FFII vs. Amazon Gift Ordering Patent 159
Elektroschock writes "The Foundation for a Free Information Infrastructure fights in court against Amazon.com's Gift ordering patent. It is about ordering gifts via email and phone communication. Amazon's gift ordering patent is seen as a danger for webdesigners and E-Commerce in Europe. It is derived from the well-known Amazon.com's 1-click patent. The flowers distributor Fleurop and Germany's Computer Acience Association "Gesellschaft fur Informatik" untertake similar legal action against Amazon's trivial patent. FFII's Hartmut Pilch said the fight against patents was not over. It is a cheap opportunity to get some exercise in patent litigation."
Am I the only one (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Am I the only one (Score:1)
Am I the only one who think that Final Fantasy 2 would have kicked Amazons ass?
Re:Am I the only one (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Am I the only one (Score:2)
Co-Parsing (Score:1)
(Read: Overtly The Friggin Lawyers Munch Amazon's Orifice)
Re:Am I the only one (Score:2)
Actually I thought it was Final Fantasy 11 (ffll), since that is the next Final Fantasy, isn't it?
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Am I the only one (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Am I the only one (Score:2)
Nope. (Score:2)
This article is BOOOOORRRRING. I wish Final Fantasy had anything to do with it.
This patent is ridiculous (Score:5, Insightful)
What next? Patenting the act of selling?
Re:This patent is ridiculous (Score:1)
I suppose this paten
Re:This patent is ridiculous (Score:1)
Re:This patent is ridiculous (Score:2)
Re:This patent is ridiculous (Score:2)
Quick! (Score:5, Funny)
Profit!
Get over it (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Get over it (Score:2)
I don't know what you just said, but you're hired!
Re:Get over it (Score:1)
Welcomed Activity (Score:2, Funny)
Mod Parent Up (Score:2)
This is a sound economic argument to punish inept law.
Are you sure? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Are you sure? (Score:5, Informative)
Opposition
the Foundation for a Free Informational Infrastructure, represented by the president Hartmut Pilch, Munich, represented by president Hartmut Pilch, opponent,
- Trustees: Attorneys Dr. Matthias Lenhardt, Olaf Koglin and Holger Scharfenberg, Kurfuerstendamm 46, 10747 Berlin -
against the granted patent
European Patent EP 0 927 945
Registration no 99105948.6
Patent owner: amazon.com Inc., USA
in the name and with the authorisation of the opponent we request
to fully revoke the patent.
Justification:
A. Opposition causes
The opposition is based on:
the subject is not not an invention in the sense of art 52 paragraph 1 of EPC
(Art. 100(a), Art 52 EPC) and does not involve an inventive step (Art 100(a),
Art 56 EPC), and that the subject matter extends beyond the content of
the application (Art 100(c) EPC, Art 123(2) EPC).
Oral proceedings are applied for
B. Justification in single steps
I. (Text by hartmut)
II.
Furthermore the opposition is justified by the justification of the
oppositions of
a) Fleurop Interflora European Business Company AG of
26.09.2003
For any case - especially in case that the oppoisition is
partially or fully revoked - those oppositions are made
fully the content of the opposition.
III.
Opposition by Fleurop-Interflora European Business Company AG
IV.
Opposition by Gesellschaft fuer Informatik e.V.
C. Formalities
EUR 610 (by cheque) have been handed in before deadline directly by the opponent.
Re:Are you sure? (Score:2)
Not much FFII can do about that... Damn freely available information
Re:Are you sure? (Score:1)
that had just been a bit slow
Re:Are you sure? (Score:2)
Official PR in the making ... (Score:1)
see also some background [ffii.org].
The corporate monster machine (Score:4, Insightful)
Even foreign governments.
Intellectual property in all of its various forms is being abused by the corporate world - both friends and foes of Linux and otherwise. The madness is the laws supporting this behavior continue to pass, bypassing the individual and wholeheartedly supporting the corporation.
Isn't the government supposed to be working for us? Aren't our rights supposed to be first and foremost in their minds? There is a balance to be maintained, and our rights are not unlimited, but more and more across the entire globe the individual is lost.
