Stories
Slash Boxes
Comments

News for nerds, stuff that matters

Slashdot Log In

Log In

Create Account  |  Retrieve Password

IBM's But-I-Only-Got-The-Soup Patent

Posted by CmdrTaco on Wed Nov 26, 2008 09:02 AM
from the next-they-patent-blue dept.
theodp writes "In an Onion-worthy move, the USPTO has decided that IBM inventors deserve a patent for splitting a restaurant bill. Ending an 8+ year battle with the USPTO, self-anointed patent system savior IBM got a less-than-impressed USPTO Examiner's final rejection overruled in June and snagged US Patent No. 7,457,767 Tuesday for its Pay at the Table System. From the patent: 'Though US Pat. No. 5,933,812 to Meyer, et al. discussed previously provides for an entire table of patrons to pay the total bill using a credit card, including the gratuity, it does not provide an ability for the check to be split among the various patrons, and for those individual patrons to then pay their desired portion of the bill. This deficiency is addressed by the present invention.'"
+ -
story

Related Stories

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.
The Fine Print: The following comments are owned by whoever posted them. We are not responsible for them in any way.
 Full
 Abbreviated
 Hidden
More
Loading... please wait.
  • by Colourspace (563895) on Wednesday November 26 2008, @09:05AM (#25898981)
    1. Eat food.. 2. Split bill.. 3. ??? 4. IBM Profits!!!
    • by Archimagus (978734) on Wednesday November 26 2008, @10:04AM (#25899599)
      This patent seems legit to me. It is not a process patent on splitting the bill. It is a patent for a device at the patrons table where they could enter there credit card and choose how much they wish to pay. I am sure there is a patent for all those self checkout lines at every grocery store chain. This is the same thing except for restaurants and it allows multiple credit cards to be used toward paying the same bill.
        • by somethingwicked (260651) on Wednesday November 26 2008, @10:20AM (#25899769)

          Really. A 20 second glance at the patent link answered this.

          Should they be able to patent this. Not likely...its an obvious idea but they are making something than CAN do something very useful.

          BUT, even if you ask for seperate checks up front, this approach is very attractive.

          Think about being out with a large group, trying to make it somewhere by a certain time, trying to hunt down the waitstaff because everyone's ready NOW vs. when they came by 20 min ago and one person was still eating, identify who got what, how much to put on what card, wait for them to ring it up, put slips in little balck books, bring em back, hand them out, etc.

          Device shows check.
          You can select the items you had through the touchscreen interface.
          It gives a total.
          You pay your part.
          You FN leave.

          • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

            "Think about being out with a large group, trying to make it somewhere by a certain time, trying to hunt down the waitstaff because everyone's ready NOW..."

            I don't think it is that big a deal...I've gotten used to no split checks in New Orleans, most restaurants I go to do not split checks.

            Simple...you add in the 20% tip to the total, split that evenly amongst the people there...pay and go.

            The only time you usually have a problem with this, is if you have a table full of chicks, who insist on whipping o

            • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

              If the waiter isn't willing to produce individual checks, I wouldn't be willing to produce a 20% tip. How hard is it to hit "Print" in-between each item ?

            • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

              I mean geez...if you can't afford to go out to eat with the group, don't go. Sure sometimes you pay a little more...some times a little less..but, it adds up in the end.

              No it doesn't. Some of my friends pound back 9$ drinks through a meal, others drink water. Some order steak EVERY time, others order a chicken salad, or a club sandwich.

              And there is no reason someone who orders 25$ worth of food should have to split the bill evenly with the guy who had a $30 entree and another $50+ in booze. And when we go o

          • by CaymanIslandCarpedie (868408) on Wednesday November 26 2008, @12:06PM (#25900931) Journal
            If IBM hasn't already patented the below, I sure plan to!

            private decimal IBMPatentValue()
            {
               Patent newPatent;

               foreach (Patent oldPatent in PatentOffice.Patents)
               {
                  newPatent = oldPatent.Clone();

                  //here is the inovative part!!!!!!
                  newPatent.Text += " with a computer.";

                  newPatent.Submit();
               }

               return decimal.MaxValue;
            }
          • by KWTm (808824) on Wednesday November 26 2008, @02:34PM (#25902275) Journal

            I thought of an idea some time ago to get rid of obvious patents, like the (not-so) Amazing One-Click. It would mean less work for the PTO (Patent/Trademark Office), too. The case of prior art might be considered a special case of "obvious" (or known) patents. See what you think:

            When someone submits a patent, claiming to have found (let's say) A Wondrous Way For Customers to Order What They Want By Clicking The Mouse Only Once, the PTO would publish the claim. Not the contents of the patent, simply the claim itself, the problem that the patent claims to solve. They would give the general public some set time, say 30 days, to come up with some way to solve this problem. "We have a patent application claiming to offer A Wondrous Way For Customers to Order What They Want By Clicking The Mouse Only Once. Can anyone come up with how this might be done? If someone gets a valid submission in within 30 days, then this patent will be considered obvious."

