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Content delivery network specialist Mirror Image is the latest in the industry to secure a patent covering its core technology, which addresses how content is moved across the Internet to improve speed and performance.
It's a technology that Mirror Image says other service providers and caching companies are using, which could result in new skirmishes in the content delivery industry that has been mired in legal battles.
Patents are nothing unusual in the technology industry where intellectual property is a key asset. But for the content delivery market, patents have become central to competitive tussles that have left some users wondering if their providers are safe from legal attack.
That has industry observers mulling what will result from the Mirror Image patent, which covers a transparent Web caching architecture the company designed in 1996. The technology involves automatically and transparently caching requested content on specific servers for quicker download to end users, according to Mirror Image.
The patent also addresses cache-aggregation technology, which combines multiple caches into a single entity that not only caches content but handles storage, compute and transaction processes, says Bob Hammond, Mirror Image's CTO.
"The patent covers two different areas, which are core to our technology and, as it turns out, are core to a lot of other folks' technology, as well," Hammond says.
"We're in the process of poking our heads up and looking around, trying to understand who's doing what. And that includes hardware manufacturers and ISPs and MSPs, and of course, our competitors," he says.
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Hammond says users can expect announcements from Mirror Image in the next few months that will detail how it plans to exercise its patent and might include everything from cross-licensing to partnerships.
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