Not to be funny but has anyone considered the implications of all these recent intellectual property rights and how it seems more and more that we're being pushed into the draconian future of Johnny Mnemonic and Shadowrun? The only way you get information is to steal it. The only way for another corporation to get information is to hire you to steal it.
I grow more and more distressed at the world my son will grow up in, the conditions he will consider normal, the laws he will break just by trying to think.
WARNING: Parent is PLAGARIZED (Score:5, Informative)
The very same post [slashdot.org]
Re:The corporate monster machine (Score:2)
You get what you pay for.
Re:The corporate monster machine (Score:2)
Now it seems that people are duplicating entire previous threads. How very strange.
See, it's pretty common trolling practice on
Legitimate reason for patenting the obvious (Score:5, Interesting)
The lawyers convinced us that filing the patent is the only way to prevent someone else from filing a patent, covering your technology, and then suing you, forcing you to PROVE to a court (always a chancy thing) that you had created prior art. And quite frankly every innovation we made to our online calendar showed up 3 months later in someone elses calendar. In fact we even found instances where people had literally cut and pasted our code, comments and all!
So we knew that there were unscrupulous bastards out there, willing to completely rip us off. So bearing that in mind, we agreed to file for patents, not so much to enforce them, but to protect ourselves from future suits. I agree, if the system was healthy and working, we wouldn't need to have done that, but the system is already full of sharks -- I don't blame people for getting shark repellant. Applying for the patent HAS to be done nowadays. Enforcing the patents is when I start to get mad. I know it's a fine line, but scruples and business operate in different realities.
Why don't you copyright it? (Score:5, Insightful)
If you want to prove to the court that you created prior art, why not just copyright the code? It's a lot cheaper, it shows prior art definitively, and it's not abusing the system by "patenting the obvious".
Dlugar
Re:Why don't you copyright it? (Score:2)
Re:Why don't you copyright it? (Score:2, Informative)
Yes, but if I register copyright on "code A to perform process B", and my opponent applies for a patent on process B 6 months down the line, then code A should in theory be proof that prior art for process B exists. Particularly since the registration process involves giving the copyright office a copy of much of the code in question (according to the US Copyright Office [copyright.gov]).
In reality of course, this relies on government departments working together flawlessly. And we all know how often that happens :P
Re:Why don't you copyright it? (Score:1)
if you want protection against patent suits here's what to do:
- print a list of all your projects files and their MD5 checksums
- have that list timestamped by a notary or something equally legally binding
- when sued, produce your code, show that the md5sums match and that you had those at date XXX
of course, be sure to keep the exact versions of all your files you used to md5sum (hint: cvs)
note: Patent offices (at least in euro
Re:Why don't you copyright it? (Score:2)
Not only that, but a piece of software can be copyrighted, patented, AND be a trade secret at the same time!
Getting a software patent doesn't require the source code to be revealed, and the wording of the patent is usually so obfuscated and convoluted that it is of little or no use to someone else who wants to create an implementation of the same thing.
Re:Why don't you copyright it? (Score:5, Insightful)
However, in software, the implementation of the solution is protected by copyright instead of by patents. The reasoning is that writing software is more like writing music or a story, than like constructing a light bulb or creating a new chemical substance. After all, you write/publish software like the former and unlike the latter.
So the implementation of both technical inventions and software are protected (by patents resp. copyright). The abstract reasonings that led to these end results should not be protectable in either case, because that harms innovation a lot more than it encourages it.
Software patents however do allow just that for software (and as such for basically anything, since you can do or steer pretty much everything using software).
Re:Why don't you copyright it? (Score:2)
This isn't really special to software patents. Even chemical or pharmaceutical patents are typically written to be as generic as possible, covering every conceiv
Re:Why don't you copyright it? (Score:2)
Absolutely, people will always try to get the broadest/most abstract/most generic claims possible. After all, if your claims are not broad enough, your patent is worthless since people can easily work around it. The broader the claims are, the more money you can get from them.
