhaust all available appeals and lose, the injuction goes back into effect, Vonage can't sign up any more customers and eventually goes out of business, unless it gets bought out by Verizon.

      As a very happy Vonage customer, I'm hoping they win.
      • Re:Ok, so now what? (Score:4, Interesting)

        by kilodelta ( 843627 ) on Tuesday April 24, 2007 @05:56PM (#18862317) Homepage
        I too hope Vonage triumphs. After all, the patents in question have already been clearly shown to be patents of existing art that was in the public domain. Lets go one further. If Vonage wins I say they should file an anti-trust suit against Verizon. Verizon is only going after Vonage because Verizon has lost 1/3 of their local loop business. Curiously they didn't go after the cable companies, or the other VoIP carriers. That makes it clear that they're trying to send a message. The worst part is, Verizon isn't really regulated anymore. They could do their own VoIP and they have, but the pricing is way out of line with what Vonage among others charges.
      • As someone who despises both companies, I too hope Vonage prevails. It will be a sad day if the bigger player gets even more power. Underdog competition benefits the rest of us.
      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        by rm69990 ( 885744 )
        If they were smart, they would be spending this time also working around the patents (if possible) so they could also survive an injunction. Of course, it may not matter. Vonage is hemmoraging cash at an unsustainable rate. They only have $550M in total assets ($500M in Cash and Short term investments) and they lost $120M last quarter alone.
        • Its quite possible that Verizon's patent is very broadly stated, such that there is no way for Vonage to do VOIP and avoid infringement.

          I don't know the facts in this case, but generally the claims of patents are made as far reaching as possible, so as to include not just the specific implementation of the invention, but any possible alternatives for accomplishing the same, or possibly even a very similar result.

          Overly broad claims can be struck down without invalidating the entire patent, so perhaps Vonage
          • Its quite possible that Verizon's patent is very broadly stated, such that there is no way for Vonage to do VOIP and avoid infringement.

            There are multiple examples of prior art, any of which should be sufficient to invalidate the Verizon patent.

        • Not to be a backseat CEO, but their marketing budget is obscene. I understand the need to get new customers and offset churn, but my god, don't blow all the cash doing it.
      • by SkyDude ( 919251 )

        As a very happy Vonage customer, I'm hoping they win.

        I am too, or at least until Verizon puts FIOS on my street.

        Man, talking about sleeping with the devil......

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by vertinox ( 846076 )
      Well... 15 years ain't that long.

      Hopefully, mankind in the next few years will patent every obvious idea possible so that by 2030 we can get back to actually inventing real non-obvious inventions.
      • With the way things are going in the u.s. and how the future of the u.s. economy depends on IP, there will probably be an extension to the life of patents in short order. Someone will introduce a bill in congress, at 4:00 AM, extending the life of patents to 55 years, no debate.. the house is adjourned.
  • by morgan_greywolf ( 835522 ) * on Tuesday April 24, 2007 @04:05PM (#18860549) Homepage Journal
    The stay is granted until the appeals process is concluded. IOW, if Vonage loses in the appeals process, of course, the District Court's injuction goes back into effect.

    It ain't over 'til it's over.
  • by Shambly ( 1075137 ) on Tuesday April 24, 2007 @04:06PM (#18860573)
    Somehow i doubt this case will result in a large portion of the Patent laws being repealed. Vonnage will look at its cost/risk analysis and decide that paying royalties to Verizon is much better then facing the risk of losing their business. A settlement will be reached behind closed door. All this posturing is merely a game of trying to reach the minimum amount of royalties they have to incur. Two large corporations fighting each other will not result in more freedom for the rest of us. The patent business is to profitable to jeopardize by bringing an argument to court.
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by (A)*(B)!0_- ( 888552 )

      "Vonnage will look at its cost/risk analysis and decide that paying royalties to Verizon is much better then facing the risk of losing their business."

      What makes you think Verizon is willing to license to Vonage?

      "All this posturing is merely a game of trying to reach the minimum amount of royalties they have to incur."

      Or it's a matter of Verizon trying to sue Vonage out of business.

      "The patent business is to profitable to jeopardize by bringing an argument to court."

      Huh? How do you think the injunctio

      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        by Shambly ( 1075137 )

        What makes you think Verizon is willing to license to Vonage?

