Seriously, though... If there's even a single person that can't see what's obvious about this in the patent office, there needs to be firings until there isn't. This is pretty much the definition of obvious. Heck, if the person even had access to the internet, they'd have fallen across rants about its obviousness every other month.
Apparently the Examiner saw it, but the people higher up (let me guess, older?) are apparently easily flabbergasted by Amazon's techspeak. I'm no patent lawyer, but I can imagine one can rewrite "using account data saved from the user" in a complex enough way to make it sound like innovation.
And as far as I've heard it's a crap 'invention' anyway, one wrong click and you just spent money on something you didn't really want. I'd rather review my account data and address every time.
by Anonymous Coward
on Friday September 28 2007, @09:31AM (#20781781)
You could probably patent breathing if you'd word it something like:
Method of obtaining oxygen while at the same time getting rid of carbon dioxide in intra-body transportation liquids by periodically increasing and decreasing the interior volume of a intra-body cavity connected with the outside air supply through a flexible biological tube, where the walls of the intra-body cavity are connected with the inter-body transport liquid system through semipermeable membranes which allow diffusion of oxygen and carbon dioxide between the transportation liquid and the air.
And as far as I've heard it's a crap 'invention' anyway, one wrong click and you just spent money on something you didn't really want. I'd rather review my account data and address every time.
I'd never thought of it that way but you're right. I already want to review everything(is the seller charging me $15 to ship an item that costs 40 cents to mail?) so why I'd want to accidentally buy something without a chance to say 'no' is beyond my reasoning powers.
Maybe it's useless for this particular implementation, but what if someone creates a site that allows you to buy items/services (such as songs) for a fixed fee (say $1) with one click while you're browsing? That'll be useful, but in comes this patent and that site can't use their system any more.
Well I have to say that it pairs quite nicely with Amazon's new MP3 store. Or if you have Amazon Prime (since 2-day shipping is free on Prime items). At least with the MP3s, you can have it show a confirmation after the one-click purchase making it two-click - I'd assume it's the same for tangible goods as well.
But yeah, it's obvious if I've ever seen it. In fact, doesn't iTunes use it? Surely a patent this stupid would apply to web apps just as much as it applies to websites.
That's what you think. In fact, you've just ordered a 36 volume encyclopaedia, and the first instalment of $199.99 will be debited from your credit card next month.
Or you could say that lawyers make language specific and attempt to make it less ambiguous. It's all a matter of perspective, really. I'm not a fan of legal abuses or lawyers who try to weedle a situation trying to get the bad guy off on some technicality of how something was worded, but let's face it, sometimes that's exactly what's needed. Sometimes it's the bad guys who are getting hung by the same technicalities of language. Consider the RIAA's attempts to prosecute people for "offering up" songs for
Non-obviousness is a legal requirement for a patent. The Examiner is required to make his determination based on a reasoned finding of fact and conclusions of law. If the Examiner failed to make his reasoning clear that the legal requirement of non-obviousness has not been met, then his determination is legally deficient. This doesn't mean that the Board doesn't see the obviousness; it means at the minimum that the Examiner did not adequately do his job in defending his determination in writing as required.
This very probably the case, as reading the board's full decision shows. However, after browsing over the long and contorted prosecution of this application, and considering the huge number of claims to consider it's clear that there was not enough time to do a proper job to meet the level of discussion and discourse required by the Board.
I have no idea if the examiner was given extra time to work on this application, but this is unlikely, or, if given, would hardly be enough to cover the work required. PTO management is fanatical about meeting production goals and meeting dates to crank out responses. Assuming that the business methods get among the most time to work on an application would mean a Primary Examiner would be expected to average getting out the equivalent of one full prosecution in about 40 hours that counts everything from when the examiner first sees the application until it sent off as an abandonment, allowance, or an appeal. the applicant here filed a Request for Continued Examination, so the examiner got another "balanced disposal", meaning that he had about 80 hours to get this out. Of course, the time is accounted on each application, but extra time spent on one application must come at the expense of working on other applications.
