Gamers Unite to Bring Back Titles Stranded by GameSpy Shutdown


Battlefield 1942.

Battlefield 1942. Electronic Arts



When GameSpy Technology—which hosted games such as Crysis, Battlefield 1942, and the original Halo—shut down its servers at the end of May, it left a bevy of games and gamers stranded offline. But fans are developing workarounds and setting up private hosting to keep their games going.


ModDB user Rorisup has compiled a collection of solutions, hosted on a Wiki-type article on ModDB, showing players how to get back in the game.


Solutions for at least 12 games have been found so far: For Battlefield 1942, users must install a modified .exe file to redirect their game to a new list of master servers. Halo community member btcc22 wrote a new server-browser application, which Bungie itself now hosts and supports, via an official patch.


GameSpy Technology, which was independent of the gaming site GameSpy (which was shuttered in February, 2013), started in 1997 as a host for Quake server IP addresses. IGN bought it in 2000, and ran it for more than a decade before selling to Glu Mobile Inc. in 2012. Its services included matchmaking, leaderboards, and player metrics; community features such as friends lists, messaging, and voice communication; and management tools and services for teams, guilds, and clans.


A long list of companies, including A-listers like 2k Games, Electronic Arts, Activision, and Bethesda, relied upon it. When word of the shutdown got out, many of them took steps to ensure players could stay online. Iron Galaxy, for example, patched Street Fighter 3: 3rd Strike Online Edition to use a homegrown solution. Similarly, Epic Games has been phasing out GameSpy’s involvement in its games for some time.


But a side-effect of the shutdown is that many games—even if they have found a way to stay online—have lost their connection to fan-made mods. Arma 2 for example—the game upon which the massively popular Day Z mod was originally built—will stay online via Steamworks integration (a hosting service run by Valve), but its mods will be affected. Similarly, many stand-alone mods were built to use the same framework as their parent game, meaning that even if the base game has migrated to a new service, the mod creators must make a shift as well.


On the other hand, stand-alone mods are also free to set up their own hosting services. The Battlefield 2 mod Project Reality has already developed a replacement, while a solution for BF2 itself is still in the works.


To be fair, most of the games that used GameSpy’s servers are old, to say the least—Battlefield 1942 and Halo both have been around long enough to spawn 10th-anniversary collectors’ editions, for example—but that doesn’t mean they shouldn’t still be playable. Take the backlash surrounding always-on DRM such as Ubisoft’s Uplay or last year’s SimCity. Players feel its bad enough when they need a constant server connection in order to play a single-player game, but even worse if they’ll be locked out if and when those servers, for whatever reason, go down.


For games where the online component is the crux of the experience, getting locked offline is effectively the same as getting locked out entirely.



What’s the Difference Between a Cheap Camera Lens and an Expensive One?


2014-06-20-Hi-Low_Nikon_lenses

Josh Valcarcel/WIRED



What do you get for your money? That’s the question everyone looking to buy a piece of tech asks themselves. It also happens to be the question this recurring feature will try to answer. Is it worth spending extra on high-end gear, or do you get what you need with cheaper models? Every month, we’ll look at some of the cheapest and most expensive products in a given category, testing each to see what their limits are and help you figure out when you can cheap it out, and when to plunk down some extra cash to get what you need.


The legendary photographer Henri Cartier-Bresson described photography as being about what he called “the decisive moment,” capturing that image frozen in time that is the essence of the subject. Although much of what Cartier-Bresson was taking about was learning to see that perfect moment, the equipment you use also plays a part in capturing it.


lens-hilow-inlinelo

Josh Valcarcel/WIRED



This desire for perfect photos is what drives many of us to spend big bucks on lenses. One of the reasons to buy a Single Lens Reflex (SLR) or mirrorless camera is the ability to swap lenses. You can use different lenses for different situations, or upgrade to better lenses over time. Sure, a lot of photographers don’t bother, sticking with the lens that comes with the camera. But the deeper you get into photography, the more you realize that you’d be happier with your results if you picked up a quality lens.

So how big is the difference between a lens that costs a few hundred dollars, and one costing over a thousand dollars more? What kinds of gains does your money buy? Are the quality improvements substantial enough to be noticed by the untrained eye?


