Online Testing Patented 48
An anonymous reader writes "For those who think that online testing is an obvious idea, please be advised that the USPTO recently issued U.S. Patent No. 6,513,042 for online testing to two Ohio inventors. According to an article in NEOhio CrainTech, "As of last week, Test Central Inc. in Cleveland owns the U.S. patent to conduct testing via the Internet and, in essence, owns the online testing business.""
looks like you can patent anything these days (Score:3, Funny)
Re:looks like you can patent anything these days (Score:1)
Re:looks like you can patent anything these days (Score:2)
Higher Learning (Score:3, Interesting)
g
I'd like to patent... (Score:3, Funny)
I used to wonder if my professors could be replaced by a VCR, perhaps even year to year with material that hasn't changed. But at some point the learning experience must be compromised, however great the financial savings.
Regardless
Re:I'd like to patent... (Score:1)
What, and get their hands dirty??? Seriously, I don't think they even know the meaning of quality of service.
Then test outside the USA (Score:1)
Re:Then test outside the USA (Score:1)
Re:Then test outside the USA (Score:1)
Breadth: Doesn't cover all online tests (Score:5, Informative)
In claim 1:
If there is no money involved you do not violate this patent. If you pay for a course and take a test as part of that course there are other ways around itIn claim 13:
There must be at least two parties making money of the testing. The first being the test maker and the second being the person who owns testing computer. If you make your own tests and host the tests on your own computer, you do not infringe.There are also claims about creating and filing tests. It appears that if you were to choose a category for your test and then create the test in that category you would not infringe. (As opposed to creating the test, putting it in a temporary folder, and then moving it to the proper place as covered by the patent.)
Although I am skilled in the art, I am no patent lawyer. The patent system says that only a patent lawyer, and not somebody skilled in the art can say what a patent is about, so run this by your patent lawyer before making tests online.
Re:Breadth: Doesn't cover all online tests (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Breadth: Doesn't cover all online tests (Score:2)
Re:Breadth: Doesn't cover all online tests (Score:2)
Now that I look at it again, I wonder what exactly a "means for generating the test" is. Suppose you had a Java applet on the client, and you sent it some data, the order of which the applet then randomized; which computer would be "generating" the test then?
Re:Breadth: Doesn't cover all online tests (Score:2)
So forget about everything except Claim 12, because us Free Software people don't care about paying for or sharing revenue from online tests. Because of Claim 12, all schools and universities could be affected.
The true affect of this patent then could be dependant on the meanings of the words "compile" and "directory", which will hopefully be defined down in the description of the invention, which I haven't had time to read yet. But I'm not optimistic.
Re:Breadth: Doesn't cover all online tests (Score:2)
Way to help out the teachers, guys!
Phew! Good Thing... (Score:3, Funny)
So purity tests are good for something (Score:2)
Prior Art (Score:4, Informative)
We complete the site in early 1996. I see that this company APPLIED for their patent in 1999.
While I know that our system was one of the early testing systems available - it was by no means the only one.
Again, another example of an utterly failed patent system awarding patents where prior art is VERY obvious.
Re:Prior Art (Score:3, Insightful)
If not, you do not have prior art because your situation does not meet all of the patents claims. The good news, as I said earlier, there are lots of ways to write online tests that do not infringe on this patent.
Re:Prior Art (Score:1)
we use smartforce in school. not server/client or anything,...
Re:Prior Art (Score:1)
Magazine Article: April 1999 (Score:1)
According to the uspto web site this patent was filed in September 1999. I remember reading an article in Java Pro magazine around the same time on how to build a test flexible testing web-app using servlets, and xml.
A quick google search produced this article [devx.com] by Claude Duguay in April 1999. Six months before "Inventors" Anderson and Stack filed their patent.
The article is a bit dry, but provides excellent instruction for anyone considering to build an online testing application. The original magazine publication included all the source code. (The online version requires you to be a JavaPro subscriber to download the code.)
this is absurd (Score:1, Flamebait)
I can imagine their think-session 4 years ago...
"Say, Jim, this internet thing seems to be catching on."
"Yup."
"Maybe we can make some money from it."
"Yup."
"I gots an idear. Let's make a list of all the common things we do with the internet, then let's go search the patent archives to find which from the list haven't been patented, and then we'll patent them and force people to pay us for them."
"Yup."
"It's a go. Waahoo! Neudge!"
Giving the "Impression" (Score:3, Insightful)
"We're trying to give them the impression that we want to work with them."
So, does this mean the DON'T want to work with them? How do you "try" to give an impression? Couldn't that be considered slightly redundant?
My problems this whole patent (an most others lately) are 1) There's the matter of "prior art"
And then 2) it's OBVIOUS AS ALL HELL! Non-proxied distance learning (including exams) are decades old -- hell, Meathead's wife was droning on about them back in the early 80's -- adding the internet as the base media is as obvious as adding the post was, and adding teleconferences, and adding VCR's (and even LaserDiscs for a while). I was under the impression that prior art and blatant obviousness were both disqualifiers for a patent; what about the combination? Is it like simple math -- prior art? That's 1 negative! oh, it's also obvious? That's another! lets see now, we have two negatives, bad things multiply problems it must be a good patent then!
