
Courtesy ABC News
Facebook
is being sued over its "like" button by a patent-holding company that claims
Facebook ripped off its technology.
The lawsuit was filed in U.S. District Court in Virginia by Rembrandt Social
Media, the owner of patents filed by a deceased Dutch programmer named Joannes
Jozef Everardus van Der Meer.
According to the lawsuit, van Der Meer pioneered technology in the 1990s that
today is being used on Facebook.
In 1998, van Der Meer applied to patent a technology that allowed users to
create online diaries and a patent for a "related set of technologies that
enabled the automatic transfer, at a user's request, of third-party content from
a content-provider's website to the user's personal diary page," according to
court documents.
Essentially, van Der Meer's patent envisioned what Facebook today calls its
"share" and "like" buttons, the lawsuit said.
In 2004, van Der Meer, doing business under his company, Aduna, registered
the domain Surfbook.com. However, he died that year and was unable to create his
social network, court documents said.
The lawsuit claims Facebook was aware of the patents from the 1990s and has
cited them in its own patent applications.
"Although Mark Zuckerberg did not start what became Facebook until 2003, it
bears a remarkable resemblance, both in terms of its functionality and technical
implementation, to the personal Web page diary that van Der Meer had invented
years earlier," court documents said.
Facebook declined to comment on the lawsuit.
The lawsuit also names AddThis, a social bookmarking service that was an
early partner of Facebook.
Rembrandt Social Media is seeking damages, interest and courts costs,
according to the court documents.