I decided to find out. I took two lenses and shot a series of images with them side-by-side, using the same camera and settings. The two lenses were both made by Nikon: a 50mm f/1.4 that costs about $350 and a 58mm f/1.4 that costs about $1,700, both lent to us courtesy of Borrowlenses.com. I chose two prime lenses like this because they offer better image quality than comparable zoom lenses, and that’s what we were looking for: quality photos. Both lenses offer excellent aperture ranges, and having a wide aperture (such as the f/1.4 of these) makes it easier to create an attractive, defocused background in an image.


Looking just at the specs of these two lenses, you’d think that they are the same: they have similar focal lengths and the same aperture ranges. So why the huge price difference? My tests show that both are great lenses, shooting sharp, clean images, but that the 58mm lens is sharper, leading to images of better overall quality.


One thing to note here: most modern SLRs come with a zoom lens as part of the kit you buy. These invariable produce worse images than the fixed focal length, prime lenses I tested. Take it as read that both of these lenses are much better than the one that came with your SLR camera.


Test 1: The Cat Photo



First, I took photos of a jaguar statue, carved by Mexican artist Jacobo & Maria Angeles, which is painted with intricate detail. On first glance, the two images look identical: both lenses captured the details of the painting well. However, a closer look shows that the 58mm lens captured more detail, which produces a more striking image. Look at the eye: the 58mm shot (on the right, click to see it full size) shows more of the details of the brush strokes and dots, which makes for a more compelling photo. The background is also worth looking at: the defocused foliage has a softer, more organic look on the 58mm shot that helps the statue stand out from the jungle (well, my back garden), while the 50mm produces more artificial looking hard circles with halos that detract from the statue. Photographers refer to this defocused organic look as Bokeh, and it makes a lot of difference when you are trying to make the foreground object stand out. A background with plenty of Bokeh looks soft, diffused and non-intrusive, while one with the halos and sharp-edged blobs of a cheaper lens draws the eye away from the subject.


Test 2: The Selfie



Next, I tried a self-portrait. Again, both of the images are sharp, with great detail. But the 58mm lens (on the right) has an edge again: looking at details like the hairs on my chinny chin chin and the pores on my nose, the 58mm shot looks more natural with smoother detail and tone.


Test 3: The Check-In



Shooting on the streets of Cambridge, Massachusetts, I came across two cherry trees in blossom in front of the former home of Edith Lesely, the founder of Lesley University. The differences between these two shots are subtle: both lenses captured a good amount of detail across the images, capturing the paler hints and shades of the cherry blossoms well. The 58mm (on the right, click to see it larger) has the edge here again, though, with details like the pink blossoms against the white paint standing out a little better than the 50mm, especially in the center of the frame.


Test 4: The Landscape



Next was a bucolic shot of a bridge over the Mystic River. For this, I put the camera on a tripod and stopped the lens down to f/16 to make sure that I had plenty of depth of field. Again, the 58mm had a slight, but significant, edge here, with better detail and clarity. The reflections of the sun on the river are also telling: with the 50mm, they have a starburst look, caused by light reflecting within the lens elements. On the 58mm, the starburst look is less visible. To be fair, I could have removed this on both lenses by using a slightly wider aperture, but the idea here is to compare them. If you look at the bottom right corner of the image on the 50mm version, you can also see how much detail is lost in the waves, while the 58mm image remains sharp to the edge.


The Verdict


I balanced my own tests with a comparative review of these two lenses done by DXOLabs, and I can definitely rate the 58mm higher than the 50mm. Based on the visible details within my own images, and DXO’s objective measurements of sharpness, transmission (the amount of light the lens lets through) and chromatic aberration (the color fringing caused by different frequencies of light being diffracted differently by the lens elements), it’s clear that while both lenses are good, the 58mm is better.


lens-hilow-inlinehi

Josh Valcarcel/WIRED



But is it worth the extra $1,350? For most shooters, no. The $350 lens shoots excellent images, and a lot of photographers won’t notice the subtle differences between the two — especially if they’re not generating large prints. Camera lenses are like wine: when you get to the good stuff, a subtle improvement costs you a lot more, and some people can taste the difference. Others are happy with a cheaper bottle that tastes just fine, and the $350 50mm f/1.4G lens shows that you don’t need to spend that much to get a lens that is much better than the cheap zoom your SLR came with.

It’s a truism to say that buying a more expensive lens isn’t going to make you a better photographer. Our old friend Cartier-Bresson himself used one camera and one lens—a Leica with a 50mm—for most of his career. But he was regarded as one of the greatest photographers of the 20th century because he knew exactly how his camera would perform. A good photographer takes the time to understand their equipment so they can get the best image, irrespective of how expensive their kit is. If you spend $350 on a lens and really learn how to use it, you’ll be closer to the ideal of photographers like Cartier-Bresson, who used good equipment to take great photos.



