Tag Archives: mueller

Charlie Sheen – Charlie Sheen will seine Zwillinge weggeben

Wenn sie nicht geschieden wären, wären Charlie Sheen und Denise Richards ein echtes Traumpaar, denn die beiden Filmstars halten zusammen – in guten wie in schlechten Zeiten. Er möchte jetzt, dass auch seine Zwillinge, die er mit Brooke Mueller bekommen hat, für immer bei Richards leben.

US-Star Charlie Sheen (47) geht offenbar davon aus, dass seine Ex-Ehefrau Brooke Mueller (35) auch nach dem 20. Drogenentzug, den sie derzeit versucht, wieder rückfällig werden wird. „Was soll dieses Mal anders sein, wenn Brooke aus dem Entzug entlassen wird? Sie hat es 19 Mal nicht geschafft, clean zu bleiben. Charlie wünscht ihr nichts Böses, aber es geht hier nicht mehr um sie, sondern um das Beste für Max und Bob“, wird ein Freund vom Promi-Portal „Radaronline“ zitiert.

Nach „Two and a Half Men“ überzeugt Charlie Sheen auch in der Serie „Anger Management“ – hier gibt´s die erste Staffel auf DVD

Weil Mueller seit Jahren mit schweren Drogenproblemen kämpft, kümmert sich ihre Vorgängerin, Charlie Sheens Ex-Frau Denise Richards (42), seit einiger Zeit um die Sheen-Mueller-Zwillinge Bob und Max (4). Der „Anger Management“-Star Sheen möchte jetzt, dass das auch so bleibt. „Er wird dem Richter sagen, dass die Jungen für immer bei Denise bleiben sollen. Denn Brookes Drogensucht verbietet ihr die Betreuung der Kinder“, heißt es bei dem Onlineportal weiter.

Und Schauspielerin Denise Richards, die sich derzeit somit um fünf Kinder – Eloise Richards sowie Sam, Lola, Bob und Max Sheen – kümmert? Die soll einverstanden sein: „Sie möchte das Beste für sie und liebt es, für die beiden zu sorgen“, weiß die Quelle.

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Charlie Sheen – Charlie Sheen will seine Zwillinge weggeben

Charlie Sheen – Brooke Mueller verliert Sheens Zwillinge

Die Zwillinge von Charlie Sheen leben nicht länger bei seiner Ex-Frau Brooke Mueller. Die Behörden haben die Vierjährigen laut US-Medien aus ihrem Haus geholt, weil sie dort nicht mehr sicher seien. Jetzt wohnen die Jungs erst einmal bei Denise Richards, die mit Sheen selbst zwei Töchter hat.

Charlie Sheens (47) Zwillingsjungs dürfen vorerst nicht mehr bei ihrer Mutter Brooke Mueller (35) leben. Die Behörden haben die Kinder abgeholt, weil die Vierjährigen dort nicht mehr sicher seien, hieß es laut US-Medienberichten. Sozialarbeiter sollen die Umgebung über ein Jahr beobachtet haben, in der die Kids aufwachsen. Sie kamen offenbar zu dem Schluss, dass Mueller zu oft nicht vor Ort sei.

Der neue Serienhit von Charlie Sheen – hier gibt es „Anger Management“ auf DVD

„Sie hat einige Wochen nicht in ihrem Haus gelebt“, zitiert „E! News“ einen Insider. „Sie wissen nicht, wo sie ist. Das ist so schlimm.“ Jetzt sind die beiden Kinder vorübergehend bei Sheens Ex-Frau Denise Richards (42) untergebracht. „Die Jungs haben schon so viel Zeit mit Denise verbracht, dass es die beste Wahl war, sie ihr vorübergehend anzuvertrauen. Charlie unterstützt das sehr. Er wird jetzt wahrscheinlich eine bessere Beziehung zu den beiden aufbauen. Alle freuen sich, dass die Zwillinge ein stabiles Umfeld bekommen“, heißt es bei „E! News“ weiter.

Richards war mit Sheen von 2002 bis 2006 verheiratet und hat mit ihm zusammen zwei Töchter. Sie kümmerte sich um die Zwillinge Bob und Max auch schon, als Mueller im vergangenen Dezember auf Entzug war. Nächste Woche soll sich ein Gericht mit der Frage beschäftigen, wo Sheens Söhne in Zukunft leben sollen. Mueller und Sheen waren von 2008 bis 2011 miteinander verheiratet, die Beziehung zerbrach aber angeblich schon 2009, nachdem der Schauspieler seine Frau mit einem Messer bedroht haben soll.

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Charlie Sheen – Brooke Mueller verliert Sheens Zwillinge

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Facebook counter-sues Yahoo over infringement of 10 patents

Screen Shot 2012 04 03 at 11.30.55 AM 520x245 Facebook counter sues Yahoo over infringement of 10 patents

Facebook has filed a counter-suit against Yahoo over 10 patents, reports Florian Mueller on Twitter. This is a countersuit to the one that Yahoo filed against Facebook over their own 10 social media patents last month.

Facebook is claiming 10 patents against Yahoo including the following:

Facebook’s General Counsel Ted Ullyot told All Things D that “While we are asserting patent claims of our own, we do so in response to Yahoo’s short-sighted decision to attack one of its partners and prioritize litigation over innovation.”

