Small Firm Claims Patents On e-Banking Processes 157
bth writes "The New York Times has a
report that DataTreasury Corp is suing banks over 2 patents that 'describe a way to store and retrieve transaction records electronically.' A patent search reveals US6032137 and US5910988, each having the title: 'Remote image capture with centralized processing and storage -- System for central management, storage and report generation of remotely captured paper transactions from documents and receipts.' From one of the abstracts: 'The system retrieves transaction data such as credit card receipts checks in either electronic or paper form at one or more remote locations, encrypts the data, transmits the encrypted data to a central location, transforms the data to a usable form, performs identification verification using signature data and biometric data, generates informative reports from the data and transmits the informative reports to the remote location(s).' It is good to know that someone has managed to finally invent a system that can store, retrieve, and securely transmit financial transactions."
Ya know. (Score:1, Redundant)
Re:Ya know. (Score:2, Insightful)
Sooner or later some corp is going to take the "evil corp" stereotype seriously and decide to make a hobby our of make some greedy smuck's life a living hell. I'm not realy advocating violence here, but we're talking big money here and sooner or later somebody is going to get stupid, then somebody is going to get hurt.
Re:Ya know. (Score:5, Insightful)
It's not a bug. It's a feature.
Face it, the American industry is unable to compete on the merits of its products alone. European and Japanese companies design better products, and achieve a much better build quality. Chinese companies cannot be beaten on costs, and their quality is rapidly improving, too.
So, if you're a CEO, how do you face this hopeless situation?
You might want to compete on price, and outsource your manufacturing to China, and your services to India. The "only" issue is: how long will it take for the local subcontractors to start making the same product without giving you a cut?
You might want to compete on quality. The problem here is that, unlike most German or Japanese companies, in which a sizeable share of directors have an engineering background, most American companies are led by marketers, accountants, or lawyers that don't know a single thing about what they're selling - yet they do not want to give up their power to those nerdy engineers.
In other words: the American economy is shafted. But wait, there is one field on which America remains unrivaled! Lawsuits!
Thus, as it was impossible to gain a real competitive advantage, corporate America decided to give itself an artificial one. Thus, the entire IP nonsense was born.
Of course, the Chinese never intended to buy this crap - and it now appears that Europe doesn't want it, either. As a consequence, it will only add an unnecessary burden on the already beleagered American economy.
Re:Ya know. (Score:2)
Thankfully, we have seen the EU balk at software patents (a little bit, anyway), and I suspect many other countries will start to realize that 'Just Say No' is enough to stop this nonsense.
We are supposed to be leaders in innovation- we *need* to stop thinking 'lawsuit' and innovate, damnit!
Re:Ya know. (Score:5, Insightful)
Congress doesn't seem to understand that there were damn good reasons why the original patent system was set up the way it was. I mean, it worked rather well for almost two hundred years, doing precisely what the Founding Father's wanted it to do. Frankly, even after all this time I trust the Founders judgment more than the current crop of Congressional weasels. If you want to get right down to it, much of the industrial productivity and standard of living enjoyed by Americans for most of those two centuries was due to that system, and the flood of creativity and invention that were the hallmark of the United States for so long.
U.S. patent law has been under a continuing process of subversion for some time now (the removal of the "demonstrable prototype" requirement, for one) but it wasn't too badly broken until recently. So far as I'm concerned, software and gene patents are the straws the broke the camel's back. And now
Re:Ya know. (Score:2)
but this is nonsense:
Actually, from a pure R&D perspective, we are the leaders in innovation. That I can agnoledge. We spend a truckload of money on R&D (government, private and institutional) which is why here it starts getting wiered: so many foreign scientists and engineers come here to work and learn (and often to take that knowledge back home.)