Insane Jet-Powered Hoverboard Lets You Fly Over the Waves


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ZR Standalone





Catching waves is rad. Flying 16 feet above them on a hoverboard propelled by a stream of high-speed H2O is radder.

The newest ZR Hoverboard is basically a souped-up wakeboard that uses a rear-mounted water jet to speed you along at up to 16 MPH. You’re not off flipping from crest to crest on your own though—the hoverboard is tethered to your boat or jet ski with a hose.


The Hoverboard connects to the company’s existing Flyboard, so if you don’t already own one, you’ll need to pony up extra cash for that and a $350, 1.5-hour training course. Apparently they don’t just let anyone strap on a jet-powered hoverboard and speed off into the wild blue yonder, go figure.


To be this fly, it’ll cost you at least $2,675 (and goes up from there).



See the Wonders of Harry Potter’s New Diagon Alley Attraction Before It Opens



Of course, to board the Hogwarts Express train you've got to walk into the wall between platforms 9 and 10 to get to Platform 9 ¾. A nifty mirror effect makes it look as if you're disappearing into the brick wall, a perfect photo op. Photo: Ty Wright/WIRED



Of course, to board the Hogwarts Express train you've got to walk into the wall between platforms 9 and 10 to get to Platform 9 ¾. A nifty mirror effect makes it look as if you're disappearing into the brick wall, a perfect photo op.


Photo: Ty Wright/WIRED



The Knight Bus, sort of like Uber for wizards, sits outside the entrance to Diagon Alley. You can chat up the bus' conductor and his shrunken head companion. Photo: Ty Wright/WIRED



The Knight Bus, sort of like Uber for wizards, sits outside the entrance to Diagon Alley. You can chat up the bus' conductor and his shrunken head companion.


Photo: Ty Wright/WIRED



How do you get into Diagon Alley? Why, by walking through this brick wall. Photo: Ty Wright/WIRED



How do you get into Diagon Alley? Why, by walking through this brick wall.


Photo: Ty Wright/WIRED



Harry used a bezoar (a stone from a goat's stomach; gross) to save Ron Weasley's life in Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince. You can find a jar of them in the Slug & Jiggers Apothecary window. Photo: Ty Wright/WIRED



Harry used a bezoar (a stone from a goat's stomach; gross) to save Ron Weasley's life in Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince. You can find a jar of them in the Slug & Jiggers Apothecary window.


Photo: Ty Wright/WIRED



Florean Fortescue's Ice Cream Parlor has lots of hard-packed ice cream in odd flavors like Clotted Cream and Chocolate Chili. But the star is the soft-serve Butterbeer ice cream, with its elegant swirls of butterbeer-flavored syrup. Photo: Ty Wright/WIRED



Florean Fortescue's Ice Cream Parlor has lots of hard-packed ice cream in odd flavors like Clotted Cream and Chocolate Chili. But the star is the soft-serve Butterbeer ice cream, with its elegant swirls of butterbeer-flavored syrup.


Photo: Ty Wright/WIRED



Like many youngsters today, Fred and George Weasley dropped out of school to found a disruptive technology startup. At Weasley's Wizard Wheezes you can buy toy versions of their inventions, from Decoy Detonators to Extendable Ears. Photo: Ty Wright/WIRED



Like many youngsters today, Fred and George Weasley dropped out of school to found a disruptive technology startup. At Weasley's Wizard Wheezes you can buy toy versions of their inventions, from Decoy Detonators to Extendable Ears.


Photo: Ty Wright/WIRED



While you're waiting around to ride Harry Potter and the Escape From Gringotts, check out the copies of the Daily Prophet newspaper. Not only do the photos move around, but the articles on the pages are not just dummy text -- they're fully written out! Photo: Ty Wright/WIRED



While you're waiting around to ride Harry Potter and the Escape From Gringotts, check out the copies of the Daily Prophet newspaper. Not only do the photos move around, but the articles on the pages are not just dummy text -- they're fully written out!


Photo: Ty Wright/WIRED



The dragon atop Gringotts Bank is no mere gargoyle. Every now and again, it breathes a giant blast of real fire! When you hear sort of a high-pitched whine near the dragon, he is about to belch some serious flames, so get your camera ready. Photo: Ty Wright/WIRED



The dragon atop Gringotts Bank is no mere gargoyle. Every now and again, it breathes a giant blast of real fire! When you hear sort of a high-pitched whine near the dragon, he is about to belch some serious flames, so get your camera ready.