Give the spotlight that this application has been under I bet management will come down hard on the examiner, probably charging him/her with an "Action Taking" clear error, if not others. They will scold employees for not doing a sufficieent job, but will will continue to hold them to production standards. Therein lies the main reason the quality of work from the PTO is often very poor.
The problem with the whole area of tech patents evaluated by non-techie people is the classic teacher's dilemma: for those who understand, no explanation is necessary, while for those who do not understand, no explanation is possible.
Almost by definition, something is obvious if it is apparent without further explanation. However, like the many tests of "reasonableness" in law, obviousness is in the eye of the beholder and depends on context. Defining an accurate, repeatable, qualitative test that determines whether something is or is not obvious in general is impossible.
However, one realistic and credible test is whether other people in the field in question could sensibly be expected to "invent" the same thing in the same circumstances without much thought. I would argue that claiming a typical web developer wouldn't think of the idea to have a single click in a specific place perform an action is pretty insulting to the intelligence of web developers, not least because hyperlinks have been following this principle since before Amazon was a twinkle in Jeff Bezos's eye. Similarly, the idea of remembering user data to minimise repetitive data entry has been around in database world since many years before the web existed. This is drifting into prior art rather than obviousness, perhaps, but I suspect that's the best way to attack this particular lunacy. After all, you can't credibly argue that other people wouldn't think of the same thing in the same circumstances if many of them already did.
Almost by definition, something is obvious if it is apparent without further explanation. However, like the many tests of "reasonableness" in law, obviousness is in the eye of the beholder and depends on context. Defining an accurate, repeatable, qualitative test that determines whether something is or is not obvious in general is impossible.
(My emphasis added above.)
One thing I've learned in lengthy 'discussions' (... and by 'discussions', I really mean 'arguments') with a group of law grads is that legal
Far from elegant, '1 click' is dangerous and insane. As a developer, I would -never- consider implementing such a crazy thing. The 'are you sure' dialog is more of an invention than '1 click'. '1 click' is the opposite of invention, it's lack of one. It's leaving out a step. You know, the secure one that prevents the customer from accidentally ordering the $1000 fuzzybear their daughter was looking at by accidentally clicking on the button, then clicking elsewhere and loading the second page so they don't even know they've ordered it.
I'm of 2 minds about this patent. It's so obvious that if it remains, the patent system is irretrievably broken. But as long as it remains, nobody else can implement this horrid system.
When the Amazon MP3 thing showed up on/. yesterday, buying MP3s defaulted to 1-click. I bought one about 3 steps earlier than I expected. (Luckily, I had intended to follow through with it.) Less than an hour later, they had added a 'check here to always confirm before purchase' checkbox. They had obviously snagged quite a few 'accidental' sales that people didn't expect to make, and got tons of complaints.
This patent is so obvious that every programmer goes through a stage where they learn about the confirmation dialog because they've already implemented this and need to fix it!
I quite often accidentally click things by my finger slipping on the mouse and pressing the button. I've also clicked 2 things on a page in the browser, and it'll send both requests (if you click slow enough) but only show you 1 or the other page. Some show you the first, some the second. If you accidentally click the 'buy' button, then click another link, it's possible to have bought the product and never know it. I'm sure you'll get an email and all that, but how often do most people check their email?
Sure, it's something that relevant to Slashdot, but posting a link directly to the documents leaves somebody without much experience reading patent-speak (like myself) almost in the dark.
Maybe this was a bad call coming straight from the firehose?
The links aren't very complicated for legal documents.
The first document says that they reject the rejection. The second one says that they don't understand the examiner's explanation. And that's terrible.
But it would have been really helpful to have a story on the original decision linked, such as to the Slashdot post [slashdot.org], or, perhaps, even a direct link to the original rejection [flickr.com]?
"If a "provisional" nonstatutory obviousness-type double patenting (ODP) [bitlaw.com] rejection is the only rejection remaining in the earlier filed of the two pending applications, while the later-filed application is rejectable on other grounds, the examiner should withdraw that rejection and permit the earlier-filed application to issue as a patent without a terminal disclaimer."