Most foreigners comming to the USA come there becaue they have an excellent education and/or a research interest which gets no funding in e
Re:Ya know. (Score:2)
Well maybe because they don't want their children to go through an "edcation system on a low and cheap profile". If you believe these stereotypes then they probably do too. They come to our country that is inferior in every possible way to every other country, make a quick buck from our doomed economy, and get the hell out as quickly as possible. After all the US is the root of everything that is wrong in the world is it n
Re:Ya know. (Score:2)
Re:Ya know. (Score:5, Insightful)
I worked for a company that paid me a bonus (roughly) $800 a quarter, used no call prediction software, no outsourcing and paid a decent salary and we still where profitable.
Now, this company has since merged with another and turned into a giant cash cow that pays almost no bonuses a year, uses call prediction software and outsources nearly 98% of its calls and they're having a hell of a time producing profits.
Issue: internal spending and internal choices
You figure that can't be true, with all the money they're saving now, I'm not giving the whole detail... You're right - the "new" company gives cell phones to all supervisors and up, 2 way pagers to all supervisors and up - and anyone else that asks, has given their CEO a raise of over 100k a year the last 2 years, spend time and money arguing with outsourcers over pricing (as well as sending employees on sight every other month to supervise operations), upgrade systems that are working perfectly fine to get extra features they don't even use, develop their own in house billing database only to find the original solution worked fine and spend more money to switch back.... I could keep going.
This company is like so many others out there that decided that a few extra things wouldn't hurt, until they had to lay off most of their workforce and it became a perpetual cycle. If you took most of these "cash strapped" companies and put everything they did on paper (like a business plan), no one would invest in them before telling them to change a lot of things they do.
Re:Ya know. (Score:2)
Here's how to play! In the parent post, for instance, "CEOs" can as a whole reason and act with conscious intention. So, they desired patent protection for methods of doing business because of simple, human emotional foible of jealousy, as they "do not want to give up their power to those nerdy engineers."
Also, it's cold out right now because the weather gods are angry. Piety, friends! Let us burn some incense to appease them.
Re:Ya know. (Score:2)
The clueless US Patent Office issues a patent on remotely storing and retrieving financial transaction in electronic form. This idea did not stem from DataTreasury Corporation but it does have the patent on it. Nor does it have an actual system that does any of that activity (although, they could probably cobble the equipm
Re:Ya know. (Score:2)
Overworked? They work for the federal government. They're not there burning the midnight oil. Just try calling them at 5:05pm. Journalists and teachers who do a bad job should find something more in line with their aptitude.
IP nonsense was born (Score:2, Insightful)
well, um, I think the US patent office got its start in the 1800's, maybe 1837? Other countries had patents before us, I think it evolved from British law.
It started cuz too many engineers were keeping trade secrets and taking them to the grave. For instance, Stradivarius violins.
You're talking about more recent events.
And copyrights and trademarks are not going away anytime soon, or all of industry would vaporize. For instance, you get rid of trademark la
Re:Ya know. (Score:2)
Oh, bullshit. Who is moderating this as insightful? This is flamebait pure and simple.
The U.S. is competitive in any number of fields - especially software. The only major non-US software I can think of is SAP. Certainly Japan (whe
Re:Ya know. (Score:1)
Taxes.
if you dont have and effective industri you cannot afford an effective army.
oh and that show of war of yours i irak is costing you a fortune too.
object in rear view mirror closer than you think (Score:2)
Re:object in rear view mirror closer than you thin (Score:2)
No, these are honest bets, just stupid ones.
Re:No... (Score:2)
Re:Ya know. (Score:1)
Re:Ya know. (Score:5, Insightful)
"..transforms the data to a usable form.."
and
"..generates informative reports from the data.."
Seem pretty broad to me. That doesn't describe anything, really.
Someone's really gotta throw junk patents like this out before they even reach the (not yet existent) REAL patent examiners.
Re:Ya know. (Score:2)
The language used in a patent can be pretty strange. They start with vauge description but then get more specific. That said lawyers like to keep it vauge so that the patent holder gains the maximum amount of coverage from the patent.
Re:Ya know. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Ya know. (Score:2)
Why? Now it starts getting more and more interesting.
If I would live in USA and was a
With todays free software all around, its easy to make very fast a demonstration prototype for nearly any issue involving computers and/or data transmission.
