Prior Art to Pinpoint vs. Amazon, from 1980's? 139
Gary Robinson writes "I'm in a fairly unique position with regard to the Pinpoint vs. Amazon case since I built a system in the mid-1980's which is commonly regarded as the first active service based on collaborative filtering. It was a voice-mail-based dating service called 212-ROMANCE. I still have the 8-inch CP/M source code disks as insurance against CF-related patent lawsuits. Today I've posted a discussion of the Pinpoint vs. Amazon case in the context of that prior art as well other prior art from the 1980's."
One should have to prove "no prior art"! (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:One should have to prove "no prior art"! (Score:2)
unrelated tangent (Score:1)
Re:unrelated tangent (Score:3, Insightful)
I realize that is a bit theoretical in this absurd case, but, goto Mexico and prove you *didn't* commit a crime you're charged with, and yo
Re:unrelated tangent (Score:2)
uh, no. (Score:1)
Re:uh, no. (Score:2)
Re:uh, no. (Score:2)
Turing proved that the above paragraph is a fabrication. Such a disk cannot exist; Google for "halting problem". This is an example of proving non-existence.
Re:uh, no. (Score:2)
This is why we need a -1, Exceptionally Moronic Humor Attempt mod.
And, no, you do not have any disks that have a program on it that does what the parent wanted. Just because he didn't explain the whole program in that first sentence doesn't mean that the later sentences explaining the specific program he was talking about weren't relevant.
We're talking theoretical here. In the real world, there are no circles, planes, or lines -- zoom in close enough and they're no longer perfect. A theoretical com
Re:unrelated tangent (Score:2)
Just because I have no evidence that you slept with your mother, I cannot conclude that you didn't.
However, if I have evidence that your mother was abducted immediately after giving birth to you, was killed in captivity, was cremated by her captors, and that you were in protective custody of the state for the duration of that period, then I can conclusively prove that you never slept with your mother.
Re:One should have to prove "no prior art"! (Score:1, Funny)
basic logic rule: your statement is self-contridictory and therefore irrelevant. How can you say it's impossible (a negative statement) to prove a negative??? You cannot prove this statement is true now can you since it implies something in the negative...
please leave the logic to people who understand it (not me)
Urban legend (Score:4, Insightful)
That's hardly a "basic rule of logic"; reductio ad absurdam is one of the most basic kinds of proof.
Remember geometry in high school? You probably proved that no triangle has interior angles greater than 180 degrees. Proof of a negative. Where did the ridiculous claim "you can't prove a negative" come from, anyways?
Re:Urban legend (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Urban legend (Score:1)
But can you prove that there has been no prior art for a patent with the same logic?
Actually, in theory you can prove it. This world is finite, and (to all of our knowledge) mankind only exists for a finite time. So, the universe is closed and you can prove by using "negation as failure".
Whether this all is possible in reasonable time is a different matter.:-)
BTW: Here is something that you cannot prove: "Ravens are black", or paraphrased: "There exist no white ravens". Unless you did in fact se
Re:Urban legend (Score:2)
I was thinking of (as I mentioned) classical geometry where about 75% of the proofs in, for example, Euclid's Elements are proofs showing that the existence of X implies premises contrary to the axioms (which, like an early EULA, are accepted by reading the book). Therefore, X cannot exist. QED.
Re:Urban legend (Score:2)
Strictly speaking, to prove that you need to assume the truth of the parallel postulate, which is true only for euclidean geometries.
Proof of a negative. Where did the ridiculous claim "you can't prove a negative" come from, anyways?
I believe it is a misinterpretation of "naive falsificationism" from Karl Popper's theory of knowledge.
Basically, his standpoint was that a (scientific) sta
Re:Urban legend (Score:2)
Prove a Square doesn't have three sides. I can't prove that per se, but what I can do is prove that a square has ONLY four sides, thus eliminating the posibility of a three sided square.
In your case, you point to a triangle and the interior angles and such. But there is an absolute answer that a triangle interior angles are always the same (180 degrees). You did not derive proof against the negative, until y
Re:One should have to prove "no prior art"! (Score:1)
This is most certainly not a rule of logic, neither basic nor anything else. I'd recommend you take a good book (e.g. Eliott Mendelson, "An Introduction into Mathematical Logic") and get a clue before doing such statements!
