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Amazon Sued For Recommending Books 37

localman writes "Cedant, the owner of Super 8 motels and Days Inn, is suing Amazon for patent infringement for recommending books with it's 'customers who purchased X also purchased Y' technology. Heh. 'Technology.' It's always fun to see Amazon hoist by its own petard, as it were, but it would really stink if no website could offer it's customer's recommendations. Got Prior Art?"
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Amazon Sued For Recommending Books

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  • Is this old news? Amazon has certainly been CENSORING book reviews on its website for a while now.
  • Prior Art (Score:3, Interesting)

    by KilobyteKnight ( 91023 ) <<bjm> <at> <midsouth.rr.com>> on Wednesday November 17, 2004 @03:29PM (#10845648) Homepage
    As a business method, there is certainly prior art. It's called "upselling", and it's been around as long as people have been selling things.
    • But since it's been done on the 'unter-nnet' it's a new & novel implementation of, uh, teh-nulogy... at least according to the USPTO... ;-)
    • I think it's more like this:
      Buy two nights at this Days Inn with just one click!
      Customers who stayed at this Days Inn also stayed at the Super 8 across town when they realized it was cheaper.
  • by angst_ridden_hipster ( 23104 ) on Wednesday November 17, 2004 @03:29PM (#10845657) Homepage Journal
    Good God.

    How many apostrophe errors can you fit into a single sentence?

    No wonder the Liberal Arts types have such scorn for geeks. We're supposedly all about logic and process, but can't even manage simple grammar rules.

    If I wrote code like that, my compiler would have me taken out and shot.
    • Of course the Liberal Arts guys are the ones who came up with the rules. Now if programmers came up with the rules for speaking / writing, the rules would be very logical. Of course only computers would be able to understand what people are saying. Thus no more human interaction.
      • Now if programmers came up with the rules for speaking / writing, the rules would be very logical.

        But they probably wouldn't be able to communicate anything of significance, either.

        Oh, wait...

    • by Anonymous Coward
      In fairness, he used both "its" and "it's" correctly, once apiece. And Taco probably would have thrown an apostrophe into "were". So the answer is that he could have fit three more into that sentence.
    • If grammer rules had any logic to them, what so ever (or is it what soever, or whatsoever?), we'd be just fine. However, they where (or is it were?) never created. They've evolved. Hence, the abstract-ness of it all...
      • No logic?

        Sure there is! But the logic just happens to have a lot of exceptional cases.

        "In the computer world, a standard is a rule followed except most of the time." -- William Abikoff

        Same with grammar.
      • Oh come on, that's baloney. The rules for using the apostrophe are quite logical.

        "it's" is a contraction of "it is". The ' means "something was taken out and the phrase was shortened". If you can logically replace the word in question with "it is" then you want the apostrophe. Same with "you're" versus "your". If you can use "you are" and the sentence still makes sense then you want "you're", otherwise "your".

        "Customer's" is the posessive of one customer. "Customers'" is the posessive of many custom
        • Yes, because the code would not be funcitonal if it wouldn't compile (and sometimes, even after it compiles). The poster's grammer mistakes didn't impeade our understanding of what he was trying to communicate. Hence, his post, with the grammer errors, was functional.

          One of these days, we'll all figure out that grammer and, for the most part, spelling, are artificial contructs of based on a primitive view of the world.

          And for the record, I used 4 apostrophes, and all correctly :p !

    • If geeks had designed the English language---hell, if ANYONE had designed the English language---the syntax would be regular. But English wasn't designed.

      As for the errors, there are only three: two "it's" instead of "its," and "hoist" instead of "hoisted." I've seen worse.
      • Yes, but even thought the language has a nasty syntax, it's certainly no harder to learn than, say, the complexities of regular expressions.

        As for the errors, I guess it depends on how you parse "customer's recommendations." I was uncharitable in my parsing, since the patent involved was about purchase-based recommendations, not customer-created recommendations.

        And hell, I'm a churlish curmudgeon, and felt like being a nitpicker. Sue me. Or mod me down.
      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • As for the errors, there are only three: two "it's" instead of "its," and "hoist" instead of "hoisted."

        "Hoist" is the standard form in that phrase. The other error is the greengrocer's plural "customer's".

    • by kutuz_off ( 159540 ) on Wednesday November 17, 2004 @04:41PM (#10846529)
      Posters who complained about improper apostrophe use also complained about improper comma use. Would you like to do that?
  • Nothing new to see here, move along.

    http://yro.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=04/11/04/18 37213&tid=155 [slashdot.org]
  • Fuck patents in their dirty asses.
  • by pjay_dml ( 710053 ) on Wednesday November 17, 2004 @03:49PM (#10845926) Journal
    A law only works, if a majority adhears to it. As soon as no one listens, the expenses of enforcing it become to high.....
    Prohibition in the U.S.A. from 1920-33 [mcwilliams.com]
  • prior art (Score:5, Informative)

    by araven ( 71003 ) on Wednesday November 17, 2004 @04:26PM (#10846377)
    Seems like something that librarians have been doing for centuries. "If you liked that Trixie Belden book, why don't you try Nancy Drew?" I've seen reading lists along the same lines to suggest other works to people on waiting-lists to borrow the most popular books.

    Don't mess with the librarians.

    ~
  • I have a solution... (Score:2, Informative)

    by Jaime2 ( 824950 )
    to all these trivial patent suits. Since it seems that common business methods can be patented, let's patent the business model of patenting something common and suing someone to get money we didn't earn.
    Then anyone who brings a stupid patent suit up owes us money!!!
  • Back in maybe 1994 or 1995, I remember using a system that some student developed. You would upload a list of your CDs and it would find similarities between your list and other people's lists and then recommend CDs that were present in many other people's lists but not yours. For instance, if it found five boy band CDs in your collection and 90% of the lists with those five boy band CDs also had a Debbie Gibson CD, it would recommend the Debbie Gibson CD.

    I'm pretty sure this was pre-web (I think it work
    • I remember something like that at MIT around 1993 by the name of Ringo. It remember it asking about bands rather than CDs. It think became Firefly then got gobbled up by Microsoft.

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