Found a small limited reliability company, patent something, start suing.
I would make this a sportive competition amoung
Re:Ya know. (Score:2)
I have my doubts about that.
Potentially, many of those companies who depend on patents for their income don't really do much on their own.
But most of the companies they are holding back actually do produce something useful.
Unfettering those companies from the legal blackmail being visited upon them by the leaches would probably help the economy, not hurt it.
Re:Ya know. (Score:3, Insightful)
Man I couldn't have said it any better.
I'm an old fart, and I can remember when we were doing innovative things at breakneck speeds.
Circa 1960 or so I was in So Cal, an ex Iowa farm boy who knew a bit about electronics and wanted a piece of the action. At one point I found myself working as a bench tech at Oceanographic Engineering in Sandy Eggo.
We were building a t
Re:Ya know. (Score:2)
Good lord. (Score:3, Insightful)
After all, that's capitalism. Government-enforced monopolies on basic business concepts is, I mean.
Business' counter sue under Racketeering laws? (Score:1)
anonymous exchange protocol (Score:4, Funny)
Re:anonymous exchange protocol (Score:2)
Here's a tech headline we won't see in 2005: (Score:5, Insightful)
~Philly
validation of SCO's business model (Score:1)
2. Dust off old patents
3. ?????
4. Profit
Re:validation of SCO's business model (Score:2)
Re:validation of SCO's business model (Score:2)
2. Dust off old patents
3. ?????
4. Profit
If they can patent this... (Score:1)
Re:If they can patent this... (Score:2)
Don't worry, there's no doubt in my mind that it's not too long before the whole patent system, or at least patents covering software technologies, will soon collapse, they're just getting far too ridiculous.
Re:If they can patent this... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:If they can patent this... (Score:2)
Re:If they can patent this... (Score:2)
Re:If they can patent this... (Score:1)
Silver lining (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Silver lining (Score:5, Insightful)
No. This will only be used by both sides to eliminate the smaller players. Patents do not help the small inventor, but only the large companies with resources to maintain legal fights.
Re:Silver lining (Score:2)
Re:Silver lining-SMALL guys. (Score:2)
"Small Firm Claims Patents On e-Banking Processes"
I'll refrain from the glaring obvious, but the audiance just might see it.
The issue here was the size of the victim, i.e. who suffers in an atmosphere of parasites. The size of the parasite itself is irrelevant.
Unless you are actually proposing we build an economy based on a core of major technology firms that do all the research and actually implement technology, who continually fend off lawsuits from "
someone call Poland... (Score:3, Funny)
I hope they win. (Score:3, Interesting)
Well that and I don't have investments in banks.
Tom
Once again (Score:5, Insightful)
Patents should be limited to physical inventions. They should also be REVOKED if the person/company filing the patent cannot provide a working prototype within a reasonable amount of time (ie, I certainly can't patent a warp drive, but I could patent something like a hocky puck that acts like a hovercraft to play with on a basketball court)..yeah, I came up with that idea and then a couple of years later, somebody had made that exact toy. DOH!!!
Ideas and mathematical formulas (including computer programs) should NOT be patentable.
in the uk they aren't (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Once again (Score:2)
Bad Idea anyways... (Score:1)
Surprised after reading the patents (Score:5, Interesting)
not required (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:The best way to get the patent system changed.. (Score:2)
Re:The best way to get the patent system changed.. (Score:2)
The 19th Century is returning to America, purchased by all the capital gains from the 20th. The "broken" patent system in America is just another manifestation of that. The rule of money and the rule of l
Patenting SQL SELECT? (Score:2)
i hate argumenting with morons too ;} (Score:2)
I hope they all win too (Score:1)
Human nature only recognizes the need for change once a given situation becomes catastrophically harmful.
Article Text (Score:2, Informative)
By JENNIFER A. KINGSON
New York Times
December 25, 2004
It is a company whose only business, other than one client, appears to be suing other companies.
