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Richard Lang comes across as a mellow Californian. The
youthful-looking 52-year-old lives on an 11-acre estate among apple trees in the
hippy town of Sebastopol, north of San Francisco, where he plays guitar in local
bands and his wife runs an "equine experiential learning institute"
that helps clients get in touch with themselves by riding horses. But there's
nothing laid-back about his strategy at Burst.com, the Santa Rosa company he
co-founded 18 years ago. With just two employees, Burst holds 10 US patents, and
its focus is on asking big companies to license its technology-and suing them
if they don't.
In March, 2005, Burst won a $60 mn settlement from Microsoft.
The next target, Lang says, is Apple Computer, which he says infringes on Burst's
patents covering superfast transmission of content, such as songs and video,
over networks. He's seeking a chunk of the tech giant's burgeoning music
revenues, and says he plans to sue in mid-April if no settlement is reached.
That makes Burst, in many people's eyes, a 'patent troll.'
In recent months tech giants such as Microsoft, Intel, and Yahoo! have vilified
the trolls-tiny companies that don't make anything but simply hold a
portfolio of patents. Their business plan consists of cashing in on this
intellectual property by suing traditional corporations, the types that produce
real products. That infuriates the targets of these suits, who claim that the
legal risk forces them into exorbitant settlements, and that the ensuing payoffs
increase costs for consumers. For many, the poster child for trolls is NTP, the
tiny company that extracted $612 mn from Research In Motion, the maker of the
BlackBerry wireless e-mail device.
But it was never Lang's plan to be in the litigation
business. A legitimate visionary, he patented a method for transmitting data
over digital networks that turned out to be years ahead of its time. His company
once seemed poised to become a major tech player in its own right. But the
hardball tactics of Microsoft blew apart Burst's original business model, Lang
claims, and gave him no choice, but to turn to the courts.
While big companies have been complaining that the patent
system is tilted against them, Lang believes his tale demonstrates that the
opposite is often true. "There's a million ways for a plaintiff to lose a
patent case but only one way to win," he says. "So if you're a big
rich company, why not go ahead and go through the [legal] process? Maybe the
little guy will run out of money, or run out of courage."
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To The
Winner Goes...Not That Much
Here's what Richard Lang was left with after Burst.com's $60 million
settlement with Microsoft got divvied up: |
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The validity of Lang's tale of woe will ultimately have to
be determined by the courts, but right now he is not winning many friends in
Silicon Valley. Burst is asserting very broad patents, and Lang has been making
the rounds with veiled threats of infringement actions. He's aiming for big
payments. While Lang won't discuss his hopes for the Apple claim, his lawyer
cites as a point of reference other cases in which plaintiffs were rewarded more
than 2% of infringing revenues. That would be about $200 mn so far for Apple.
"Burst.com approached Apple claiming that some of our products violate
their patents, but we don't agree," says an Apple spokesperson. On Jan.
4, Apple filed a suit seeking to invalidate Burst's patents.
While Lang is controversial, his record as a tech clairvoyant
is impressive. When the rest of the world was focused on stuffing 500 channels
onto cable TV, he was devising ways to use digital networks to deliver content
more efficiently and reliably. Lang recognized that shows could be sent faster
than they could be viewed-in 'bursts' that took full advantage of
momentary increases in network capacity, rather than in constant 'streams.'
Indeed, at the 1991 Consumer Electronics Show, Lang drew a crowd with a demo in
which 15-minute segments of a PBS documentary were zipped to a TV across the
booth in seconds. "They were demonstrating things that other people couldn't
do," says tech pundit Robert X Cringeley.
"SO OUTSIDE THE BOX"
After spending the 1990s trying to perfect 'real-time streaming' of
content-often in low resolution with tiny images-titans including Apple,
Microsoft, and Real Media have since embraced Lang's general approach.
"We were so outside the box that even in the late 1990s, people didn't
get it," says Lang.
By the late '90s his company had grown to 110 employees and
was selling a software package called Burstware. Then, Microsoft got in the way.
When the software giant upgraded its Media Player software in 2000, suddenly
Burst's key product stopped working. Lang is certain it was on purpose, a
charge Microsoft denies. Regardless, Burst nearly went bust. Customers backed
away, as did bankers who had been arranging a $70 mn secondary offering for the
company. Within months, he'd laid off all, but four staffers and was begging
Microsoft for a licensing deal. "Microsoft, like many big companies, wants
to wear out their opponents," says Lang. In one e-mail, Burst's contact
at Microsoft reported that the company was 'going, going...'
Burst survived, though. Convinced that a 2001 release of
Windows Media Player infringed on Burst's technology, Lang got an investor to
put up $1.5 mn to keep the company afloat as it pursued a lawsuit, filed in
June, 2002. Without admitting liability, Microsoft agreed to the $60 mn
settlement a day before a hearing on whether it had destroyed evidence. Although
the myth is that trolls get fabulously wealthy, Lang personally ended up with
just a fraction of the settlement proceeds, $2.5 mn.
Believing the victory validated his patent claims, Lang has
expanded his search for licensees. Apple was his first stop, and not only
because of its deep pockets. Apple reps had approached him at a trade show back
in 1991, and Burst met with Apple in 1999, 2000, and 2002. "The attitude is
exactly like it is at Microsoft and everywhere else. If you won't take next to
nothing [for Burst's technology], we'll fight you for the next 10
years," he says.
That may well be what happens. Lang's patents have never
been upheld in court, and Apple will be a formidable foe. But he insists his
easygoing style doesn't tell the whole story: "I'm a bit of a
terrier."
By Peter Burrows Page(s) 1
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