Anyone got prior art? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Anyone got prior art? (Score:1)
Mind you, this is a CANADIAN university, so maybe this doesn't count? Or, because we didn't force people to pay for this, it doesn't fall under the scope of the patent? Anyhow, someone with knowledge of how to report patent abuses such as this could hopefully use this as prior art.
Re:Anyone got prior art? (Score:1)
Re:Anyone got prior art? (Score:1)
Re:Anyone got prior art? (Score:2)
If the patent requires "making a test and posting the test online...for potential test takers", as the CrainTech article suggests, then SkillCheck (&/or one or more of their competitors) was doing that commercially well before 1999. From a quick skim of their patent, it looks like all you need is any client-server arrangement where you've got one server running a database & test logic while at the same time you can do tests & test management from the client end. Quoting just the patent abstract:
Maybe I'm dense but where's the clever part in all of this?
That CT article doesn't exactly paint this company in a positive light -- look at what they're trying to do: (a) not use their patent, but force companies to sign up as licensees & live off the rent from that; (b) squat on the test.com domain until someone finds it valuable enough to buy from them; (c) sell off their assets to one of the companies that they're trying to strongarm with the patent, granting them their domain name, software, and any other assets. Yuck -- if only we could count on this getting laughed out of court if they ever try to pursue it.
Re:Anyone got prior art? (Score:1, Informative)
This is an online Internet test (Score:2)
How does this happen? (Score:2)
Re:How does this happen? (Score:2)
A bit of recent history may be useful. (Score:2)
Before the Great Depression, there was a very similar state of patent affairs to what we have now. The laws were worded in a way that gave patent holders enormous rights and patent holders tended to win in court.
During the reforms that took place after the Depression, patents were seen as monopolistic and were closely watched by a division of the Justice Department called Antitrust. In courts, the value of patents was distinctly weakened to the point that patent holders tended to lose in court and patents became an unprofitable way to manage one's business.
These anti-patent reforms were in place through the growth decades from the end of the war and into the sixties allowing many of our favorite toys like the Xerox GUI based PC to come into existence relatively free of patent issues. If you're old enough, you might even remember hearing about consent decrees on the news at night when you were a kid. They used to be common, but I haven't heard the phrase in the headlines in decades although that's no mystery.
In the 80s, an odd but charismatic man was elected president in a tide of big business friendly politics and himself and his associates immediately reformed the legal system regarding patents by creating a brand new court that specialized in patent cases only. This new court was called the Court of Appeals of the Federal Circuit AKA, the CAFC and it essentially reversed the reforms that had taken place since the Great Depression.
Subsequently a great bubble formed in the stock market and then. . .
onlinetrafficschool.com (Score:2, Interesting)
Domain Name: ONLINETRAFFICSCHOOL.COM
Status: ACTIVE
Creation Date: 19-nov-1997
[whois.opensrs.net]
Registrant:
Online Traffic School
645 Fourth Street
Santa Rosa, CA 95404
US
Someday (Score:1)
Want to tell the USPTO about this? (Score:3, Informative)
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Personally, I'd quote them a dozen or so sites that use online tests regularly, especially for-profit (i guess thespark.com doesn't qualify =P) and then mention the general case of Universities, who are slowly moving towards great use of online tests to ease their administrative loads. I'm sure enough comments can get a patent reviewed.
Re:Want to tell the USPTO about this? (Score:2, Informative)
Unfortunately, you cannot participate in the proceedings, but I have cought rumours that the USPTO will change re-examination procedures to inter partes proceedings, bringing it more in line with the opposition procedures of the European and Japanese Patent Offices (both built on the unequalled German patent system (BTW, I am not a German))
Patent will not be granted anywhwere else... (Score:1)
And at least the European Patent Office keeps repeating that they will never ever grant patents for this kind of stuff (pure business methods, with only the new feature being that you can earn money with it), so the solution for others is quite simple: put your server in Europe and chances of winning an infringement case will surely rise.
Prior Art (Score:2)
The Department of Defense was using the internet for "online testing" long before these schmucks came along.
Prior Art? (Score:1)
How do I determine if it is prior art? What do I do if it is?
26% pure and counting.
Prior Art (Score:3, Funny)
Which brings me to a funny story. There was this one "logic" class that was taken almost entirely online, tests and all, except for some optional lectures. I was dating this really dumb girl at the time ("blonde, all the way to the brain stem"), who just didn't get *anything* about the class. And she kept going to the professor and complaining that it was too hard, and it didn't make sense, and so on.
So I think she ended up with a D for the class, which was probably generous, and she went to complain one final time. At that meeting the professor *admitted* to her that the whole thing was a sham. It wasn't a logic class at all. It was in reality, a giant psychological test to study how people react under extreme stress. And she was one of the subjects. She was vindicated! She knew it all along!
Now I knew the professor, and he was a really cool guy, with just a bit of a mean streak. Of course CMU wouldn't let a professor conduct a covert semester-long psych experiment on students. (And a math professor at that.) That guy must still laugh about the story he told to this poor girl. I know I do.
Anyway, my point was... oh yeah, the prior art thing.