The lawsuits contend patent infringement, yet the defendants are usually not electronic commerce companies, but a relatively new target: banks or others in financial services. The company, the DataTreasury Corporation of Melville, N.Y., has sued companies that it says have infringed on its two patents, which descri
Re:Article Text (Score:1)
Someone should just patent the "business method" of suing over patents, and then sue them!
Related Article CEO Steps Down (Score:2)
Chief Executive Officer of DataTreasury Corporation Steps Down; Nationwide Search for New Chief Executive Begins
MELVILLE, N.Y.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Dec. 10, 2004--DataTreasury Corporation announced today the resignation of President and CEO Keith DeLucia, effective immediately. DeLucia, who is leaving to pursue personal interests, departs after a number of notable achievements, and it is with regret that DataTreasury's board of directors accepts his resignation. DataTreasury founder Cl
Re:Related Article CEO Steps Down (Score:4, Interesting)
well, well--- I remember working for a financial institution long before this- they were in the process of installing a new system that scanned, stored, and retrieved information....hm. Maybe ScanOptics [scanoptics.com] might have something to say about this.
My dad & I just had this discussion today. (Score:3, Interesting)
*THIS* right here is the most screwed up part.... (Score:4, Insightful)
What the hell? Is this what our legal system has come to? "Nuisance Lawsuits"?
This is not sustainable, and the situation could harm our judiciary processes right to the very core.
Well duh... (Score:2)
I know (Score:1)
Still have to try.
Prior Art (Score:4, Informative)
I hope IBM/NCR sue the crap out of this company.
Merry Chistmas and enjoy.
Re:Prior Art (Score:2)
I'm sure there is plenty of discussion with congresspeople at this very moment. The question is whether the solution to the patent problem will addressed properly, or made into a larger mess.
A new google patent search tool (Score:3, Insightful)
Seriously, this has gone way too far and I can only see how this hurts business, consumers, innovation and the little guy.
-- Thought I would put a SIG here but that would have caused a patent violation
Innovative (Score:1)
What Slashdot needs (Score:2)
Slashdot needs a "Follow-up to Silly Patent" section so we can all see if prior art was ever brought up and whether or not it was successful in court or not.
Now *that* would be a useful section..
What a mess (Score:3, Interesting)
A key feature of most IP implementations is that you can sell a patent to another company. A lot of the problems with the patent sharks could be solved if this were not possible.
If a patent can't be transfered then sharks can't get hold of it. You should have to renew a patent every year.. making keeping huge portfolios expensive.
In the software patent world, I think one small change would make it (more) aggreeable to FOSS. Make the time the patent lasts much shorter, like on the order of five years. That way, FOSS is protected. In software, if you haven't made your millions in five years then your not going to full stop. This would also protect FOSS from huge damages claims if they are caught infriging since the time to claim damages over is much shorter.
While i'd like software patents to disappear in the US, it wont happen and therefore I believe a third way is needed. A compromise that restores sanity to the system. My suggestions would be a good first step.
Simon.
Re:What a mess (Score:2)
/. doesn't like MS FUD but likes anti-patent FUD (Score:4, Informative)
The title of a patent is meaningless. I read one last week for "Remote Control Device" which was a high pressure hydraulic hoze/nozzle that could be aimed from a distance, used in mining operations. There is no legal weight in a patent title and while the intention is that they are informative, there is uneven enforcement of that rule.
From one of the abstracts: 'The system retrieves transaction data such as credit card receipts checks in either electronic or paper form at one or more remote locations, encrypts the data, transmits the encrypted data to a central location, transforms the data to a usable form, performs identification verification using signature data and biometric data, generates informative reports from the data and transmits the informative reports to the remote location(s).'
The abstract of a patent has no legal weight. The rules regarding abstracts are more evenly enforced than titles, as the abstracts are useful to examiners, but the typical attorney couldn't care if the abstract recited a recipe for meatloaf.
