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Technology Stocks : EDTA (was GIFT)
EDTA 0.00005000.0%Nov 14 9:30 AM EST

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To: Mel Spivak who wrote (1355)9/29/1997 8:06:00 AM
From: GRC   of 2383
 
Excerpt from biz.yahoo.com

I'm reminded of another company involved in an Internet-related controversy. For almost two years now, I've followed the
travails of a tiny company named E-Data (OTC:GIFT). E-Data, at this point, exists merely as mechanism for a savvy
entrepreneur and a pit bull patent attorney to create enormous wealth out of a stack of paper.

That paper happens to be a U.S. patent issued in 1995, and E-Data asserts that the patent covers many forms of online
commerce. While it may seem astounding that such a process could be patented, E-Data has reached licensing agreements
with more than 20 companies and has sued more than 40 others. And while some of the defendants had hoped to see the
case thrown out of court by now, E-Data's litigation is proceeding -- a federal judge in New York is expected to schedule oral
arguments soon.

As one of the defense attorneys recently told me, an E-Data victory would bring it the ``wealth of Bill Gates,'' though I'm
not sure if he was exaggerating just a bit to gain sympathy for his case. It would mean a lot of money, no doubt, and the
potential windfall has over the past 24 months been the stuff of much stock speculation. I've seen the range go from pennies
per share up to $10 and back down to its current level, in the 50-cent to $1 range.

It's purely all or nothing. E-Data wins, and the stock holders score big. E-Data loses in court, and the story has an unhappy
ending.

Now I'm a little hesitant to draw a direct comparison with NSI, since NSI still makes several million dollars a year in
businesses outside of the name business. And while E-Data might be clever, it hasn't exactly contributed anything to the Net
community, a contrast to NSI, which has to its credit fulfilled the daunting mission of keeping the Web running for these last
two years.
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