Earlier this year, Yahoo warned Facebook that it would seek legal action if it did not license between 10 and 20 patents on technologies related to advertising, personalized web pages, social networking and messaging. At that time, Yahoo said “we must insist that Facebook either enter into a licensing agreement or we will be compelled to move forward unilaterally to protect our rights.”

Facebook issued a statement when the Yahoo suit was filed, saying: “We’re disappointed that Yahoo, a longtime business partner of Facebook and a company that has substantially benefited from its association with Facebook, has decided to resort to litigation. Once again, we learned of Yahoo’s decision simultaneously with the media. We will defend ourselves vigorously against these puzzling actions.”

It looks like it has made good on that promis with this suit.

Fb Answer and Counterclaims


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Facebook counter-sues Yahoo over infringement of 10 patents

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Apple moves to ban the Samsung Galaxy Nexus in the U.S., attacking Android with 4 patents

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Apple has filed a motion for preliminary injunction against the Samsung Galaxy Nexus in the U.S., for infringing on four patents held by the company, reports Florian Mueller of FOSS Patents. This move is an incredibly aggressive one that uses some very strong patents that have already been proven to have some success.

The motion, which was filed Thursday, names four patents, one of which has already had some success in use against Android devices and three others which appear to be very dangerous to Google’s business as well.

The four patents are a ‘data tapping’ (a term coined by Mueller) patent, a patent related to Siri’s search functionality, a slide-to-unlock patent and a patent on the way that complete words are automatically recommended when typing them into iOS.

These patents are all relatively new filings, which is likely why some of them have not seen legal action before. One of them, however — the ‘data tapping’ patent — has seen some success against Android devices in the past, having been used successfully to win a ban request Apple filed with the ITC against the import of HTC devices, which begins in April of this year.

At this point, there is no real way to take this besides a strike as close to Google as Apple can get without directly pursuing the company. The Galaxy Nexus is a flagship device that runs a stock version of Android 4.0, with no Samsung ‘improvements’. That means that these patents, all software, are really being directed at Android as much as they are at the phone.

As the device is made by Samsung, Apple does couch the arguments in terms of the Galaxy Nexus, calling Samsung a compulsive and unrepentant infringer on Apple’s patents.

Apple has been on an aggressive tear lately in the U.S., having filed suit against Motorola Mobility stateside just yesterday in order to head off arguments by Motorola against Apple in Germany. In that argument, Apple decries Motorola for its abuse of patent licensing on fair, reasonable, and non-discriminatory (FRAND) terms, something that Apple has been working with the European Telecommunications Standards Institute on establishing better ground rules for.

This case is significant among the numerous motions filed lately between Apple and various Android makers in that it uses very strong patents and establishes an aggressive timeline for a ruling, something that should come within months. It’s also a case that has Apple directly attacking a stock version of Android that is being shipped on a ‘flagship’ Google device. This has the potential to be one of the most interesting bits of legal wrangling between Samsung, Apple — and by proxy Google — yet.

Original source: 

Apple moves to ban the Samsung Galaxy Nexus in the U.S., attacking Android with 4 patents

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Apple moves to ban the Samsung Galaxy Nexus in the U.S., attacking Android 4.0 with 4 tough patents

IMG00027-520x245

Apple has filed a motion for preliminary injunction against the Samsung Galaxy Nexus in the U.S., for infringing on four patents held by the company, reports Florian Mueller of FOSS Patents. This move is an incredibly aggressive one that uses some very strong patents that have already been proven to have some success.

At this point, there is no real way to take this besides a strike as close to Google as Apple can get without directly pursuing the company. The Galaxy Nexus is a flagship device that runs a stock version of Android 4.0, with no Samsung ‘improvements’. That means that these patents, all software, are really being directed at Android as much as they are at the phone.

The motion, which was filed Thursday, names four patents, one of which has already had some success in use against Android devices and three others which appear to be very dangerous to Google’s business as well.

The four patents are a ‘data tapping’ (a term coined by Mueller) patent, a patent related to Siri’s search functionality, a slide-to-unlock patent and a patent on the way that complete words are automatically recommended when typing them into iOS.

These patents are all relatively new filings, which is likely why some of them have not seen legal action before. One of them, however — the ‘data tapping’ patent — has seen some success against Android devices in the past, having been used successfully to win a ban request Apple filed with the ITC against the import of HTC devices, which begins in April of this year.

As the device is made by Samsung, Apple does couch the arguments in terms of the Galaxy Nexus, calling Samsung a compulsive and unrepentant infringer on Apple’s patents.

Apple has been on an aggressive tear lately in the U.S., having filed suit against Motorola Mobility stateside just yesterday in order to head off arguments by Motorola against Apple in Germany. In that argument, Apple decries Motorola for its abuse of patent licensing on fair, reasonable, and non-discriminatory (FRAND) terms, something that Apple has been working with the European Telecommunications Standards Institute on establishing better ground rules for.

This case is significant among the numerous motions filed lately between Apple and various Android makers in that it uses very strong patents and establishes an aggressive timeline for a ruling, something that should come within months.

It’s also a case that has Apple directly attacking a stock version of Android that is being shipped on a ‘flagship’ Google device. This has the potential to be one of the most interesting bits of legal wrangling between Samsung, Apple — and by proxy, Google — yet.

From: 

Apple moves to ban the Samsung Galaxy Nexus in the U.S., attacking Android 4.0 with 4 tough patents