Photo: Ty Wright/WIRED



Not sure which wand to buy? Mr. Ollivander will find the right magic stick for you, with a fun little show to go along with it. Ollivander's been set up in the Harry Potter park since 2010, but his Diagon Alley branch is much, much larger to hold the crowds in. Photo: Ty Wright/WIRED



Not sure which wand to buy? Mr. Ollivander will find the right magic stick for you, with a fun little show to go along with it. Ollivander's been set up in the Harry Potter park since 2010, but his Diagon Alley branch is much, much larger to hold the crowds in.


Photo: Ty Wright/WIRED



Just like Harry, you can travel from London to Hogwarts in style in the Hogwarts Express, which will take you back and forth between Diagon Alley and Hogsmeade in style. Amazing special effects during the ride include a Dementor attack. Photo: Ty Wright/WIRED



Just like Harry, you can travel from London to Hogwarts in style in the Hogwarts Express, which will take you back and forth between Diagon Alley and Hogsmeade in style. Amazing special effects during the ride include a Dementor attack.


Photo: Ty Wright/WIRED



Draco Malfoy used the Hand of Glory ("insert a candle and it gives light only to the holder") in one of his several dumb failed plots to kill Professor Dumbledore. He bought it from Borgin and Burke's shop in Knockturn Alley, where you can find it today. Photo: Ty Wright/WIRED



Draco Malfoy used the Hand of Glory ("insert a candle and it gives light only to the holder") in one of his several dumb failed plots to kill Professor Dumbledore. He bought it from Borgin and Burke's shop in Knockturn Alley, where you can find it today.


Photo: Ty Wright/WIRED



Sadly, this tattoo parlor down Knockturn Alley is not an actual establishment and kids can't get real tattoos here. But the "animated tattoo" effects you can see if you peer in the window are worth the trip down seedy, dark Knockturn. Photo: Ty Wright/WIRED



Sadly, this tattoo parlor down Knockturn Alley is not an actual establishment and kids can't get real tattoos here. But the "animated tattoo" effects you can see if you peer in the window are worth the trip down seedy, dark Knockturn.


Photo: Ty Wright/WIRED



This is the kind of lock you have to pick if you want to break into a Gringotts vault. Photo: Ty Wright/WIRED



This is the kind of lock you have to pick if you want to break into a Gringotts vault.


Photo: Ty Wright/WIRED



Located just off Diagon Alley, the perpetually nighttime Knockturn Alley is where you go if you want to murder somebody and need the right magic to do it. You can also buy jewelry (note: jewelry may carry a death curse). Photo: Ty Wright/WIRED



Located just off Diagon Alley, the perpetually nighttime Knockturn Alley is where you go if you want to murder somebody and need the right magic to do it. You can also buy jewelry (note: jewelry may carry a death curse).


Photo: Ty Wright/WIRED



You don't have to go in Diagon Alley to find an easter egg. Hang out near 12 Grimmauld Place outside the area, and watch the windows to see Sirius Black's house elf Kreacher peer out at you. Oh, he doesn't like Muggles. Photo: Ty Wright/WIRED



You don't have to go in Diagon Alley to find an easter egg. Hang out near 12 Grimmauld Place outside the area, and watch the windows to see Sirius Black's house elf Kreacher peer out at you. Oh, he doesn't like Muggles.


Photo: Ty Wright/WIRED



Gringotts Bank, and the thrill ride inside its doors, looms at the end of Diagon Alley's main drag. Photo: Ty Wright/WIRED



Gringotts Bank, and the thrill ride inside its doors, looms at the end of Diagon Alley's main drag.


Photo: Ty Wright/WIRED



The stuffed animals for sale in the Magical Menagerie are all characters from the books, from Fluffy the Cerberus to Buckbeak the Hippogriff. But what's up with the ferret? Even I had to be clued in to this: at the end of the last movie, Harry's son takes this ferret with him to Hogwarts. Photo: Ty Wright/WIRED



The stuffed animals for sale in the Magical Menagerie are all characters from the books, from Fluffy the Cerberus to Buckbeak the Hippogriff. But what's up with the ferret? Even I had to be clued in to this: at the end of the last movie, Harry's son takes this ferret with him to Hogwarts.