        Because there is money in doing so. It's likely more profitable for Verizon to obtain royalties from Vonage then to have them take over their business.

        Or it's a matter of Verizon trying to sue Vonage out of business.

        Despite what you think company execs aren't vicious little monsters out to destroy everything that is not them. It is more profitable for them to charge large licensing fees to Vonage then to destroy them.

        Huh? How do you think the injunction came into existence in the first place? Verizon has already taken the argument to court.

        We are still in the deliberation stage. Verizon and Vonage can still reach an agreement that is mutually beneficial (at least better then one that may

        • "Because there is money in doing so. It's likely more profitable for Verizon to obtain royalties from Vonage then to have them take over their business."

          Is it? Where's your proof of that? You said it's likely - I call shenanigans. Even if Verizon doesn't pursue VOIP service, Vonage's continued existence takes customers away from Verizon. It's not even a matter of Verizon making use of the patents they have, they could merely sit on them to keep a competitor out of the field. You haven't proven to me that

          • by modecx ( 130548 )
            Is it? Where's your proof of that? You said it's likely - I call shenanigans. Even if Verizon doesn't pursue VOIP service, Vonage's continued existence takes customers away from Verizon. It's not even a matter of Verizon making use of the patents they have, they could merely sit on them to keep a competitor out of the field. You haven't proven to me that Verizon would make more money through licensing than either driving competition out or using the technology themselves now that VOIP is a more established
            • "Well, for one, not everyone is in Vonages' area of service for landlines. Licensing to Vonage would at least let them reach out and touch millions more people, in an indirect way."

              I was responding to the claim that it is more profitable to license to Vonage than to drive Vonage out of business. The fact that licensing might expand the customer base does nothing to prove that it is more profitable to license than to drive Vonage out of business. Starting your statement by saying, "Well, for one," seems to

              • by modecx ( 130548 )
                Who pissed in your cheerios?

                The claim is plausible, isn't it? That's enough. Or are you willing to jump out on a limb and say there is no possible way Verizon could benefit, Mr. I see everything in black and white?
                • "The claim is plausible, isn't it? That's enough."

                  No, it's not enough. The person I replied to was not saying that it was plausible or even just merely possible. He was stating that it was clearly the case that Verizon would be eventually licensing the patent to Vonage.

                  "Or are you willing to jump out on a limb and say there is no possible way Verizon could benefit, Mr. I see everything in black and white?"

                  Read in context. I was the one saying you can't make a definitive statement that it is in Verizon's

        • by NeutronCowboy ( 896098 ) on Tuesday April 24, 2007 @04:56PM (#18861367)

          It's likely more profitable for Verizon to obtain royalties from Vonage then to have them take over their business.


          No. Monopoly rents are more profitable than any royalty or customer payments.

          It is more profitable for them to charge large licensing fees to Vonage then to destroy them.


          And one way to destroy Vonage is to charge licensing fees that are larger than Vonage's profit margin. It's win-win for Verizon, really.
        • by norminator ( 784674 ) on Tuesday April 24, 2007 @05:04PM (#18861509)

          Huh? How do you think the injunction came into existence in the first place? Verizon has already taken the argument to court.
          We are still in the deliberation stage. Verizon and Vonage can still reach an agreement that is mutually beneficial (at least better then one that may be arbitrary assigned by a judge).

          Actually, no, we're in the appeals stage. The deliberation ended a couple weeks ago when the jury decided that Vonage infringed on 3 out of 5 of Verizon's patents. Then Verizon sought an injunction against Vonage. I think it's safe to say that either Verizon, Vonage, or both are not interested in a licensing agreement. Vonage's entire defense was that the patents are junk and are too broad to be valid. Of course they'd rather pay licensing fees than close up shop, but if that possibility ever comes up, it will happen after the appeals process has been exhausted.

          And when you say it's more profitable to Verizon to license the patents' use, I think that's complete speculation. We don't know how much business Verizon can hope to reclaim by stomping out Vonage (and then the other VoIP providers that could also be infringing), and we don't know how much they'd be able to charge for licensing fees (or how much Vonage would be able to pay).
        • Because there is money in doing so. It's likely more profitable for Verizon to obtain royalties from Vonage then to have them take over their business.

