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D2L: Blackboard's Comments 'Contempt(ible)'

6/23/2008

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On the heels of Blackboard's latest court action, Desire2Learn this week posted a response describing some of the commercial LMS leader's comments last week as "contempt(ible)" themselves and nothing more than a cynical attempt to create "fear, uncertainty, [and] doubt" in the marketplace. Blackboard filed a motion last Tuesday for contempt on the grounds that Desire2Learn had not fulfilled its obligations under a court order resulting from a patent infringement suit.

Responding in large part to comments made by Blackboard Chief Legal Officer Matthew Small in this publication, Desire2Learn said that Blackboard's negative comments were false and that its actions in court are designed to stifle competition in a market where Blackboard clearly dominates, at least as far as commercial vendors are concerned. "Blackboard's apparent hope to defeat a formidable competitor is to attempt to strangle it with legal actions, as it cannot compete against a superior product and a company that provides superior client service," Desire2Learn posted Monday in its ongoing blog covering its litigation with Blackboard.

Blackboard's Small had told us that it was his opinion that Desire2Learn's workaround (Learning Environment 8.3) included only "cosmetic changes" in comparison with the previous version, which was found by one court to be infringing on Blackboard's e-learning patent.

Desire2Learn, however, said that 8.3 was a carefully tailored workaround: "Version 8.3 was planned to ensure that we addressed Blackboard's claims, regardless of our opinion of them. We achieved this, while also adding a host of new features and functionality in version 8.3. Then our work was vetted both internally and externally, both by our attorneys and by a highly regarded technology expert."

Desire2Learn, of course, has been working to get Blackboard's patent revoked, an effort that has seen some preliminary success, with the United States Patent and Trademark Office rejecting all of Blackboard's patent claims in a "non-final" action. (This was the result of Desire2Learn's inter partes reexamination request combined with an ex parte reexam request filed by open source advocate The Software Freedom Law Center.)



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