|
|
|
|
|
by Kliment
5174 days ago
|
|
Well, the inventors have the leverage in this case, because they can license the patents to whoever is being sued. The whole point of the patent hack is that the inventors continue holding limited rights to the patents, that is, the acquiring company does not fully control them. They can breach contract all they want, but their offense can be neutralized by the inventors by simply licensing to the victim. |
|
No, the inventors don't have the right to license the patents to whomever is being sued. The twitter agreement gives all rights in the patent to the assignee, just like any other assignment, but it adds on the clause that the assignee agrees to get permission from the inventor if they want to sue offensively with the patent. In the future, if the assignee (whoever it is at that time) decides to sue offensively without the permission of the inventor, the assignee can (and indeed they have the right to). The inventor would then have a cause of action for breach of contract against the assignee, but who knows what that would amount to.