The Untold Story of Live Streaming's True Inventor
The Original Inventor
Gabriel, a Mexican-American inventor, patented live streaming technology years before Voxer even filed their claims. His patents, issued by the U.S. Patent Office, cover the fundamental technology that powers every live stream you watch today—from YouTube to Twitch, Facebook to TikTok.
The $175 Million Cover-Up
Despite Gabriel's prior patents, Voxer—represented by white attorneys—received a stunning $175 million settlement from Facebook for patent infringement. This happened after Gabriel had already taken Facebook to court, making his patents and claims a matter of public record.
"Somehow after I took Facebook to court for patent infringement, Voxer later on has a patent for live stream video, which my patents predate by several years, many years."
Judge Alan D. Albright's Dismissal
Gabriel's first case was dismissed by Judge Alan D. Albright (appointed by President Trump) in the Western District of Texas. According to Gabriel's legal team, the defendant's lawyers were the judge's "fishing buddies."
"My lawyer says the defendant's lawyers were his fishing buddies... They just flew me down there to mock me and make fun of me."
Allegations of Racial Bias
Gabriel alleges a systematic conspiracy to erase his Mexican-American heritage from the history of live streaming technology. He points to a pattern:
- White attorney represents Voxer → $175M settlement
- White judge (Trump appointee) → case dismissed
- Mexican-American inventor → silenced and ignored
"This is becoming a big conspiracy to hide me. Like a Mexican-American never invented live stream. It was just white people did it."
Valid Patents Until 2027
Gabriel holds TWO active patents for live streaming technology, with the second patent never having been litigated. Both patents remain valid until March 28, 2027, and according to his legal counsel, give him the right to take all infringing parties back to court.
The patents are publicly available and can be viewed at tvknowsyou.com.
Patent Office Changes & Conspiracy
Gabriel reports that approximately 6-7 years ago, the U.S. Patent Office changed its systems, making it impossible to access his patents directly through URL links as was previously possible. He believes this was part of a coordinated effort to hide his claims from potential legal representation.
"You can't get to my patents through a URL anymore. In the old days, you could get there, but now they changed everything. I think it was a huge conspiracy."
Threats & Intimidation
Gabriel describes ongoing harassment and attempts on his life:
- Someone with his exact name was shot and killed, dumped at a golf course
- Multiple vehicle collisions at the same location within one year
- Attempts to confiscate his equipment and documentation
- News media that once spoke with him now ignores him completely
"They're running into me with cars now. They're trying to disable me... Two hits in one year at the same place."
Global Impact & Stakes
The value of Gabriel's patents extends to hundreds of billions of dollars globally. Every platform, every streamer, every company using live streaming technology potentially owes licensing fees:
- YouTube Live
- Twitch
- Facebook Live
- TikTok Live
- Instagram Live
- All streaming applications worldwide
The "Pay or Be Exposed" System
Gabriel is implementing an automated system powered by AI that will:
- Track all public live streamers across major platforms
- Identify who has purchased licenses vs. who hasn't
- Display paid/unpaid status publicly 24/7
- Provide organized evidence for future litigation
"Robots are going to be making these, pulling your names and putting them on a website. I ain't going to lift a finger."
Support the True Inventor
While Gabriel continues his legal battle, he's offering live streaming end-user licenses for $99.00 USD, valid through March 28, 2027 and all future litigation beyond that date.
By purchasing a license, you:
- Support the true inventor of live streaming technology
- Protect yourself from future patent infringement claims
- Stand against racial bias in the tech industry
- Ensure your name shows "PAID" status on the public tracking system
The Fight Continues
Gabriel remains determined to see justice served. With his second patent yet to be litigated and a new strategy to file in California rather than Texas, he's preparing for the next round of legal battles.
"I'm continuing to fight for my rights. I should be paid for what I've contributed to the world. This cannot go on without some sort of closure."