However, software is already a
Re:Why don't you copyright it? (Score:2)
A chemical reaction sequence can be pretty abstract, basically little more than an algorithm. The originality typically lies in the sequence of steps, not in the wet details of what kind of solvent or container, much as the originality of a software program lies in the sequence of steps, not the details of the computer hardware.
Re:Why don't you copyright it? (Score:2)
This is not about whether software can be original or not. A literary work can also be very original, both in the way it is written as well as the underlying story, subplots and used ideas (and the paper it is printed on is of much lower importance). Yet, society has deci
Re:Why don't you copyright it? (Score:2)
No, because the other key element in addition to originality required for a patentable idea is that it accomplishes something of r
Re:Why don't you copyright it? (Score:2)
You really are completely following the EPO's (and Commissions, and JURI's) interpretation of "computer program as such". It goes like this: a computer program as such is not patentable. However, if that program running on a computer produces a "technical effect" (e.g., it makes the operation of the computer more efficient), then this pro
Re:Why don't you copyright it? (Score:2)
This is the interpretation that US Supreme Court and Federal Circuit Court have imposed on the Patent Office.
And in fact the second argument is right, because the economic rationale behind not granting patents on thoughts applies also here: abstract ideas are, regardless of their applicability to technical problems, produced without experimentation cost
In practice, however, the major
Re:Why don't you copyright it? (Score:2)
I hope you see that reasoning does not make any sense. It's like saying that arsenicum as such is not deadly, but arsenicum when digested is deadly. Why don't they just admit that they do want to allow patenting of programs and algorithms, then we could get over this whole silly word game. It's obvious people will only claim useful usages of those things, since useless usages or non-usages are not
Re:Why don't you copyright it? (Score:2)
I thought this was too obviously nonsensical to merit a reply, but since you insist: Algorithms are no more applicable to an infinite range of problems than any other tool. Some are highly specialized for a particular task, others have broad applicability. I suppose that you could say that a screwdriver or a l
Re:Why don't you copyright it? (Score:2)
An algorithm is not a tool, it's a way to use a tool. An algorithm defined in terms of usage on a generic computer is not in the least more specific than the algorithm described in terms of e.g. mathematical equations, and as such is applicable to anything you can do on a computer.
You just have to make sure you word your claims generic enough to be able to patent all ranges of problems that could ever be tackled wit
Re:Why don't you copyright it? (Score:2)
Patent law does not prevent you from doing so. But in practice, you can't, because you are constrained by prior art and expired patents. Which will soon be the case for software as well.
That's an often-heard argument of software patent proponents, but there is not a single guarantee for this. Patent law does not specify that something has to be "truly innovative" in order to be pat
Prior Art? (Score:1)
How the heck could this possibly get past the patent office is beyond me.
Those wacky lawyers (Score:2, Insightful)
Then when the company has problems... what do we have? Oh looky PATENTS.
Defensive patents are what got us in this mess to start with.
One click shopping was a defensive patent.
Look and feel patents (Remeber the Macintosh look and feel patent?) were defensive.
The LZH patent was defensive...
Of course defensive patents just go to show there IS a problem to start with.
Statutory Invention Registration alternative (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Legitimate reason for patenting the obvious (Score:2)
My name is on a number of patents that were filed for precisely this defensive reason. If the company where I worked held the patents, no one else could obtain one and force us to stop (even temporarily) using my invention for our own internal purposes. None of the items patented were particularly obvious, and IMHO, a couple were rather innovativ
Why can't they... (Score:2)
Re:Why can't they... (Score:2)
It's FFII, as in Foundation for a Free Information Infrastructure :)
That's because FFII is a European organisation fighting against the introduction of software patents in Europe. One-click shopping was part of the same patent application, but was not granted because of prior art (and not because it was a software patent, even though software and business methods are not patentable according to the European Patent Convention!)
Re:Why can't they... (Score:2)
Foundation for a
Free
Information
Infrastructure
Forderverein fur eine Freie Infornmationelle Infrastruktur
A popular OSS lobby group in Europe....