Photo: Ty Wright/WIRED



This portrait of the Weasley family is... somewhere in Diagon Alley. Can you find it? Photo: Ty Wright/WIRED



This portrait of the Weasley family is... somewhere in Diagon Alley. Can you find it?


Photo: Ty Wright/WIRED



You can buy many different kinds of magic wands, from original creations to the ones used by the characters in the film. Photo: Ty Wright/WIRED



You can buy many different kinds of magic wands, from original creations to the ones used by the characters in the film.


Photo: Ty Wright/WIRED



A hologram comedy scene between Bill Weasley and this goblin will play for you as you wait to board Escape From Gringotts. Photo: Ty Wright/WIRED



A hologram comedy scene between Bill Weasley and this goblin will play for you as you wait to board Escape From Gringotts.


Photo: Ty Wright/WIRED



25 Years After Batman, No Superhero Movie Can Compare


batman

Warner Bros.



Tim Burton’s Batman turns 25 today, believe it or not. And in the quarter-century since the movie was released, superhero movies have turned into a genre all their own. Some of have been more coherent than Batman, some have been slicker, some even more enjoyable. But none have been as off-kilter, confused, and passionate as the 1989 film—and that doesn’t bode well for the future of the genre.


Let’s get this out of the way first: Batman is not necessarily a good movie. Yes, there’s a lot that’s good about it—Michael Keaton made a surprisingly great Bruce Wayne, despite the fan outcry at his announcement, and the movie looks amazing thanks to Burton’s direction and Anton Furst’s production design—but overall the movie is as uneven as a mountain range. A lot of that can be put down to the performances, which range widely in intensity; at times, two people sharing a scene seem like they’re acting in entirely different movies (e.g., Michael Gough’s Alfred with Kim Basinger’s Vicki Vale, or Jack Nicholson with… well, anyone, really).


But the movie also reflects a struggle between Burton and Warner Bros. over just what a Batman movie should be. Burton came into Batman with a particular mission: to show the public a cinematic Caped Crusader as fraught as the one who first surfaced in Frank Miller’s The Dark Knight Returns, then continued in projects like Batman: Year One and The Killing Joke. Burton’s Batman, in his mind, would drop the camp caricature the vigilante had been saddled with since the 1960s television show and replace it with something more befitting of a character nicknamed the “dark knight.”


In rebuttal, Warner Bros. offered this:




Is the End of Moore’s Law Slowing the World’s Supercomputing Race?


The world's top supercomputer: the Tihane-2. Photo: Jack Dongarra

The world’s top supercomputer: the Tihane-2. Photo: Jack Dongarra



Every six months, a team of supercomputing academics compiles a list of the most powerful computers on the planet. It’s called the Top500 list, and it has become a competition of sorts. National labs vie against universities, military facilities, NASA, and even temporary cloud-based supercomputers–all to see who’s building the worlds’ largest number-crunching machines.


This year, the machine on the top of the list is Tihane-2, a Chinese system that can perform 33.86 quadrillion calculations per second. But here’s the thing. Tihane-2 was on top back in November of 2013, and a year ago too. In fact, when you look at the top ten machines on the June list, there’s only one new entry–an unidentified Cray supercomputer, operated by the U.S. government. It’s ranked tenth.


For Jack Dongarra, a computer science professor with the Unversity of Tennessee who has long been involved with the list, we’re starting to see a trend. “Things seem to be slowing down,” he says. “You might characterize it as maybe a sign that Moore’s Law is having some issues.” Moore’s Law predicts that the number of transistors on a computer microprocessor will double every two years or so, providing regular leaps in computing power.


Dongarra sees early signs of stagnation not only at the top of the list, but also at the bottom of the list. Traditionally, the system that places last on the list has been significantly faster than its predecessor. But over the past few years, that growth rate has slowed–as you can see in this chart:


Growth at the bottom of the Top500 List has taken a dip. Image: Top500 List

Growth at the bottom of the Top500 List (the yellow dots) has taken a slight dip. Click for full graph. Image: Top500 List



“We see a widening of the gap between #1 and #500,” Dongarra says. In other words, there are still some wondrous giant computers being made, but they’re not popping up as frequently, and the smaller systems at the bottom aren’t catching up as fast, either.


For more than a decade, Moore’s law has treated the supercomputer community pretty well, handily delivering astounding performance improvements year after year, but eking out those improvements has been a little harder of late. Transistors are shrinking down to the atomic level, and chip designers have had to rejigger the way they boost performance–delivering multi-core chips and looking at novel architectures.