And now somebody probably should say: You must be new here. Rationale: one is not supposed to RTFA on/.
That said, I personally kinda like legalese, patent-speak, and other dialects of formalese. They appear to be kinda like somewhere between natural and formal languages. The rules seem too strict for a truly natural language, yet not strict enough to be parsed with a formalized grammar. Most of the potential ambiguity is removed (or reduced), yet the expressive power doesn't seem to be artificially limited.
The post which is first comes before the other posts. That is, it is the first post, if read in chronological order. Its firstness is determined by the earliness of its posting.
But no matter how hard I try, I still can't make this as confusing as the summary.
Sir Lancelot: We were in the nick of time. You were obvious. Sir Galahad: I don't think I was. Sir Lancelot: Yes, you were. You were very obvious Sir Galahad: Look, let me go back in there and be obvious Sir Lancelot: No, it's too obvious Sir Galahad: Look, it's my duty as a knight to be as obvious as I can. Sir Lancelot: No, we've got to find the Holy Patent. Come on. Sir Galahad: Oh, let me have just a little bit obviousness? Sir Lancelot: No. It's unhealthy. Sir Galahad: I bet you're Jeff Bezos. Sir Lancelot: Am not.
Bezos was reported to be so mad about this ruling that he began throwing chairs and now he's getting legal threats from some CEO in Redmond who claims to have a patent on chair launching.
At first I thought someone tried to patent this " 1-Click Rejection" feature, and Slashdot would have to be paying $0.20 for every submission they easily rejected with one click.
I suggest using the following pseudo-code: function button_click() {
add_item_to_shopping_cart();
if(one_click_enabled) {// THIS IS THE OBVIOUS PART - a simple IF!
checkout_and_buy();
} else {
continue_showing_items();
} }
function checkout_and_buy() {// This applies for both normal checkout and 1-click-buy
process_financial_transaction_to_buy_items_in_shopping_cart();
How do you explain what makes something obvious when it's obvious?
It's incredibly easy, if not trivial, to design a site so that someone can save a set of data (name, address, CC info) and resubmit it along with another set of data (the order) in one click. There are first and second-year CS and CIS projects that are more complicated than that. Securing the site wouldn't be nearly as simple, but that's not the part that's covered by the patent.
According to the supreme court:
"Granting patent protection to advances that would occur in the ordinary course without real innovation retards progress and may, in the case of patents combining previously known elements, deprive prior inventions of their value or utility"
Summary:
If the same solution would have eventually been created within a reasonable amount of time by anyone skilled in that area, it is too obvious. A patent has to be something unique that probably would not have been created within a few years by every single other engineer/scientist/professional in that area.
It is time to patent a brilliant new system that will help e-commerce vendors rake in billions of dollars: half-click shopping.
Rather than waiting for the MOUSE_UP event after a MOUSE_DOWN event, we will use the MOUSE_DOWN event itself to close the transaction. This will ensure that all of those customers who initiate a click in a moment of shopping excitement will not be able to prematurely terminate a transaction by dragging their mouse pointer off of the link element before releasing the mouse button. Just imagine all of the extra transactions that will initiate!
Next up, Zero-click shopping by using MOUSE_OVERs.
You are correct. Shopping that seems to defy the Arrow of Time is the future of ecommerce. Marketing is calling it "Lightspeed Shopping" for now. Reasonably priced licenses are available now, contact me for details. When a new potential revenue stream is instantiated (ie, born) the retailer references the birth record and local demographics. Based on the instance's socioeconomic class and other factors, a queue of products is created and stored in a database. The instance will then receive products and bills
The court just wants to show it's done it's job. In this case the patent office has an extra problem in that it previously granted the patent, so undermined it's own right to reject on the grounds of obviousness. But that j
"The obviousness is just to obvious, that's why." said Captain Black
"That... that's just stupid. If it's so obvious, you should just call it obvious and reject it." said Yossarian
"Oh, sure. But if we did that, what would be the end result? Everyone would spend all their time trying to force themselves to think of non-obvious things." said Captain Black
"What?! Isnt't that the point of this whole patenting system?!" asked Yossarian
"NO! That's exactly my point - have you ever seen a good invention, I mean a really good invention? What makes you say it's a good invention - I'll tell you, it's because it makes so much sense for the situation its in! The really good inventions are only the ones that are SO obvious you never thought of them before. So, therefore, we decided it's really best that if an invention seems TOO obvious, it obviously must be something we have to encourage, and therefore has to be accepted BECAUSE it was too obvious." said Captain Black
Why can't they reject it on the grounds that software shouldn't be patentable?