Re:Why can't they... (Score:2)
Re:Why can't they... (Score:2)
hmmm...
"FLOSS" as an compromise?
Re:Why can't they... (Score:2)
FFII is not associated with FSF (Europe or otherwise). FFII is not lobbing for open or free/libre software. Several companies that support us have absolutely nothing to do with FLOSS. Several of our goals are supported by the FSF of course, but they're just as well supported by e.g. Lemke Software, which has nothing to do with free software.
Here's FFII's mission statement from homepage [ffii.org]:
Re:Why can't they... (Score:2)
V.
I always wonder: (Score:3, Interesting)
But if this is the case why is it then (a) useful opposed to triviality or (b) nobody though of patenting it before ?
The steam engine is e.g. not a very original idea of Watt: approaches like this where done before but for some strange reason nobody brothered to create it.
Take as a different non-patent example Einstein's theory of relativity: it's a rather simple conclusion from the fact that the speed of light is constant. You have just really calculate all formulas and then you are done and math undergrad can do this. But Einstein is considered to be one of the greatest scientists because of this discovery.
The point is: sometimes it needs a genius to see the obvious.
And why not rewarding the genius then ?
Re:I always wonder: (Score:1, Redundant)
Re:I always wonder: (Score:2)
If you think some thoughts and use a machine to record your thoughts as a string of bits and those bits are used to give instructions to the machine, you don't g
Re:I always wonder: (Score:2)
And if they had been, the patents would have expired a long time ago.
Re:I always wonder: (Score:2)
Special relativity is within the grasp of many high school students and most undergraduates. All you really need is a little trig and basic calculus, and the notation is fairly simple. General relativity is another matter.
Uhhh PRIOR ART maybe (Score:2)
Re:Uhhh PRIOR ART maybe (Score:1)
Avarice (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Avarice (Score:5, Interesting)
(A quick google search will turn up more; too lazy to link myself.)
Re:Avarice (Score:2)
More likely, he would have done just what he did; kept it to himself as trade secret until somebody else came up with it and he wanted to grab a share of the credit. One of the rationales for patents is to encourage inventors to make public their methods, rather than keeping them secret.
Prior art (Score:1)
Prior art? Umm the Christmass folowing the introduction to phone orders and the Christmass folowing the first Internet store.
Oh hell I have an e-mail box full of prior art for that matter.. We call it SPAM.
"Buy Viagra.. makes a great gift". Grrrr
Someone mentioned "Why not patent selling?" but realisticly isn't that exactly what they just did?
What is the diffrence between buying a gift online and buying something for some other reason?
Thats right. This
Re:Prior art (Score:5, Informative)
A method in a computer system for ordering a gift for delivery from a gift giver to a recipient, the method comprising:
receiving from the gift giver an indication that the gift is to be delivered to the recipient and an electronic mail address of the recipient; and
sending to a gift delivery computer system an indication of the gift and the received electronic mail address, wherein the gift delivery computer system coordinates delivery of the gift by
sending an electronic mail message addressed to the electronic mail address of the recipient requesting that the recipient provide delivery information including a postal address for the gift; and
upon receiving the delivery information, electronically initiating delivery of the gift in accordance with the received delivery information.
Please remember that the title means nothing, the abstract means nothing, and the description means nothing. The only part that gets legal protection is the claims.
Re:Prior art (Score:2)
Consider the old way of sending a telegraph message: You address the message with something like "John Smith, Smith Associates, Milwaukee" - and let's also say that you're telegraphing flowers, or perhaps the gift of song with a singing telegram. Then the telegraph company has to figure out the physical address for th
Re:Prior art (Score:2)
To prove obviousness you must have references which show motivation (ie, you can't make up your own motivation) to alter previously known techniques to create the invention which is st
Re:Prior art (Score:2)
You know... (Score:4, Funny)
Your Rights Online: You don't have any.
Can't be too far off...
