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Re: [Rmt] Posting of IPR Disclosure related to QUALCOMM Incorporated's Statement about IPR related to RFC 5170
Hello Mike,
I'd like to have your opinion on the following point.
Claims 27-28 of US patent application 20080034273 detail the
"multiple symbols per packet" technique as follows:
" 27. The method of claim 25, wherein the number of ouptput
symbols carried in a packet is determined based on a desired
number of input symbols.
28. The method of claim 25, wherein the number of output
symbols carried in a packet is determined based on desired
reception overhead."
Now if I have a look at RFC 3453 (or the previous I-Ds,
http://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-rmt-info-fec), it is said in
section 2.4, p.12:
" There is a weak tradeoff between the number of source symbols and the
reception overhead for LT codes, and the larger the number of source
symbols the smaller the reception overhead. Thus, for shorter
objects, it is sometimes advantageous to partition the object into
many short source symbols and include multiple encoding symbols in
each packet. In this case, a single encoding symbol ID is used to
identify the multiple encoding symbols contained in a single packet."
Of course, the "man in the art" immediately understands that the above
paragraph is not limited to LT codes but is applicable to any code
that performs better with large objects, in particular LDPC codes.
And RFC 3453 was published in 2002, several years before the filling
dates of 20080034273 and 7,418,651 (the latter containing IPR related
to the claims 25-29 of patent 20080034273, as you explained).
Did I miss something? I'd like to understand.
Another detail that surprises me is the fact there is no reference to
RFC 3453 in U.S. patent application 20080034273 (the same is true for
patent 7,418,651) whereas this RFC discloses what is claimed in the patent.
It won't simplify the work of the USPTO examiner.
Regards,
Vincent
Luby, Michael wrote:
Hi Vincent,
Yes, you got it with respect to the technical reason for the new
patent information in the updated IPR declaration on RFC 5170.
With respect to 20080034273, it is not yet granted, it was published
in February of 2008.
I’ll get back to you as soon as practical in a different thread
concerning
http://www.ietf.org/mail-archive/web/fecframe/current/msg00516.html.
Best, Mike
On 10/6/09 3:18 AM, "Vincent Roca" <vincent.roca at inrialpes.fr> wrote:
Mike,
If I understand correctly, your point is related to the possibility
offered by RFC 5170 of having several encoding symbols per packet in
order to increase the number of symbols, which is useful to improve
LDPC erasure correction capabilities when dealing with small objects.
This is what I understand when comparing claims 25-29 of U.S. patent
20080034273 to our RFC.
And from your 09/23/2009 email, this is the "additional element added
to the ldpc draft" that justified the 10 additional patents of IPR
disclosure #1184 (WRT IPR disclosure #637).
So I recognize there is a problem here. Now that it has been
clarified,
we can search for a solution that would hopefully satisfy both of us.
As I said, we always did our best to avoid infringing any patent we
were aware of... But of course, there's nothing we can do in case of
unpublished pending patents!
Especially when an IPR disclosure referring to an unpublished pending
patent is not quickly updated once the patent has been granted or
rejected. In this case, patent 20080034273 has been granted in
February
2008, but the IPR disclosure only updated in September 2009. In the
meantime I haven't received any complain from you there could be an
issue with the "several symbols per packet" technique. It does not
help!
This reminds me of the similar situation (unpublished pending patent)
we are currently experiencing with our FECFRAME document... So far I
didn't receive any clarification after my email sent mid-September:
http://www.ietf.org/mail-archive/web/fecframe/current/msg00516.html
Cheers,
Vincent
Luby, Michael wrote:
> Hi Vincent,
>
> Claims 25-29 of U.S. patent publication number 20080034273 is
related to the IPR issue. Note that the patent specification for
U.S. Patent 7,418,651 (and the patent specification for U.S.
Provisional Patent Application No. 60/569,127 to which it claims
priority and is incorporated by reference) also contains IPR
related to claims 25-29 of U.S. patent publication number
20080034273. It was realizing that the IPR in the patent
specification for U.S. Patent 7,418,651 (and the patent
specification for U.S. Provisional Patent Application No.
60/569,127) is relevant, based on looking more carefully at the
drafts as they evolved and not the specific material in any one
particular draft, that triggered the new DF IPR declaration in
December 2007.
>
> Best, Mike
>
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