            People who would be motivated to work hard to look for a solution within the allotted time would include, besides the Slashdot crowd, firms who have a vested interest NOT to pay licensing fees every time they want to use the invention. They would have some idea what sort of patent apps might be coming down the pipeline. PTO doesn't have to figure out whether a patent is obvious (which is good seeing as how they're doing a pretty lousy job of it). As for prior art, if the public can come up with a way to solve the desired problem using prior art, then that's another sign that the patent is obvious! Of course, these submissions tbhemselves of "that patent is so obvious even I could come up with something in 30 days" would be published and be available to the public.

            Some patents, including algorithmic software patents, are worth patenting. The MP3 algorithm, for example, was the result of hard work and research. If the PTO had given the public a chance to come up with "A Way to Compress Sound Files With Unnoticeable Loss", people might not have been able to produce a solution in 30 days, showing that the MP3 patent is not so obvious. Someone might have come up with a different solution (Vorbis, FLAC, etc.), and that would be okay but the MP3 patent would be granted. (Of course, then large firms might have used Vorbis instead of paying the MP3 fees.)

            What do you think?

            (I posted this comment before [slashdot.org], but too late to generate any discussion. I'm reposting it to see whether you think this would be a valid test of whether a patent is "obvious".)

  • Two burgers and fries: 8$ Two large drinks: 3$ Tax and tip: 1.75$ Getting paid for something most people can just do with simple mental math: PRICELESS.
    • by Hacksaw (3678) on Wednesday November 26 2008, @09:22AM (#25899143) Homepage Journal

      Making a wry comment based on someone else's poor interpretation of an article: $0.02.

      Making a joke in a cliched format you didn't invent: $0.00

      Reading the damned source article all the way before you make a fool out of yourself in public: Well, I wouldn't call it priceless, but something like that.

      The patent describes a device for accepting credit card payments at the table of the patron, allowing them to pick their amounts paid, and therefore saving the patrons and the waitrons from the hassle of communicating all this back and forth and dealing with the subsequent mistakes.

      • by MobyDisk (75490) on Wednesday November 26 2008, @10:02AM (#25899569) Homepage

        I've worked with point-of-sale systems that allowed this at the register. Is it novel because it happens at the table? Gah! That's patentable?

        Maybe if we stopped granted patents for these trivial things, people would be forced to innovate for real. And lots of lawyers would have to go out and do something productive in society.

        (Sorry, getting down from the soap box)

        • by Fallingcow (213461) on Wednesday November 26 2008, @03:15PM (#25902701) Homepage

          About 7 or 8 years ago, I worked with a guy who talked--a bit more than idly--about opening a restaurant. One of the features/gimmicks was to be the ability to order from a computer screen at the table. We spent some time discussing how this would work, and how the customer would interact with it.

          Of course we came up with the same idea as what's in this patent (pay at the table, split the bill how you like), because it's fucking obvious. We didn't think anything of it, because it hardly seemed like an "invention" of any sort: using a custom thin client POS system to order and pay? What, so exactly like the one (or ones) that waiters use?

          How does simply using more of some things that already exist--without even modifying them in any meaningful way--constitute a patentable "invention"? If something like this is the very first thing someone not even in the industry thinks of, it's pretty dumb that it can be patented, IMO. In fact, I'm shocked there wasn't a ton of prior art for this, as I'm sure hundreds of people, if not thousands, had already independently thought of this solution.

      • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

        by Anonymous Coward

        I also have to mention that I am not a real programmer.

        No need to be redundant - you already said you used Python.

  • There really isn't a convenient way to split a check and allow the parties to all still pay with a credit card (at least not in any of the restaurants I've ever been too). We live in a credit card/debit card world now (even the Salvation Army now accepts them [npr.org]) and that sort of thing is actually needed.
    • by Lumpy (12016) on Wednesday November 26 2008, @09:18AM (#25899097) Homepage

      You must go to crappy restaurants.. I do it all the time with coworkers.

      either that, or the waitstaff there are complete morons and cant figure out the credit card machine.

      • Yeah, what the hell. We do this all the time at lunch. Splitting a bill is remarkably easy.