SebastianRe:One should have to prove "no prior art"! (Score:2)
Furthermore, in predicate elgebra one can always form a negative from a positive (the 'null hypothesis'), and vice versa, and if one is proved the other is disproved (etc etc), so anytime you prove a positive you are proving a negative (and vice versa).
Thus to say it is 'impossible to prove a negative' is clearly nonsensical. However, please feel free to give me refere
Re:One should have to prove "no prior art"! (Score:1)
AFAIK: The USPTO uses databases of inventions both patented and non patented to determine "Prior Art". Things are considered prior art only if the USPTO knows about them. However, prior art and business method patents have come under question and the USPTO is seeking comment on the issue.
Comment info here [uspto.gov] And here [uspto.gov]
Ok, give them a list of words. (Score:1)
Re:Ok, give them a list of words. (Score:1)
> generate the entire set given finite amounts of
> time.
>
> Your solution is not possible.
Countably infinite, yes.
However, if you pick an upper limit to the number of words in the description, say, 10 million, it merely becomes practically impossible, not theoretically.
And if they allow formulae as a description, even the infinite is possible. My Kleene Star is a bit rusty, but something like:
{all english letters and common punctuation}*
should
Patents still serve a purpose (Score:5, Insightful)
Look, there are still things that are patent worthy. I was just watching on the news where some kid and his dad made a device that would kill mosquito larvae using sound waves through water -- no chemicals. I question the overall usefulness of such a device (getting rid of standing water around your house may be smarter, although I suppose this would be helpful if you had a small pond) but it seemed pretty unique and clever.
The process of proving prior art should be more streamlined, perhaps, and the level of interest at the patent office of yanking improperly issued patents definitely needs to be increased, but doing away with this system is only going to punish the small inventor as illustrated above.
Even here few want to do away with patents... (Score:1)
Re:Patents still serve a purpose (Score:2)
Sorry bub, you cant steal your cake and eat it too.
Re:One should have to prove "no prior art"! (Score:5, Interesting)
The way it works is exactly the opposite of that. Prior art does not invalidate a patent, it just make the patent dependent on having the rights to the prior art as well.
Unless your patent is exactly what the prior art is (hardly anything is exactly something else (!)) or some subset of it, finding prior art will not prevent the granting of a patent. Also, many patents that are flaged as outrageous by armchair lawyers on slashdot are not as broad of scope as they seem due to the prior art that is listed in the patent.
The process may be broken, but not as badly as you'd think from all the postings you see around here.
Re:One should have to prove "no prior art"! (Score:3, Insightful)
The process is, however, very badly broken from the perspective of the people actually having to spend enormous amounts of money on filing the patents in order to make their patent portfolio sufficiently thick for trading, or getting sued over bogus patents on decades old technology. And plenty of people on Slashdot have been in either or both situations (myself included). For that, it doesn't take "armch
Re:One should have to prove "no prior art"! (Score:2)
The poster must have meant something entirely different: the above statement is simply false. Prior art by definition isn't secret stuff- that comment would imply I could come around later and get a patent on something I published years ago. Prior art is used to prove that an 'invention' has not taken an inventive step, meaning someone skilled in the relevant art could reasonably be ex
Re:One should have to prove "no prior art"! (Score:3, Insightful)
I've read this a few times now, and it seems like you're saying the same thing I said.
Prior art by definition isn't secret stuff- that comment would imply
I don't understand how I could be implying that prior art is secret when I specifically say it's disclosed right in the application...
Prior art is used to prove that an 'invention' has not taken an inventive step, meaning s
Re:One should have to prove "no prior art"! (Score:4, Interesting)
Patent examimers are supposed to do a check for prior art. Unfortunately, their usual body of work to check from is other patents. From their point of view, useful items are patented, so examining other patent filings is the best place to find already existing inventions.
The problem is, there patent office refused patents on software until forced to by the Supreme Court in the 1981 case Diamond v. Diehr [bitlaw.com] The software industry developed without any consideration to patents, and now the patent office is missing decades of the basic building blocks needed for determing the novel from the mundane.