Patents were never intended to protect ideas but rather an idea + method of accomplishing it. The purpose being that it wouldn't stifle innovation because other people could come up with other - perhaps improved - methods to accomplish the same thing. Thus innovation continues forward, but the particular device that the original designer came up with is protected, not the goal he set out to accomplish. It's akin to patenting an octagonal wheel. Someone else is free to come along and patent a circle based wheel. But with software patents, even if you do it better, you can be sued for it. Thus obvious stifling of innovation. Sure you could do it on your own time, but you have to wait, what, 50 years before you can make money from it?
I'm just curious, but the court docs don't say that it was rejected, they say that it was remanded. The two are very different things. Rejection means poof, its done. No more contesting unless someone appeals. Remanding means that it is returned back to the prior stage of the legal system to be looked at again. Maybe I'm misreading this?
There are a number of things that are perfectly obvious to me that may not be obvious to someone else. One of the things I think is lacking is the notion, actually used in patent law, "obvious to someone skilled in the art." But what "art?" Software engineering is not one art. Like it or not, it is splitting into a number of (sometimes and sometimes not) overlapping fields.
Web, GUI, networking, search, OS, embedded, etc. these are all specializations and what is obvious to an OS guy may be completely incomprehensible to a web guy. An OS guy who only sees mouse clicks as merely system interrupts may not think 1-click is obvious, hell he probably doesn't even like mice.
The 1-click patent is totally obvious and trivial to anyone doing any sort of GUI and/or web programming.
From my experience, this is a huge win for Amazon. Many, many patents look "obvious" in restrospect.
I don't get this argument. If it looks obvious in retrospect, it's still obvious. Patents exist because it's good for society to have a system where individuals or companies that choose to spend money on expensive research, have a way of profiting from it. If your research wasn't expensive, and your "invention" was the result of a single aha-moment, then society does not benefit from you getting a patent.
But... (Score:5, Funny)
Seriously, though... If there's even a single person that can't see what's obvious about this in the patent office, there needs to be firings until there isn't. This is pretty much the definition of obvious. Heck, if the person even had access to the internet, they'd have fallen across rants about its obviousness every other month.
Re:But... (Score:5, Insightful)
And as far as I've heard it's a crap 'invention' anyway, one wrong click and you just spent money on something you didn't really want. I'd rather review my account data and address every time.
Parent
Re:But... (Score:5, Funny)
Method of obtaining oxygen while at the same time getting rid of carbon dioxide in intra-body transportation liquids by periodically increasing and decreasing the interior volume of a intra-body cavity connected with the outside air supply through a flexible biological tube, where the walls of the intra-body cavity are connected with the inter-body transport liquid system through semipermeable membranes which allow diffusion of oxygen and carbon dioxide between the transportation liquid and the air.
Funny thing is, the captcha is "breath"
Parent
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
I'd never thought of it that way but you're right. I already want to review everything(is the seller charging me $15 to ship an item that costs 40 cents to mail?) so why I'd want to accidentally buy something without a chance to say 'no' is beyond my reasoning powers.
Perhaps (Score:3, Interesting)
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
But yeah, it's obvious if I've ever seen it. In fact, doesn't iTunes use it? Surely a patent this stupid would apply to web apps just as much as it applies to websites.
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
http://www.artlum.com/dilbert.gif [artlum.com]
Re:Parent violated patent! (Score:5, Funny)
Your link leads to nowhere.