Kierthos
My Patent & More Costs (Score:2, Funny)
Seriously, though, the major problem with the patent office is that their technically deficient, overworked clerks have neither the time nor the knowledge to properly evaluate submissions of technical patents. Even more scary are patents which are being passed on sections of DNA and other bioscience patents.
IMHO the cost of filing a patent should be proportional to the bullshit factor. I call this the Amazon ratio.
Wednesday in Berlin: parliamentary evening (Score:2, Informative)
Eg this Wednesday you are invited to a Parliamentary Evening [tu-berlin.de] in Berlin. Other events at Paris, Brussels (FOSDEM),Leuven (yet another conference), Rome, Stockholm etc can be found via the calendar at the events page [ffii.org].
National mailing lists (meet your reps before European Parliament elections in June!) can be subscribed via aktiv.ffii.org [ffii.org].
So what's the court case then? (Score:2)
Re:So what's the court case then? (Score:1)
Re:So what's the court case then? (Score:2)
Not as obvious as it seems (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm not going to comment on whether that should be patentable, but at least it's not as trivial as it looks at first glance.
Re:Not as obvious as it seems (Score:1)
But FFII's opposition is not based on non-novelty or lack of inventive step (except that Fleurop's opposition is fully endorsed) but rather on the ground that software as such is not patentable under EPC.
Re:Not as obvious as it seems (Score:3, Informative)
Looks like it is to me
"[...] determining whether the gift order includes sufficient information so that the gift can be delivered to the recipient;
when sufficient information is not provided in the gift order, obtaining delivery information from one or more information sources; and [...]"
I read that to mean that they use whatever information the giver specified (email, user id, whatever) to go out and determine the rest.
Agre
Re:Not as obvious as it seems (Score:2)
Re:Not as obvious as it seems (Score:2)
Regardless, the point is that the giver doesn't provide or need to know the delivery address. Sounds suspiciously like the way you can get a letter delivered by just providing a name and postal code.
Re:Not as obvious as it seems (Score:2)
Actual Patent from EPO (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Actual Patent from EPO (Score:2)
Amazons Claims read like this (A -classified Patent document:
"1. A method in a computer system for co-ordinating delivery of a gift from a gift giver to a recipient, the gift and recipient being specified in a gift order, the method comprising:
determining whether the gift order includes sufficient information so that the gift can be delivered to the recipient;
when sufficient
phew... my Boss' site is safe... (Score:2)
Re:phew... my Boss' site is safe... (Score:2)
Those patents would all have become enforceable with the European Commissions and the JURI Committee's proposed directive. The European Parliament [ffii.org] fortunately thwarted those plans. Support the European Parliament amendments and make sure your national government follows them!
And if you are part of a company that would be negatively affected by these patents, Call for Action II [ffii.org]! To get listed publicly on that page, send a
Re:phew... my Boss' site is safe... (Score:2)
Previously on Slashdot: Amazon 1-Click Sequel (Score:2)
ff2 (Score:1, Offtopic)
What a joke (Score:3, Insightful)
How pathetic: the GI (Gesellschaft fuer Informatik) is moaning about this specific patent because for some reason they don't like it, but on the other side they're pushing for software patentability in Europe. Do they intent to fight every single stupid patent instead of rooting for the unpatentability of software? Boy, they're in for quite a ride.
Re:What a joke (Score:3, Interesting)
FFII was among the toughest critics of GI (German only) [ffii.org].
patent defense (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:no shirts (Score:1)
Re:Curious (Score:2)
a) previously known by others
b) obvious
where obvious means that there is dated proof that teaches altering previously known methods to achieve the invention in question. Note that there must be motivation contained within the reference to combine it with other previously known references (just because two individual parts are known, does not make the combination obvious).
In this cas
Re:Patent Office = Hopelessly Befuddled (Score:2)
That's not true, it's patent law that is nowhere near capable of dealing with software (and business methods). These are purely abstract/theoretical fields, where almost all progress is consequential instead of revolutionary new. However, patent law does not make that distinction. Have a look at A problem of law, not of patent examination [ffii.org]. Quote from the deputy director of the British Patent Office: