Microsoft Applies For Patent On Private Browsing 181
PhilDEE writes "Microsoft is in the process of applying for two patents for a private browsing mode in their next version of Internet Explorer — a feature already present in Safari, among other browsers."
First place I saw it was distrust (Score:4, Informative)
best firefox extension ever.
Trademarks, not patents! (Score:5, Informative)
They aren't patent applications, they're trademark applications. Check the source [istartedsomething.com]
BIG difference.
Patents==Bad and subject to prior art.
Trademarks==Good, and not subject to prior art.
Re:Trademarks, not patents! (Score:5, Informative)
Summary and Article WRONG (Score:5, Informative)
This is all wrong. Microsoft did not apply for patents, they applied for trademarks for the names they're giving the features, namely "ClearTracks" and "InPrivate". Unless you can find existing use for those names in privacy software you're not likely to find any objections to the trademark applications. Trademarks are not a claim of invention and in no way prevent others from implementing the exact same ideas or algorithms. They're simply a claim to a name in a specific context.
Even the original blogger got it right:
http://www.istartedsomething.com/20080820/microsoft-hints-private-browsing-feature-ie/ [istartedsomething.com]
I don't expect Slashdot to actually fix the summary, though. The word "patent" will generate a lot traffic, whereas everyone will simply yawn over "trademark".
Trademark not patent (Score:5, Informative)
While searching the patent numbers, it appears that this story is not even about patents:
http://www.istartedsomething.com/20080820/microsoft-hints-private-browsing-feature-ie/
"On July 30th, Microsoft filed two trademarks for:"
So please CmdrTaco, update your article.
Best,
Re:Trademarks, not patents! (Score:4, Informative)
Sure, you can argue that some trademarks are stupid. You have to remember that trademarks are context sensitive, though, so even if the trademark is a common word the question is it's use in the context of the product in question. This is how "Linux" can manage to be both a kernel and a laundry detergent.
In this case, the two words "ClearTracks" and "InPrivate" are not obvious common words. In fact, there are only two other live trademarks for "ClearTrack", one applied to golf putter training rails and the other applied to software to track packages in transit. A search on UPSTO for "InPrivate" only brings back the application from Microsoft, so it apparently has never been used before.
I would say that these are good and valid trademark applications. They don't imply invention, they don't attempt to hijack common parlance and they are quite narrow in scope.
Re:Trademarks, not patents! (Score:4, Informative)
Patents==Bad and subject to prior art.
Trademarks==Good, and not subject to prior art.
What a wonderfully 2 dimensional view of the world you have.
Both have their good points and both can be misused for bad stuff.
Patents are so the inventor can make money on their invention for a period of time before someone can copy it. While misused to keep competition down at its worse it can be used to improve competition at its best. Eg. Say a guy invents and patents a compression algorithm that is Faster, Lossless, Tighter then all other compression algorithms. So he is making money selling licenses to use the product. Now lets say Microsoft (as most people on slashdot sees them as the bad guy) wants to get in, however they don't want to pay the licensing fee. Without patents they could just copy this guys work (which could have taken years of R&D and costs the guys life savings) and he would be penniless for his invention.
Now for trademarks they are for protecting "idenity" of the company say a Logo or a Name. A company I use to work for has the Hourglass Nebula part of their logo which is trademarked. Although they have never enforced it they could have sued Perljam as they used that Nebula for one of their covers. Or they may have gone against say some small astronomy club who used a picture of it for their logo.
So saying Patents are Bad and Trademarks are Good is a very poor view of the world. Things rairly ever go so neatly into categories. Now a more correct view would be realizing that Patents may have gone past its origional intent and needs some major reform while trademarks less so. But saying it is bad and good is a huge understatement.
Re:First place I saw it was distrust (Score:4, Informative)
Another Example (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Trademarks, not patents! (Score:3, Informative)
It's a mistake. The blog they cite (istartedsomething.com) has it as trademark too.
Re:Trademarks, not patents! (Score:4, Informative)
Re:M$ - Tabbed Browsing Patent (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Trademarks, not patents! (Score:3, Informative)
You haven't heard about the olympic committee going ballistic on anyone who uses the phrases or shows the rings?
It has the same problems as the DMCA: it's easier to stifle someone's freedom/speech [techdirt.com] than it is to fight back such situations.
Re:First place I saw it was distrust (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Trademarks, not patents! (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Trademarks, not patents! (Score:4, Informative)
"InPrivate" is alright, as long as it's limited to the proper scope. "Clear tracks" is a fairly common phrase for people to use in reference to this.
http://clear-tracks.qarchive.org/ [qarchive.org]
http://www.softplatz.com/software/clear-tracks/ [softplatz.com]
I don't speak for the software in the links above, just pointing it out...
Amusingly, it looks like it's also the name of a piece of tracking software. So, you can clear your tracks, or you can leave them clearly.
http://www.claritytech.com/software/clarity/cleartracks/ [claritytech.com]
No, they cannot... (Score:5, Informative)
There already is a very similar software product called "TracksClear". I would imagine that "ClearTracks" will be sufficently confusing.
Except... There are problems (Score:2, Informative)
Neither one of those are super-enforceable. Unique names in sound and spelling are worthy of a truly enforceable trademark.
These trademarks are not unique in as much they ram two common words together. I know it's done "all of the time" but that doesn't mean they are perfectly defensible.
Trademarks like this are commonly used to drown your smaller competitors in legal bills by filing infringement claim after infringement claim. Nothing else.
Re:Trademarks, not patents! (Score:4, Informative)
How much affordable is a drug that hasn't been discovered?
Re:legitimization through familiarity (Score:4, Informative)
Luckily for you and you obviously over-used Righteous Anger Gland, the BBC got it wrong.
As mentioned below, they're trademarks, not patents.
Re:Trademarks, not patents! (Score:5, Informative)
Actually, if you're at Best Buy, and it's a Sony, then it's probably their Sony "Express" line for big retailers, high on features, low on quality.
If you go to a mom and pop, or custom shop and buy a Sony, then it's of the "We stand behind what we sell" product line and the quality is higher.
^^^^^^^^ Stuff I've learned being in a family with retail shop owners...
Re:Trademarks, not patents! (Score:3, Informative)
I would hardly consider Trademarks good too, especially when its often used to Trademark very common things like colors, common words, etc
Microsoft is one of the guilty companies in this case (ie. Word, Windows, Works, etc.). However, when the "Windows" trademark was tested in court in Microsoft vs. Lindows (now Linspire), Microsoft almost lost it because of how general a word "windows" is. To avoid losing it, Microsoft ended up settling with Linspire, paying Linspire $24 million dollars [wikipedia.org]. That's a pretty happy ending :-).