        • Yeah, what the hell. We do this all the time at lunch. Splitting a bill is remarkably easy.

          Splitting a bill evenly is remarkably easy. Getting separate checks ahead of time is remarkably easy, though a bit of a hassle for the waitstaff. Splitting a bill unevenly is a bit more of a hassle - "Mr. Waiter, please take these cards: Joe will pay $14.51, of which $2.37 is tip; Frank will pay $12.97, of which $2.06 is tip; George will pay $13.61, but refuses to tip because he's a jerk; Ed will pay..."

          This invention, aside from any issues with obviousness, allows them all to pay at the table by swiping their cards and putting how much they individually want to pay. Takes any chance for confusion out of the waiter's hands.

          Downside: also takes any chance for avoiding fraud out of the waiter's hands. "Hey, this credit card says 'Mary Smith' and you're all men!"

          • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

            This invention...

            That's the problem; this isn't an invention at all. It's an agglomeration (or conglomeration, or perhaps both) of existing technologies to obtain the expected result of combining those technologies. Inventions are things that either involve new technology or combine technology to achieve results that are not obvious from the constituent parts. Anything else is just an engineering exercise. Consider: when Ford, GM, Toyota, or whomever create a new car model, they don't say they "invented"

              • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

                But why didn't a POS product like this exist before?

                The simple answer: customer's wont pay for it because it doesn't save them money. Establishments weren't paying for it because they wouldn't see enough increase in revenue or decrease in cost to pay for it.

                Products and services - be they inventions or just good engineering/marketing/whatever - are only developed, as far as I can tell, for two or three reasons: A) someone is interested in making new things because they like creating stuff, B) there is somet

                    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

                      I would argue that if in 5 years we're all using electric cars, then there's most likely been a patentable advance in electric car technology, bringing down costs and increasing efficiency.

                      And I wouldn't have a problem with that type of patent at all. I agree that sometimes commercial success is an indicator of non-obviousness. Most of the time commercial success a better indicator of changing values though.

                      I'd be willing to bet that the credit-card accepting POS is patented.

                      Probably, but note I put "on the

              • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

                The car: As a whole, not patentable. Various components in the car: patentable (for instance, differential gear).

                Lightbulb: patentable - the combination of electricity and filament producing light was not an obvious result at the time of invention.

                Refrigerator: As a whole, not patentable (the principles of refrigeration were already known at the time). Various components to make the refrigeration system work - patentable.

                Washing Machine: again, as a whole, not patentable, though various components inside mi

    • by aliquis (678370) <dospam@gmail.com> on Wednesday November 26 2008, @09:24AM (#25899161) Homepage

      But the question is: Should it be patentable?

      We live in a world filled of porn now, there threesomes have become much more acceptable. Just think about how it would had been if you had to pay a license fee each and every time you joined up in a threesome. Yeah, that's right, for a grand total amount of $0. Totally unacceptable.

    • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward

      There really isn't a convenient way to split a check and allow the parties to all still pay with a credit card (at least not in any of the restaurants I've ever been too).

      Really? Because we usually just give the waitress a pile of credit cards and ask her to split it. I don't know what kind of quantum alchemy takes place at the register, but she usually returns a few moments later with a fist full of pens and a smile.

      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        but she usually returns a few moments later with a fist full of pens and a smile.

        Either you're better looking then I think you are, or you should check your credit card bill very carefully.

  • Not a problem here (Score:5, Interesting)

    by clickety6 (141178) on Wednesday November 26 2008, @09:14AM (#25899049)

    In Germany the waiting staff are more than happy to split the bill with you so that each person pays for what they ate and drank separately. I suspect that this is because, unlike in the US, tips aren't expected and aren't at a more-or-less fixed percentage and instead patrons who want to tip usually round up the bill amount.

    So if the waiting staff take the time to go through 10 separate payments for each person, they probably get a larger total tip than the tip on one big payment.

    And the person who only had a glass of water and a starter is happy he didn't pay for the steak-guzzling alcoholic ;-)

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      I suspect that this is because, unlike in the US, tips aren't expected and aren't at a more-or-less fixed percentage and instead patrons who want to tip usually round up the bill amount.

      As a previous waiter in the U.S., and a patron of many establishments outside of the U.S., I've never had a problem with splitting checks. Whenever it looked like it wasn't a family unit, my policy was to ask when taking the order if checks would be split. I've had that happen maybe half the time at other venues (in some si

  • by Mistshadow2k4 (748958) on Wednesday November 26 2008, @09:15AM (#25899063) Journal
    You'll just have to pay for the pizza. See, IBM holds a patent on splitting the check. Honestly, they do. Don't worry, I'll pay next time. Promise!
  • Bad summary (Score:4, Informative)

    by russotto (537200) on Wednesday November 26 2008, @09:16AM (#25899075) Journal

    It's not a business method patent on splitting the bill. It's a device patent for a portable terminal which allows people to split the bill using a credit card.

    I still don't think it's patent-worthy -- the idea for the gadget has no doubt been thought of by numerous groups of geeks, and the patent really doesn't disclose anything beyond the idea and basic method of operation. But at least it's not totally silly.

    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      Definitely a bad summary, this is the abstract of the patent:

      Patrons at a restaurant or bar can pay at their table using credit cards, without involving the restaurant or bar cashier and/or wait staff. Patrons are assisted using this system in dividing the bill by displaying the amount due (including tax) and allowing each patron to enter the amount they wish to pay. When the initial bill is presented, a balance due will be displayed and the indication will be provided that the bill has yet to be paid in full. As each transaction is entered, a running total will be displayed indicating the remaining balance due. When the running total reaches zero, the bill is paid in full, and an indication will be provided, such as by illuminating a green indicator light or by displaying a balance due of $0.00.

      If you can patent a cash register you should also be able to patent this device.

    • Yeah... I actually thought of this back in the mid 90's, when going out to lunch with fellow I.T. co-workers. At that time, everyone said "Wow... why DON'T restaurants have that already, anyway??"

      To this day, it seems they still don't.

      Long ago, I decided the problem was one of the expense of the hardware, vs. one of people "coming up with the idea".

      Almost all restaurants use Point of Sale systems provided to them under contract by one of only a handful of providers out there (IBM being one of them). My b

  • FTL travel (Score:5, Funny)

    by Psmylie (169236) * on Wednesday November 26 2008, @09:17AM (#25899083) Homepage
    It may sound silly, but this is a first step for IBM to patent and control the world's first Bistromathic drive, as first theorized by Douglas Adams.
  • For a second there I thought they were trying to patent soup...talk about prior art...
  • 'Though U.S. Pat. No. 5,933,812 to Meyer, et al. discussed previously provides for an entire table of patrons to pay the total bill using a credit card, including the gratuity

    Since when has paying a restaurant bill with a credit card for a group been patented? Does this mean that I'm paying royalties every time I treat my friends when we go out to eat??

    Separate checks, please!!

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      'Though U.S. Pat. No. 5,933,812 to Meyer, et al. discussed previously provides for an entire table of patrons to pay the total bill using a credit card, including the gratuity

      Since when has paying a restaurant bill with a credit card for a group been patented? Does this mean that I'm paying royalties every time I treat my friends when we go out to eat??

      Separate checks, please!!

      What gets me is you directly quoted the article, implying that you read it, and even plucked out a quote from the 7th paragraph of the detailed description, but never realized that the Meyer patent (and this one) isn't on a process, but a portable payment unit, kind of like the ones at most cash registers in convenience stores.

  • Because it is so difficult to tell the waitperson, "Separate checks please" before you order. What's next, a patent on belching words?
  • by McWilde (643703) on Wednesday November 26 2008, @09:20AM (#25899111) Homepage
    Sure, you people can laugh at it now, but someday this patent will make interstellar travel possible.
  • Discussing patents on Slashdot is like trying to diagnose mental illness using WebMD. Only with more mental illness.

    RTFP, people. And the relevant patent law, while you're at it. The patent examiners did, so it's the least you could do.

  • by geekmux (1040042) on Wednesday November 26 2008, @09:35AM (#25899289)

    Economy is in the toilet, unemployment setting records, hundreds of billions in bailouts, and we've got IBM over here fighting for 8+ years over this?.

    Holy....Shit.

    IBM deserves more than this patent, but I don't feel like going to jail.

  • Prior art? (Score:3, Interesting)

    by ThierryD (217773) <tdaigneaultNO@SPAMmacapa.com> on Wednesday November 26 2008, @09:43AM (#25899351)

    Well, the patent seems to have been filed in 2000. The "Resto" application I wrote for the Newton was doing pretty much the same thing in 1997...

    I wonder if I could sue IBM...

    Millions here I come!

  • by zappepcs (820751) on Wednesday November 26 2008, @09:47AM (#25899391) Journal

    My knowledge of the credit card payment industry is not complete, but as I recall, the rate that a business pays for CC services is based on average transaction value and number of transactions per day/week/month/quarter. This would have a more than insignificant impact on that rate.

    It does however have some far reaching possible effects: If the patrons are paying at the table (no wait staff involved), the value of wait staff is reduced and the likelihood that they could be replaced by robotic wait staff is increased. Already wait staff are paid some of the lowest wages on the planet. If their value decreases, it could be interesting times for restaurant patrons.

    I'm not saying that robots could replace waitresses at Hooters, but there are places where robots could be used. It was always the payment end of things that made using robots impossible.

  • by Trevelyan (535381) on Wednesday November 26 2008, @09:55AM (#25899511)
    Is there a list somewhere of all the humorous patents that IBM have applied for?

    e.g. this one [google.com]
  • prior art (Score:3, Insightful)

    by 2gravey (959785) on Wednesday November 26 2008, @10:54AM (#25900113)
    There's already a method of paying at the table and it does include splitting the bill between as many patrons as you like. They call it "cash".
  • by golodh (893453) on Wednesday November 26 2008, @11:23AM (#25900459)
    IBM's new patent U.S. Pat. No. 5,933,812 constitutes a valuable and timely intellectual contribution with immediate application to the real-world economy. It is a shining example of US ingenuity and the wisdom of the Founding Fathers which basically holds that "anything under the sun" can (in principle) be patented.

    A guaranteed way of evenly splitting a Restaurant Bill (note: the patent may have even wider applicability !) will help ensure that restaurant patrons will not, in these economically troubled times, be driven to ramp down their much-needed demand for the professional hospitality industry due to irrational and unjustified fears over how to divide the bill. Its importance cannot be overestimated and forms the basis for the continued economic viability of a branch of industry with a rich history which America can rightly be proud of.

    In principle IBM would be within its rights to take the view that restaurants are responsible for unlicensed use of this invention on their premises and to demand a license fee for this invention from each and every restaurant on US soil. As an added benefit, after obtaining a license, restaurants would be empowered to apportion the fees payable for the use of IBM's Invention for apportioning restaurant bills by their clientele, to their clientele using IBM's patented invention.

    In addition IBM would be in a position to institute RIAA-like proceedings against any restaurant that fails to promptly obtain a proper license for IBM's ground-breaking technology. Failure to properly license this technology would raise the gravest questions about the good-faith intentions of these establishments. I am certain we can all agree that unlicensed use of this intellectual property is Theft, and should be met with a zero-tolerance policy.

    However, I urge IBM not to do this. On the contrary, I firmly believe that it is IBM's patriotic duty to make this patent available for general use for all restaurant bills that are generated by patrons who meet to discuss Open Source issues on the premises and who are prepared to publish their Restaurant Bills in the public domain under the GPL license.

    I trust that IBM, given its commitment to the use of Open Source world-wide, will assume its responsibility in this matter and allow individual restaurants to refrain from charging license fees for the use of this Invention if they are satisfied that the issues discussed on their premises consist for at least 75% of the time of Open Source topics. Restaurants are in a position to verify this through the simple expedient of having their waiters listen in to conversations where those waiters currently do not record such proceedings. Following precedents set in the telecommunications industry, it is clear that it is only fair and reasonable to require Restaurants to keep logs of topics discussed and the time allotted to each topic.

    Restaurants who are in compliance with this monitoring scheme should then be allowed to pro-actively deduct the fees payable from the annual licensing plan.

    In order to ensure fair dealing, Restaurants would of course agree to accommodate un-announced spot-checks on the topic of conversation of patrons of their establishments, either in person by designated IBM personnel, or remotely through audio-pickups to be installed at every table.

    • You know, if you took a tenth of the time you spent constructing your parody, and read the fucking article... you wouldn't look so foolish.

      It's not a patent on splitting checks.
  • by Iluvatar (89773) on Wednesday November 26 2008, @11:39AM (#25900631) Homepage

    No no, this is really a cost-cutting measure!

    From now on, IBMers can legally get their guests to pay for their food ("royalty fee", capice?). Better watch out if an IBMer invites you to dinner!

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Never have I felt so strongly the "Read The Fucking Article" needed to be spelled out.

    • Oh, come on. Read the patent. It's for an apparatus for splitting the bill. It should be quite clear what the actual invention is, provided you don't rely on a Slashdot summary to properly summarize a patent.

      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        More accurately, it is on a device that allows the restaurant to present one bill to the table, then have the individual patrons at the table enter payments by credit card against the bill total, rather than the restaurant breaking the bill up into individual bills for each patron, then (presumably) handling each bill by hand, which ties up server/cashier time. If I could go to a restaurant and then present a bill to the restaurant when I'm finished eating, I'd eat out a lot more often.