That's what you think. In fact, you've just ordered a 36 volume encyclopaedia, and the first instalment of $199.99 will be debited from your credit card next month.
That's what comes of not reviewing your order.
Parent
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm not a fan of legal abuses or lawyers who try to weedle a situation trying to get the bad guy off on some technicality of how something was worded, but let's face it, sometimes that's exactly what's needed. Sometimes it's the bad guys who are getting hung by the same technicalities of language. Consider the RIAA's attempts to prosecute people for "offering up" songs for
Re:But... (Score:5, Informative)
Parent
Re:But... (Score:5, Interesting)
I have no idea if the examiner was given extra time to work on this application, but this is unlikely, or, if given, would hardly be enough to cover the work required. PTO management is fanatical about meeting production goals and meeting dates to crank out responses. Assuming that the business methods get among the most time to work on an application would mean a Primary Examiner would be expected to average getting out the equivalent of one full prosecution in about 40 hours that counts everything from when the examiner first sees the application until it sent off as an abandonment, allowance, or an appeal. the applicant here filed a Request for Continued Examination, so the examiner got another "balanced disposal", meaning that he had about 80 hours to get this out. Of course, the time is accounted on each application, but extra time spent on one application must come at the expense of working on other applications.
Give the spotlight that this application has been under I bet management will come down hard on the examiner, probably charging him/her with an "Action Taking" clear error, if not others. They will scold employees for not doing a sufficieent job, but will will continue to hold them to production standards. Therein lies the main reason the quality of work from the PTO is often very poor.
-Ex Examiner
Parent
Re:But... (Score:5, Insightful)
But, but... It's so OBVIOUS!
The problem with the whole area of tech patents evaluated by non-techie people is the classic teacher's dilemma: for those who understand, no explanation is necessary, while for those who do not understand, no explanation is possible.
Almost by definition, something is obvious if it is apparent without further explanation. However, like the many tests of "reasonableness" in law, obviousness is in the eye of the beholder and depends on context. Defining an accurate, repeatable, qualitative test that determines whether something is or is not obvious in general is impossible.
However, one realistic and credible test is whether other people in the field in question could sensibly be expected to "invent" the same thing in the same circumstances without much thought. I would argue that claiming a typical web developer wouldn't think of the idea to have a single click in a specific place perform an action is pretty insulting to the intelligence of web developers, not least because hyperlinks have been following this principle since before Amazon was a twinkle in Jeff Bezos's eye. Similarly, the idea of remembering user data to minimise repetitive data entry has been around in database world since many years before the web existed. This is drifting into prior art rather than obviousness, perhaps, but I suspect that's the best way to attack this particular lunacy. After all, you can't credibly argue that other people wouldn't think of the same thing in the same circumstances if many of them already did.
Parent
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
(My emphasis added above.)
One thing I've learned in lengthy 'discussions' (... and by 'discussions', I really mean 'arguments') with a group of law grads is that legal
Re:But... (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm of 2 minds about this patent. It's so obvious that if it remains, the patent system is irretrievably broken. But as long as it remains, nobody else can implement this horrid system.
When the Amazon MP3 thing showed up on
This patent is so obvious that every programmer goes through a stage where they learn about the confirmation dialog because they've already implemented this and need to fix it!
Parent
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
I'm sure you'll get an email and all that, but how often do most people check their email?
Firehose antics... (Score:3, Insightful)
Maybe this was a bad call coming straight from the firehose?
Re:Firehose antics... (Score:5, Funny)
Parent
Re: (Score:2)
The first document says that they reject the rejection. The second one says that they don't understand the examiner's explanation. And that's terrible.
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Firehose antics... (Score:5, Funny)
Clear now?
Parent
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Rationale: one is not supposed to RTFA on
That said, I personally kinda like legalese, patent-speak, and other dialects of formalese. They appear to be kinda like somewhere between natural and formal languages. The rules seem too strict for a truly natural language, yet not strict enough to be parsed with a formalized grammar. Most of the potential ambiguity is removed (or reduced), yet the expressive power doesn't seem to be artificially limited.