Re:And thank Jesus it took this long for it to sta (Score:4, Insightful)
If patents on systems implemented in software were granted from day one, the software industry would be very different than it is today. Other industries, electronics for example, deal with patents and licensing on a day to day basis and the state of the art keeps advancing. One could argue whether it would be better or worse, but at least it would be consistent. What we have today is the worst of both worlds. We have a patent office accepting patents while they have no concept of the state of the art or prior art.
Personally, I feel what the patent office is missing is the idea that computers are designed to be infinitely configurable machines, and that software just sets the machine to a particular configuration. Being able to patent software is like being able to patent a particular Lego layout.
But just to let you know, if it would have been possible to patent Hello World, and if the patent to it had coincided with the publication of the first edition of the book The C Programming Language [bell-labs.com] (long after string output had implemented in software), then the patent would have expired by now.
Re:And thank Jesus it took this long for it to sta (Score:2)
You seem to be jumping to conclusions about my personal opinions or preferences about software and business process patents. By picturing an alternate reality in which software is and always has been patentable, it doesn't mean that I wished that I lived in that reality. It doesn't matter anyway, because we can't change the course of past events. We can't truly determine the effects of a world that always had software patents, and even if we could, we couldn't succeed at emulating that course.
That lea
Re:One should have to prove "no prior art"! (Score:1)
That's probably one of the worst abuses of "philosophy" I've heard in a while. Your conclusion that ideas exist outside of time isn't justified by your hand wavey "proof." Besides, even if they did exist outside
8" floppy media? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:8" floppy media? (Score:5, Informative)
Patent # 5,884,282 [uspto.gov]
Patent # 5,790,426 [uspto.gov]
Both held by Gary B. Robinson aka. the poster of this story
Re:8" floppy media? (Score:2)
In any case, collaborative filtering goes back a long way; I doubt any of these patents are valid, and it doesn't take Robinson's work to invalidate them.
Re:8" floppy media? (Score:1)
Re:8" floppy media? (Score:2)
Re:8" floppy media? (Score:2)
Re:8" floppy media? (Score:1)
Re:8" floppy media? (Score:1)
Re:8" floppy media? (Score:1)
Re:8" floppy media? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:8" floppy media? (Score:1)
Not as lucky as one with a hard-drive.
Re:8" floppy media? (Score:2)
Re:8" floppy media? (Score:1)
Re:8" floppy media? (Score:1, Funny)
In Soviet Russia perfectly good jokes kill you
Re:8" floppy media? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:8" floppy media? (Score:1)
Re:8" floppy media? (Score:2)
Re:8" floppy media? (Score:3, Funny)
To which, of course, a couple dozen slashdotters would offer the use of theirs.
--RJ
Re:8" floppy media? (Score:2)
I have a box of 5.25" disks I need to get some stuff off of. If I don't get a drive in my machine and do it soon, I may be out of luck.
Re:8" floppy media? (Score:2)
Re:8" floppy media? (Score:2)
I dropped a few (3.5) two feet onto carpeted floor, the result being they were unusable, could not even be formatted.
But, after I beat on one for a while, they tend to last. Basically, I'm seeing over a 20% failure rate with various brands. These are cheap, lightweight, and I'm happy if over %50 work these days.
Re:8" floppy media? (Score:1)
Floppy disks (Score:1, Redundant)
Interesting.. (Score:2)
Now, IANAL, but I'm pretty sure you need to file patent suits ASAP, or you lose your ability to do so. And, Amazon has been using this tech for a while.
Hey, but he should post the source! Then we could see it!
Re:Interesting.. (Score:2)
especially the last paragraph called "full disclosure" (or something to that effect), where the writer "discloses" that he is the holder of Patent # 5,884,282 and Patent # 5,790,426... So I guess he got there before Amazon....
he would post the source (Score:5, Funny)
If you do sorting with CP/M and don't pay them money, you're a common thief!
Re:Interesting.. (Score:2)
Nope, you're thinking of Trademarks, which are "defend or lose".
Patent suits can be filed at any time during the life of the patent, and can even be selectively enforced if the patent holder wishes (meaning they can sue one person for infringement and ignore another).
Re:Interesting.. (Score:1)
incorrect (Score:1)
You are right that patent suits can be filed anytime, but you will LOSE if you have not actively and vigorously defended your IP prior to the suit. This is to say that you cannot ignore little company X infringement for 5 years, and then sue Microsoft for infringing. Microsoft just has to show that you knew there were others infringing, and you didn't do anything about it.
