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By Tom Krazit
Posted on ZDNet News: Feb 22, 2006 7:28:00 PM

The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office has issued a final rejection of one of the five patents at issue in NTP's long-running case against BlackBerry maker Research In Motion.

The final rejection was posted on the Patent Office's Web site for the NTP-held patent, which covers a system for sending e-mails over a wireless network to a mobile device. The Patent Office has already issued nonfinal actions rejecting the claims in four out of the five NTP patents in question, but a final rejection is required before the appeals process can begin.

Contacted on Wednesday, NTP's lead counsel, James Wallace of Wiley, Rein & Fielding, said he had not reviewed the final action and therefore could not comment. NTP has the right to appeal any final rejection notice to a three-judge panel at the Patent Office, and can file further appeals at the federal-court level.

RIM issued a statement confirming it had received the final action and said it expects the rejections to withstand future NTP appeals.

NTP, a patent-holding company, successfully sued RIM for patent infringement and won an injunction, stayed pending appeal, to halt most sales of RIM's BlackBerry wireless e-mail device and service in the United States.

While the case has worked its way through the court system, the Patent Office began re-examining the validity of NTP's patents.

NTP has said it plans see the full reexamination process through, which could take years, because it has the ability to appeal the decisions through the courts.

RIM and NTP are scheduled to argue the remaining portions of their patent dispute Friday in a courtroom in Richmond, Va. The presiding judge in the case, U.S. District Court Judge James Spencer, will decide whether NTP is entitled to an injunction against the sale and support of BlackBerry wireless e-mail devices in the U.S., a prospect that has the fiercely loyal BlackBerry community worried.

RIM shares were up 46 cents in midday trading at $74.61.

CNET News.com reporter Anne Broache and Reuters contributed to this report.

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  • Most Recent of 29 Talkback(s)
Article could have been clearer
It's hard to parse this article. Is this a setback for the holding company or for Blackberry users?

As to the wiseacre who threw in the Al Gore comment, that is a tired canard. See Read the rest)
Posted by: richwig Posted on: 02/23/06 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
Yikes  specialk_z | 02/22/06
Step 6...  BitTwiddler | 02/22/06
Step 7 and 8  Narg | 02/22/06
Unfortunately  Gregory.J.Bradley@... | 02/22/06
Not nearly finished.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 02/22/06
Due process is a right.  John Le'Brecage | 02/23/06
Patent Farms. Bah, humbug...  BitTwiddler | 02/22/06
sue happy  kjgslg@... | 02/22/06
Hear Hear  Scoid_z | 02/22/06
Great idea  Gregory.J.Bradley@... | 02/22/06
So invest YOUR money and doit your way.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 02/22/06
Here No_Axe goes again, folks.  John Le'Brecage | 02/23/06
Oh come on  James T. Kirk | 02/23/06
Farms Okay if some kind of effort is shown  daver_z | 02/23/06
Patents require publication  BorisKarloff | 02/23/06
Patents finally rejected  stevem_001 | 02/22/06
The Answer?  Gregory.J.Bradley@... | 02/22/06
The Issue Exposed  Cayble | 02/22/06
I like your closing. It makes sense. It will be ignored by the USPTO. (NT)  Update victim | 02/22/06
Perfect  nomorems | 02/22/06
Not quite the basis  John Le'Brecage | 02/23/06
Moderately True?.  Cayble | 02/23/06
The original mistake...  NobodyHome | 02/23/06
So then we have a double highway forming  jaszman | 02/23/06
BINGO  Cayble | 02/23/06
Product equals Patent???  morinville@... | 02/23/06
Did Al Gore patent the internet?  danocanada | 02/23/06
Nope, that was his mistake.  UncleBubba | 02/23/06
Article could have been clearer  richwig | 02/23/06

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