Obviousness (Score:5, Funny)
Obviously?
Re:Obviousness (Score:4, Funny)
Pwned! Should have seen that one coming, obviously.
Parent
This post, which is first (Score:5, Funny)
But no matter how hard I try, I still can't make this as confusing as the summary.
Re:This post, which is first (Score:4, Funny)
Parent
You're joking...right? (Score:5, Funny)
An Obligatory, just for you (Score:5, Funny)
Sir Galahad: I don't think I was.
Sir Lancelot: Yes, you were. You were very obvious
Sir Galahad: Look, let me go back in there and be obvious
Sir Lancelot: No, it's too obvious
Sir Galahad: Look, it's my duty as a knight to be as obvious as I can.
Sir Lancelot: No, we've got to find the Holy Patent. Come on.
Sir Galahad: Oh, let me have just a little bit obviousness?
Sir Lancelot: No. It's unhealthy.
Sir Galahad: I bet you're Jeff Bezos.
Sir Lancelot: Am not.
Parent
Re:You're joking...right? (Score:5, Funny)
Sir Lancelot stops to keep from marching into a giant hole.
Sir Lancelot: Halt here!
Servants stop.
Servant: Why'd we stop sire?
Sir Lancelot: Well isn't it obvious?
Servant: Isn't what obvious?
Sir Lancelot: Why we stopped, isn't it obvious?
Servant: That's what I was asking.
Sir Lancelot: There's a giant hole there.
Servant: Ahh, I see, great job stopping there. Fine job indeed. I shall tell tales of your decisiveness and cunning.
Sir Lancelot: Decisiveness and cunning? But it was obvious!
Servant: What was obvious?
Sir Lancelot: Stopping in front of the hole there of course.
Servant: Well, that might have been obvious to someone such as you, your excellence. But I'd hardly call that obvious.
Sir Lancelot: But it's a hole!
Servant: Yes... Yes it is...
Sir Lancelot: And it's quite deep.
Servant: Yes sir, quite deep indeed.
Sir Lancelot: And falling down it would've indeed injured us.
Servant: Perhaps so, your excellence, perhaps so.
Sir Lancelot: So it was obvious to stop then!
Servant: To someone with your skills and decisiveness perhaps.
Sir Lancelot: Are you saying you wouldn't have stopped then?
Servant: Perhaps not.
Sir Lancelot: But you would of fallen.
Servant: Probably yes, your majesty.
Sir Lancelot: Did you see the hole?
Servant: Yes, yes I did, it was a quite impressive hole.
Sir Lancelot: But you would've still gone?
Servant: Perhaps.
Sir Lancelot: But WHY?!? IT WAS OBVIOUS THEN!
Servant: No offense, but maybe to you it was obvious, your excellence. But to me it was less so.
King Arthur strides up with servants.
King Arthur: HALT HERE!
Servants and Arthur halt.
King Arthur: Why have you stopped here Lancelot?
Sir Lancelot: Well, isn't it obvious?
Servant: Here he goes again, twas what we were just discussing.
King Arthur: AHA the hole, but wait, why did we stop? There's a bridge over there.
Parent
Even More Trouble (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Even More Trouble (Score:5, Funny)
Parent
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Even More Trouble (Score:5, Funny)
Parent
1 click rejection? (Score:4, Funny)
1-Click Rejection (Score:3, Funny)
We need a hero to save the day. (Score:5, Funny)
Captain Obvious to the rescue! (serious) (Score:3, Informative)
function button_click() {
add_item_to_shopping_cart();
if(one_click_enabled) {
checkout_and_buy();
} else {
continue_showing_items();
}
}
function checkout_and_buy() {
process_financial_transaction_to_buy_items_in_shopping_cart();
Catch-22 (Score:4, Insightful)
It's incredibly easy, if not trivial, to design a site so that someone can save a set of data (name, address, CC info) and resubmit it along with another set of data (the order) in one click. There are first and second-year CS and CIS projects that are more complicated than that. Securing the site wouldn't be nearly as simple, but that's not the part that's covered by the patent.
Re: (Score:2)
Perhaps the folks in the patent office need to hire some first-year CS students to help them figure it out?
Re:Catch-22 (Score:4, Interesting)
According to the supreme court:
"Granting patent protection to advances that would occur in the ordinary course without real innovation retards progress and may, in the case of patents combining previously known elements, deprive prior inventions of their value or utility"
source:
http://news.zdnet.com/2100-9595_22-6180220.html [zdnet.com]
Summary:
If the same solution would have eventually been created within a reasonable amount of time by anyone skilled in that area, it is too obvious. A patent has to be something unique that probably would not have been created within a few years by every single other engineer/scientist/professional in that area.
Parent
Obviousness. (Score:4, Insightful)
Half-click shopping ... (Score:5, Funny)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
When a new potential revenue stream is instantiated (ie, born) the retailer references the birth record and local demographics. Based on the instance's socioeconomic class and other factors, a queue of products is created and stored in a database. The instance will then receive products and bills
So show basis already (Score:2, Informative)
http://www.news.com/Supreme-Court-loosens-patent-obviousness-test/2100-1014_3-6180220.html [news.com]
The court just wants to show it's done it's job. In this case the patent office has an extra problem in that it previously granted the patent, so undermined it's own right to reject on the grounds of obviousness. But that j
Tagging thread (Score:2)
Catch-22 (Score:5, Funny)
"Why isn't this obvious?!" Yossarian asked
"The obviousness is just to obvious, that's why." said Captain Black
"That... that's just stupid. If it's so obvious, you should just call it obvious and reject it." said Yossarian
"Oh, sure. But if we did that, what would be the end result? Everyone would spend all their time trying to force themselves to think of non-obvious things." said Captain Black
"What?! Isnt't that the point of this whole patenting system?!" asked Yossarian
"NO! That's exactly my point - have you ever seen a good invention, I mean a really good invention? What makes you say it's a good invention - I'll tell you, it's because it makes so much sense for the situation its in! The really good inventions are only the ones that are SO obvious you never thought of them before. So, therefore, we decided it's really best that if an invention seems TOO obvious, it obviously must be something we have to encourage, and therefore has to be accepted BECAUSE it was too obvious." said Captain Black
-
Ryan Fenton
Gah! (Score:4, Insightful)
Patents were never intended to protect ideas but rather an idea + method of accomplishing it. The purpose being that it wouldn't stifle innovation because other people could come up with other - perhaps improved - methods to accomplish the same thing. Thus innovation continues forward, but the particular device that the original designer came up with is protected, not the goal he set out to accomplish. It's akin to patenting an octagonal wheel. Someone else is free to come along and patent a circle based wheel. But with software patents, even if you do it better, you can be sued for it. Thus obvious stifling of innovation. Sure you could do it on your own time, but you have to wait, what, 50 years before you can make money from it?
It doesn't appear rejected... (Score:2)
The problem with "Obvious" (Score:3, Insightful)
There are a number of things that are perfectly obvious to me that may not be obvious to someone else. One of the things I think is lacking is the notion, actually used in patent law, "obvious to someone skilled in the art." But what "art?" Software engineering is not one art. Like it or not, it is splitting into a number of (sometimes and sometimes not) overlapping fields.
Web, GUI, networking, search, OS, embedded, etc. these are all specializations and what is obvious to an OS guy may be completely incomprehensible to a web guy. An OS guy who only sees mouse clicks as merely system interrupts may not think 1-click is obvious, hell he probably doesn't even like mice.
The 1-click patent is totally obvious and trivial to anyone doing any sort of GUI and/or web programming.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
I don't get this argument. If it looks obvious in retrospect, it's still obvious. Patents exist because it's good for society to have a system where individuals or companies that choose to spend money on expensive research, have a way of profiting from it. If your research wasn't expensive, and your "invention" was the result of a single aha-moment, then society does not benefit from you getting a patent.