          Hmmm... Lets see here. Verizon can license this to Vonage and receive a small fraction of what Vonage is charging for each phone line or they can shut down Vonage and force everyone to get their phone lines for which they charge twice what Vonage does and keep all the profits.

          It is more profitable for them to charge large licensing fees to Vonage then to destroy them.

          Yeah it's more profitable for them to get a small licensing fee from a company that is destroying there entire business model.

          We are still in the deliberation stage. Verizon and Vonage can still reach an agreement that is mutually beneficial

          "Mutually beneficial" when one companies business is basically destroying the others? My understandin

      • by cdrguru ( 88047 )
        The problem is that Vonage relies on Verizon and other telephone companies to be there to support the Vonage product. Without Verizon DSL, they would lose a substantial fraction of their customer base.

        This means that Verizon is supporting their competitor, something I bet they would rather not do. They are going to get turned off, somehow or at least prevented from using Verizon's infrastructure to compete with Verizon.
        • by H8X55 ( 650339 )
          using the Internet isn't supporting the Vonage product. Unless you also say ISPs support child pr0n.

          what I do w/ my internet access is my business, be it play games, post on slashdot, or establish internet phone service.

          You're also forgetting cable. In my area (somewhat rural Northwestern Virginia), cable is far more prevalant than DSL. Also in my area, there is no Verizon DSL package that doesn't require at least a basic home phone service.

          I imagine that some users could have DSL through Verizon,
  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday April 24, 2007 @04:07PM (#18860593)
    this to be a no-brainer, considering what SCOTUS has already said about injunctions. This [wikipedia.org] was actually a pretty important case, in recent history that the injuction issuing judge should really have read. I am pretty sure Verizon couldn't show the injunction met the 4th requirement. Actually, I think they would have a hard time showing items #1 or #3, as well.
  • by soft_guy ( 534437 ) * on Tuesday April 24, 2007 @04:09PM (#18860631)
    Somehow I can't image that Verizon really wanted to cause Vonage to immediately go out of business which is what would have happened had they not gotten this stay. They would have been out of business by the time the case made it to trial and Verizon wouldn't have received much if anything.
    • Somehow I can't image that Verizon really wanted to cause Vonage to immediately go out of business which is what would have happened had they not gotten this stay. They would have been out of business by the time the case made it to trial and Verizon wouldn't have received much if anything.

      Except to shutdown the most public use of VoIP outside of any physical medium carrier. Or, in verizon's case, outside of their own business.

      That'd be a huge bonus to them.
      • This doesn't SAVE Vonage - it just allows them to continue to exist until Verizon can either buy them on the cheap or else get lots of money from them. In order for your argument to make sense, then Verizon would have to believe that another larger player in the VOIP market was going to emerge that they should wait and try to extort for a larger payday in the future. Of course, I am hypothesizing on the premise that Verizon is trying to act like a patent troll.
        • by Fatal67 ( 244371 )
          Wasn't much a fight since verizon was in favor of letting them add customers. Of course, if Verizon wins, that will be that many more customers for Vonage to have pay royalites for.
        • by grasshoppa ( 657393 ) on Tuesday April 24, 2007 @06:00PM (#18862385) Homepage
          This doesn't SAVE Vonage - it just allows them to continue to exist until Verizon can either buy them on the cheap or else get lots of money from them. In order for your argument to make sense, then Verizon would have to believe that another larger player in the VOIP market was going to emerge that they should wait and try to extort for a larger payday in the future.

          It's not about the money. Phone companies in general aren't about making money; They have more money than God. What do they need an extra 60 mil for?

          The telcos are all about power; Consolidating theirs. If there are external voice players out there, they want them eliminated. A rival and real competition would threaten their hold on their market, and that's not something they'll stand for. VoIP has the potential to be the most disrupting technology since the internet itself; The telcoms are terrified of it. If they can supress it long enough to establish a strangle hold on it, they win.
    • Somehow I can't image that Verizon really wanted to cause Vonage to immediately go out of business

      Are you kidding? Verizon's request was for an injunction shutting down Vonage's VoIP services altogether immediately until the appeals were complete. The "no new customers" was a compromise by the judge.

  • by RobertB-DC ( 622190 ) * on Tuesday April 24, 2007 @04:10PM (#18860645) Homepage Journal
    This is a huge story among us techno types, but does the general public have any clue?

