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Heat Turned Up on Streaming Video
Patents
Author: eWEEK
(AP)— After a recent legal setback, a California company
that claims its patents cover the streaming video technology
used by adult Web sites is boosting efforts to collect money
from a very different group of streaming video users: colleges
and universities.
Newport Beach, Calif.-based Acacia Media Technologies Corp.
has sent letters to dozens of colleges in recent days claiming
the schools' use of streaming video in areas like distance
learning and video lectures violates company patents. The
message: pay up, or risk getting sued.
"Certainly for colleges that do a lot of distance education,
this could be a major problem," said Steve Worona, director of
policy and networking programs at EDUCAUSE, an association of
campus information technology centers.
Several colleges say the letters make even broader claims,
extending beyond distance learning to cover almost anything a
college does that involves moving audio and video files on
computer networks.
Washington College in Chestertown, Md., was told that by
Acacia that a minimum annual license fee of $5,000 was likely
to cover the company claims it's owed. But Acacia said the deal
is only on the table until Sept. 15. Afterward, the price might
go up and Acacia might sue for past infringement.
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