There are a lot of compani
collaborative filtering, that seems oddly familiar (Score:3, Informative)
Anyway, the Pinpoint patents are obviously not worth the paper they're printed on. The Firefly collaborative music recommendation system was widely published out of MIT in '94, and should be the easiest stick with which to L.A.R.T. the Pinpoint bozos.
But gee, a telephon date line running under CP/M from the 80's, now there's some extra points for overwhelming geekitude. Who needs Firefly when you've got 212-ROMANCE?
"RINGO" (Score:3, Informative)
collaborative filtering and different domains (Score:3, Informative)
Why? Because while you may have similar sources of data in both areas, namely personal profiles or "shopping" transactions, there is no guarantee that the data has the same properties in these different domains, and so there is no guarantee
Re:collaborative filtering and different domains (Score:3, Interesting)
Don't try to convince me that there is anything fundamental going on here beyond sparce matrix distance metric theory. Trying to recommend dates is essentially similar in Joe Random Juror's mind to trying to recommend music and books. Even if one algorithm is entirely unsupervised and the other depends on a huge preferenc
Re:collaborative filtering and different domains (Score:2)
Is the data distributed the same way? Does it represent a random process or not? Do users generate the same number of selections in the domains? Are there orders of magnitude more objects to recommend in one domain than in the other?
Are the rules that a user follows for deciding whether two things are similar or not the same in the two domains?
All these factors, and more, come into play
Re:collaborative filtering and different domains (Score:1)
Re:collaborative filtering and different domains (Score:1)
A Taste of their own medicine (Score:1)
Huh? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Huh? (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Huh? (Score:1)
Re:Huh? (Score:5, Funny)
"directing an intense coherent beam of invisible light produced by a hand-held laser apparatus to produce a bright highly-focused pattern of light at the intersection of the beam and an opaque surface, said pattern being of visual interest to a cat;"?
Re:Huh? (Score:5, Insightful)
Today patenting is a legal business and therefore putting things in legalese would stop the engineers form seeing straight through the patent and stamping REFUSED on things like "using a laser to play with a cat" before even reading the patentapplication... Putting it in legalese would make anything seem "new" and radically different from everything...
Don't discount such patents (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Huh? (Score:1, Funny)
Poor Fluffy and me will go to jail!
Why did they bother? (Score:1)
What I don't understand is why anyone would spend the time and money to file this patent in the first place. It's totally worthless. First, any sane judge or jury, even in our messed-up system, would probably throw it out as non-obvious. Second, and more importantly, the patent's claims (the only part that really counts) are incredibly limited. Claim 1, which all the others are based on, specifically requires a "a hand-held laser apparatus".
Re:Huh? (Score:1)
Entropy Accelerators?
Always learning again.
What were we talking about?
Re:Huh? (Score:2)
That's alright, I'm safe. My cat tends to prefer visible light.
Re:Huh? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Huh? (Score:1)
Re:Huh? (Score:2)
ObSimpsons: [snpp.com]
Re:Huh? (Score:2)
Re:Huh? (Score:2)
Actually I don't think I wouldn't disagree with you.
Re:Huh? (Score:2)
Re:Huh? (Score:1)
Wow, the patent office has fessed up! (Score:3, Funny)
This line could be a slashdot story in and of itself!:)
Re:Wow, the patent office has fessed up! (Score:3, Funny)
Business Plan (Score:5, Insightful)
2. Wait until other people do the actual work.
3. Sue one of the largest ones, settling for a license fee they can easily afford and which is far cheaper than litigation.
4. Sue the smaller ones on the strength of the first suit.
5. PROFIT!
Re:Business Plan (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Business Plan (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Business Plan (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Business Plan (Score:1)
Diligence (Score:2)
> years after an actual reduction to practice and
> before filing a patent application, and still keep
> the date of conception as the date of the
> invention, as long as the patent is applied for
> within one year of the invention becoming public.
Not true. Look up "diligence".
Re:Diligence (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Diligence (Score:4, Informative)
Why has he waited so long? (Score:3, Insightful)
Diamonds are forever (Score:1)
Re:Diamonds are forever (Score:1)