Slashdot Log In
Apple, Starbucks Sued Over Music Gift Cards
Posted by
kdawson
on Monday February 25, @06:45AM
from the you-can-brick-but-you-better-not-click dept.
from the you-can-brick-but-you-better-not-click dept.
Trintech writes "A Utah couple acting as their own attorneys have filed a lawsuit against Apple and Starbucks over the retailers' recent Song of the Day promotion, which offers Starbucks customers an iTunes gift card for a complimentary, pre-selected song download. In a seven-page formal complaint, James and Marguerite Driessen of Lindon, Utah say they developed in 2000, and were granted a patent in February 2006 for, an Internet merchandising utility dubbed RPOS (retail point of sale). The concept, which forms the heart of the infringement lawsuit, would allow gift cards for pre-defined items that can be sold at a brick-and-mortar store but used online; customers could redeem a card for a dining room set or a DVD, for example."
Related Stories
The Fine Print: The following comments are owned by whoever posted them. We are not responsible for them in any way.
Full
Abbreviated
Hidden
Loading ... Please wait.

Its a new invention because its online (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Its a new invention because its online (Score:5, Interesting)
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Its a new invention because its online (Score:5, Insightful)
No, but top up cards for pay as you go cellular plans have been sold at POS since the mid 90s.
Yet more free prior art consulting...
There are lawyers who have tried to convince me that I can do more for the industry by helping them sink bogus patents than by actually like inventing stuff or writing books on how to stop Internet crime. Unlike some folk here I do accept that software can be patentable, but thats not the problem, the problem is the junk patents that should never have been applied for or granted.
Junk patents devalue genuine ones. They also mean that every few weeks we have another slashdot story where IBM or Microsoft have patented the wheel or such like, almost certainly as a defensive move, but once the patent is granted it can be used for anything.
Die, business process patents, die!!! (Score:4, Insightful)
It's not just that patent trolls can now extort exorbitant amounts of money from innocent companies going about what used to be called "doing things" and now is called "violating patents". It has also put a damper on innovation, and we are seeing American industrialists becoming timid and reluctant to market incrementally improved products, just as our Asian competitors are becoming predominant in nearly every sector through incremental improvement to design and function.
At this rate, we're going to become like the Europeans, muddling along and watching the world pass them by technologically while they debate the latest politically correct labor laws such as whether to go to a 34 hour work week.
If this sounds overly negative, try coming up with an original invention and trying to sift through the existing process patents. It's next to impossible to avoid violating some process patent or other, usually something stupid like "A method for pushing a button that causes a light bulb to flash..." To compound the problem we now have companies practicing defensive patenting (I wonder how long it will be before someone patents defensive patenting) simply to keep these trolls off their back.
I wonder that none of the presidential candidates have addressed this issue. Obama's website pays some lip service:
Unfortunately, Obama does not address the real problem, which is that business process and methods have been made too easily patentable. Hillary's website does not even mention patents as far as I can tell, though to her credit she does talk a lot about increasing basic science research. The word "patent" is not found on John McCain's website. As for Ron Paul, apparently he doesn't know about the issue [slashdot.org].
Anything goes .. (Score:5, Funny)
The patent office is really more of a nuisance than anything nowadays.
Eh
would examine and grant patents
they are
Re:Anything goes .. (Score:4, Funny)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
In the true spirit of Gödel, I hereby patent patenting patenting patents.
-:sigma.SB
Internet starter kits (Score:5, Informative)
And what about AOL CD's. You might have been given it with a magazine. Sounds pretty obvious to me.
What about S&H Green Stamps as prior art? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:What about S&H Green Stamps as prior art? (Score:5, Funny)
No, I'm not sure that I'm kidding.
Re:What about S&H Green Stamps as prior art? (Score:4, Interesting)
US Patent 7003500 (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.google.com/patents?id=HY54AAAAEBAJ&dq=7003500 [google.com]
Re:US Patent 7003500 (Score:4, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re: US Patent 7003500
Not the point of the article, but... seven million patents in the USA. Seems like just a little while ago they were in the four-millions, but then the "...on the Internet" patent revolution got going.
And kudos to the US for usi
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Maybe if they had used an indecipherable c
MMORPGs (Score:3, Informative)
Well technically, it isn't exactly media or merchandise that the MMORPGs were selling (as claimed by the patent), but in terms of prior art, uniqueness and obviousness, the patent shouldn't be valid. Heck, USPTO should employ teens as patent examiners.
My Prior Art for the NBA (Score:5, Interesting)
That app and those cards were precisely the same as these music gift cards, for a product that happened not to be music, but otherwise identical - a trivial difference. So this post constitutes my notification of prior art. Apple and Starbucks can pay me now to use it invalidate these Utahrds' entire patent.
It probably won't stand... (Score:5, Informative)
It's been a while since I had to deal with patent law but what I remember is this.
You just have to be different; even in the smallest way. Get past one of the primary claims, not the dependent ones as they don't count, and the patent doesn't hold.
Also, if this were to hold or if it doesn't and/or the previous product infringes, it shouldn't matter if company XYZ simply pulled a product from the shelves that was infringing.
They really should consult an attorney in patent law. If they are one then well you know what they say about representing yourself.
Re:LMAO (Score:5, Insightful)
(It isn't that I hate Apple or support patents, it is just that I hate capitalism. Can't you see the connection?)
--
DISCLAIMER: Use of this advanced computing technology does not imply an endorsement of Western industrial civilization.
But apparently you're willing to use this advanced technology even though it is the product of something that goes against your principles. How pragmatic of you. How... dare I say it... capitalist? After all, your actions seem to imply that you value your short term personal gain over your principles, and that furthermore you can absolve your conscience with a disclaimer that says the opposite. If that behavior isn't typical of the large Western corporations you claim to despise, I don't know what is...
Re:LMAO (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't think there's anything wrong with that. Just because somebody doesn't approve of a political or economic system, it doesn't make them a hypocrite for using something that was created under (although not necessarily as a consequence of) that system. I might disagree with the current patent system, but that shouldn't stop me using something that was developed using it.
Regarding the second part of your comment, I don't think capitalists have the monopoly on being selfish, shortsighted or even pragmatic.
Re:LMAO (Score:5, Insightful)
The modern rocket was a product of the Nazi regime and was applied for terror bombing. The first man into space was a Soviet. That did not stop Kennedy from starting the Apollo program (headed, by the way, by the same guy who was working for the Nazis and built his rockets with Jewish slaves).
There are lots of useful technologies developed by assholes. For instance, there is a great deal of knowledge about how to deal with modern chemical weapons in Iran, because someone sold their enemies lots of chemical weapons. Going back in time, the Interstate system in the US is inspired by Hitler's Autobahn system that Eisenhower saw during the war; the Fischer-Tropsch process (coal to petrol) was used to drive Germany in its last year of war; and I could go on.
Technologies are things, and as such they cannot have an opinion on politics.
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
I think it is more likely that Apple's lawyers pitched some offers to this couple to "make them go away" and couldn't work anything out. Then they just went about their business of setting up the service (this service through Starbucks was probably alread
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)