A few years ago, hybrid systems that used graphical processing units as calculation accelerators were all the rage, but the “uptake has not been as great as the hype has been,” Dongarra says. Without a big performance win to be had right now, researchers may be holding on to their existing systems just a little bit longer before they build the next great thing.


Over at Intel—the chipmaking giant that supplies the processors for the vast majority of supercomputers on the list—they see no slowdown as they map out the next few generations of microprocessors. “We expect Moore’s Law to continue to provide benefits for the foreseeable future across a broad range of computing segments,” said Bill Calder, a company spokesman via an email message. And indeed there may be other forces at work here. In the U.S., funding for these behemoths has been scaled back, and that may also be a contributing factor to the stagnation on the list.


But if the Top500 List really is saying something about Moore’s Law, then the rest of the world should take notice. We’ve grown accustomed to chip-makers cranking out faster and cheaper computing power, year after year. If that engine is sputtering, we’ll all soon be feeling the drag.



Supreme Court Deals Major Blow to Patent Trolls


The United States Supreme Court

The United States Supreme Court. Photo: US Gov’t



The Supreme Court just dealt a major blow to patent trolls.


On Thursday, the court upheld the notion that an idea alone can’t be patented, deciding unanimously that merely implementing an idea on a computer isn’t enough to transform it into a patentable invention. Published on the Supreme Court website, the decision does leave room for patenting specific ways of implementing an idea, but it could prevent some of the most frivolous patent cases from moving forward.


Such cases have become an enormous problem in recent years, particularly in the tech industry. The industry is plagued by an increasing number of “patent trolls,” companies that exist solely to force money out of others using patents, and many large companies now spend an enormous amount of time and money defending themselves from patents that should never have been granted in the first place. Legislators and activists have long pushed for new patent laws in an effort to solve this problem, but recent efforts have stalled, and today’s court decision can help limit the problem while other bills are penned.


The case in question was Alice Corporation vs. CLS Bank. Alice Corporation, a financial company based in Australia, holds a number of patents for facilitating financial exchanges between two parties by using a computer as a third party. CLS Bank, a foreign currency exchange company, filed a claim that the patents were “invalid, unenforceable, or not infringed,” and then Alice countered with a claim that CLS was infringing its patents. The court ruled in favor of CLS, reasoning that third party intermediation is a fundamental building block of the economy, and not a novel invention and that “merely requiring generic computer implementation fails to transform that abstract idea into a patent-eligible invention.”


‘What the Supreme Court did in the Alice vs CLS case is give parties dealing with those various patents a very important tool to fight back by invalidating those patents.’


The decision is important because many software patent cases are based on ideas rather than implementations, says Julie Samuels, executive director at the public policy think tank and research outfit Engine. “Most of the troll cases involve software patents of dubious quality,” she says. “What the Supreme Court did in the Alice vs CLS case is give parties dealing with those various patents a very important tool to fight back by invalidating those patents and, going forward, gives the patent office instruction about what it can and cannot issue patents on.”


For example, online advertising company Ultramercial is currently suing video streaming company Hulu. Ultramercial is alleging that Hulu violates its patent on forcing viewers to watch a commercial before playing copyrighted content. Alice vs. CLS establishes that the mere idea of showing ads before content isn’t patentable–only the specific implementation.


But other patent reforms are still necessary to protect companiesd from frivolous patent suits. The Alice vs. CLS ruling may help prevent dubious patents from being granted in the future, but it won’t stop patent trolls from filing suits with their existing software patent portfolios. And because of the high cost of fighting litigation, many companies may continue to shy away from fighting such suits, even if they are likely to win.


Legislators have tried to resolve the cost issue, but they’ve hit political road blocks. Last December, the House of Representatives passed a bill that addressed the matter in part by requiring the loser in a patent suit to pay the legal fees for the winner, which would, in theory, discourage frivolous claims and encourage wrongfully targeted companies and individuals to fight back. It was widely expected to pass in the Senate as well, but Senator Patrick Leahy, a Democrat from Vermont, killed the bill in during committee last month.


Samuels says the patent reform bill is still needed, but the Alice vs. CLS an important victory. It’s yet another example of the Supreme Court reigning in patent decisions made by circuit courts. And it solves a problem that was unlikely to be resolved by Congress. “Neither the House nor the Senate had the political will to address the patent quality issue,” she says. “This decision deals with the issue Congress wasn’t willing to, even if the law had passed.”