    Just last night, I got the usual pack of coupons in the mail... including one inviting me to choose Vonage for my local phone service. I'd wager nobody on my block has ever heard of the Vonage vs. Verizon patent battle. What happens to these folks -- especially the non-technical ones who don't even understand the 911 and VoIP thing [911voip.org] -- if Vonage eventually loses its case entirely?

    Or is Vonage's strategy now built around pumping up the customer base in advance of the inevitable bankruptcy and fire sale of their only remaining asset: their customer list?
    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by ivan256 ( 17499 )

      especially the non-technical ones who don't even understand the 911 and VoIP thing


      Given that many "technical" people still don't get the 911 thing (and claim it's way worse than it actually is), maybe it's for the best...

      It wouldn't be the end of the world if your phone company went out of business and you had to sign up with a new one. Especially in the age of number portablilty.
      • I have Vonage. My other options are Cox (VOIP) or Embarq (POTS)
        I have internet through Cox at the moment, but their VOIP costs more than Vonage.
        I will fight tooth and nail going back to Embarq(Formerly Sprint).
        My wife has had the same phone number her whole life. I can just see something going wrong and losing the number. I'd probably get a divorce.
      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        by Jett ( 135113 )
        I don't get the whole "911" thing. I've had to call 911 on my Vonage phone and it worked fine. As I'm sure everyone here knows, when you sign up you have to "activate" 911 service (i.e. fill out a form with your address and wait for them to verify it) - it's no big deal.
        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          by ivan256 ( 17499 )
          Actually, apparently you do get it.

          Unfortunately many techies read way too much into the situation and assume that you get sub-par E911 service on your Vonage phone. It's just plain not true. The only additional complication is that you need a UPS for your router so you can call 911 when the power is out.
        • From the vonage website:

          Customers in locations where the emergency center is not equipped to receive your telephone number and address have basic 911. With basic 911, the local emergency operator answering the call will not have your call back number or your exact location, so you must be prepared to give them this information. Until you give the operator your phone number, he/she may not be able to call you back or dispatch help if the call is not completed or is not forwarded, is dropped or disconnected,

      • by cdrguru ( 88047 )

        It wouldn't be the end of the world if your phone company went out of business and you had to sign up with a new one. Especially in the age of number portablilty.

        Except that Vonage then goes out of business because all you can call are other Vonage customers.

        Vonage counts on the existing telephone service being there and working for all non-Vonage customers. This was never about putting the existing tariffed telecoms out of business, it was about reselling their services with a different wrapper.

        • by ivan256 ( 17499 )

          Except that Vonage then goes out of business because all you can call are other Vonage customers.

          First of all, that makes no sense in the context of my comment. So Vonage goes out of business... Sign up with somebody else afterward.

          Vonage counts on the existing telephone service being there and working for all non-Vonage customers. This was never about putting the existing tariffed telecoms out of business, it was about reselling their services with a different wrapper.

          That's absurd. First of all, if ev

    • by pnutjam ( 523990 )
      I got an email solicitation from Vonage to pay for the whole year now and save about $50. They claimed it was no risk, hahaha.
  • Now they just need a new way to get calls from the net to a phone line. I wonder if anyone has patented taping a phone to a speaker.
    • by dattaway ( 3088 ) on Tuesday April 24, 2007 @04:36PM (#18861021) Homepage Journal
      I wonder if anyone has patented taping a phone to a speaker.

      Just because it seems obvious to you, doesn't mean it didn't take someone else millions of dollars in reasearch to develop this INVENTION. It could have taken many billed hours to perfect the tape required to adhere the phone to the said speaker. What will happen if those who carefully do this research aren't compensated for their efforts? We will all be cast back into the stone age with our children. Please think of the children!
      • No, it doesn't work that way. I can guarantee it didn't take millions of dollars to patent this one invention. If it did, you wouldn't be hedging your bets on just ONE patent. And "obvious" doesn't mean "obvious" to Joe Schmo on the street -- it's "obvious to one skilled in the art." An even lower standard.

    • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

      by hicksw ( 716194 )
      Acoustic couplers?
      --
      Somewhere, something incredible is waiting to be known, but not here.
  • by Frosty Piss ( 770223 ) on Tuesday April 24, 2007 @04:19PM (#18860781)
    Unfortunately for Vonage, under the current patent system, Verizon almost certainly has them under their thumb. Within the current rules, I'm betting that Vonage can't win, and somehow will become Verizon's bitch whore just to stay in business. Patent reform is the solution, but it's not going to happen in time for Vonage.
    • by PPH ( 736903 )
      Meanwhile, Vonage has some more time to research prior art on tying packet-based telecom systems to the PSTN. And they may very well find them. I've seen exmples of this nearly 30 years old.

      Verizon's patents may prove to be worthless.

  • How about.. (Score:3, Interesting)

    by loconet ( 415875 ) on Tuesday April 24, 2007 @04:25PM (#18860875) Homepage
    I'm not too familiar with what exactly is going on here and the reach of the issues but how about Vonage Canada? Did Verizon register the patent up here as well? Does it even matter (considering traffic still goes through American based technology/infrastructure)?..
  • Now thing whole patent mess will just drag out and never be resolved. Shutting them down would wake the public up and make them mad. Oh, wait...That's why the stay. We can't make the public aware that they are being raped. They might do something, like call for abolition or some such nonsense. Or worse, they might vote out a valuable incumbent. And we definitely can't have people actually being aware of and using their power they have over the government.
    • That reminds me of the blackberry case where there was an injunction for everybody except the US government. Wouldn't want your elected representatives to go without their blackberry, they might actually see how messed up the patent system really is. Luckily in this case RIM came up with a technical work-around and never had to actually shut down their system.
      • Well of course. This is how the game works. They simply push as hard as they can without drawing undue attention. When it gets too heavy, they back off a bit. just like what's happening with the RIAA thing. The judge is actually doing them a favor so the process can continue while the public remains distracted.
  • by searchr ( 564109 ) <searchr AT gmail DOT com> on Tuesday April 24, 2007 @04:35PM (#18860997)
    Vonage! We can't guarantee we'll be here tomorrow, but we promise great service today!

    [Sign up for a 3 or 5 year plan, pay in advance, and earn a special reserved seating package for all future Vonage court proceedings!]
  • by Dejohn ( 164452 ) on Tuesday April 24, 2007 @04:52PM (#18861295) Homepage
    Here's the patent Click Here [uspto.gov]
  • Vonage, Verizon, VA, VoIP. Too many Vs!!
  • by Newer Guy ( 520108 ) on Tuesday April 24, 2007 @05:46PM (#18862175)
    Jeff Pulver has come forward claiming that he published a book called "The VOIP Toolkit" that has all of verizon's patent stuff in it. The problem for Verizon is that the book was published MONTHS before they filed for their first patent. he used name translation for Free World Dialup back in 1995. It also looks like Dialpad predated Verizon's use of this technology as well...

    Here: http://pulverblog.pulver.com/archives/006846.html [pulver.com]

    Verizon is looking more and more screwed every day....
  • The problem is that Vonage is relying on Verizon's infrastructure (DSL, PSTN) in order for their business to function. If it wasn't possible for people with Verizon DSL to use Vonage or to call a Verizon PSTN customer from Vonage, Vonage wouldn't have a product.

    This is like buying your hamburgers at McDonalds and selling them at a discount from a cart in the parking lot. OK, so McDonalds made a deal with you to sell you the burgers at a big discount because you bought so many. Well, at some point they wi
    • Your argument is bullshit, troll. You are obviously a 'big monopoly telco' astroturfer.

      Vonage does not need Verizon's infrastructure to exist. You dont have to have *VERIZON* DSL to use Voip, ANY highspeed Internet connection will suffice.

      Also, only if a Vonage user calls a Verizon customer does it connect to Verizon's PSTN. If they call an AT&T customer, it goes to AT&T. And, astonishly, if they call another Vonage customer, it doesnt go anywhere near the obsolete 'PSTN'. And guess what, the same t
  • i emailed verizon about this crap last time there was a big thread. here is my email and the response:

    I recently read about Verizon's attempt to stop Vonage from allowing VOIP calls to connect to old telephone systems on basis of "patent infringement". If I recall, other companies used the technology mentioned before Verizon had acquired those patents. I have to say that I'm angry and baffled.

    What is the ultimate goal for this type of action? Do you think that all of the Vonage customers who could potent

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