Here are the patents under debate:
6032137 [uspto.gov]
5910988 [uspto.gov]
Linking to the actual patent is trivial, however undermines the element of FUD which wins the submitter such karma and peer approval. (Rather than mod this as a troll, proving at least to myself how correct I am, feel free to explain to me why failing to link to the patents themselves helps an intelligent discussion rather than perpetuating the FUD.)
The claims of a patent are the only part of a patent that undisputably carries legal weight. Any discussion about whether a patent should or should not have been issued that does not relate strictly to the claims is nonsense - it is directly analogous to praising Windows because you can use a mouse on a graphical screen. It is uneducated, pointless, and irritating to anyone who knows that other operating systems use mouse pointers and graphical screens.
Further, these patents will come under extreme attack if they are used in court. Merely having these patents is meaningless. When these patents are used against someone, he would be a complete idiot to not first question whether the patents can be invalidated in court. This is how the patent system works and this is why you can apply for a patent for under $2000 - a thorough search for prior art will cost over $100,000 and the USPTO cannot afford to give those out for $2000. Only the media and those who do not properly understand the existing system of patent litigation expect the USPTO to provide a perfect search of prior art for 2% of the market value of such a search.
In conclusion, while there may be a great deal of problems with these patents, and plenty of legitimate complaints about the how the system works, the submitter of this story addresses nothing but meaningless and baseless fluff. There would be more substance to the complaints if he griped about the poor scan quality of the documents. Please keep in mind that I'm not arguing the merits of these patents, but rather pointing out that the submitter addresses no valid complaints because, by analogy, he's busy arguing whether the Windows is better than OSX by pointing out how pretty the Windows desktop is.
But moderators, if you fear that facts might interfere with your self-affirmation, by all means convince me that I'm correct (regarding the subject line) and moderate this as a troll.
Re:/. doesn't like MS FUD but likes anti-patent FU (Score:1, Interesting)
This is one of the things that is wrong with the patent system - no one but large companies can afford to spend that much money on a patent search - and most of those companies are covered by cross licensing. The only thing patents harm in the current legal situation is small firms who can't afford
Re:/. doesn't like MS FUD but likes anti-patent FU (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:/. doesn't like MS FUD but likes anti-patent FU (Score:2)
Why do you think the USPTO should be giving out $100k prior art searches for $2k? Or do you think a patent applicant should be required to shell out $100k to apply for a patent? If so, are you aware of how the pre-American patent systems worked in Europe?
Re:/. doesn't like MS FUD but likes anti-patent FU (Score:2)
It's funny that calling up a buisness and telling them to give you $50000 or you'll burn down their property (worth $100K) is illegal, while calling up a buisness and telling them to give you $50000 or you'll make them pay $100K to challenge a bogus patent is perfectly legal.
When the government hands someone
I think you got it reversed (Score:3, Insightful)
The fact is, when it is allowed for ANYBODY else to controll how inventions are used, problems like this are going to happen. Problems like corruption in the system, problems like poorly defined boundries when asserting patents, problems like unprod
Re:/. doesn't like MS FUD but likes anti-patent FU (Score:5, Insightful)
Did you read the claims? The abstract is spot on. If you think the abstract or title is mislead, why are you attacking the submitter and not the abstract or title?
"Further, these patents will come under extreme attack if they are used in court."
Attacked by lawyers and adjudicated by judges. Neither of those has any technical grouding in software. Once these patents are judged in court, its a dice roll.
"When these patents are used against someone, he would be a complete idiot to not first question whether the patents can be invalidated in court."
Again, the court is not technical, it is a dice roll.
Your side does eBanking and could face hefty royalties a catastrophic block on business, plus legal fees. His side faces only legal fees at most.
Now roll the dice, but you'll find its weighted.
"This is how the patent system works"
No the patent office is supposed to filter this crap for obviousness, prior art and technical invention.
"a thorough search for prior art will cost over $100,000 and the USPTO cannot afford to give those out for $2000."
Its the USPTO's job to do that and since when has it cost $100,000? Thats a couple of man years work,a ridiculous figure pulled from the air.
Re:/. doesn't like MS FUD but likes anti-patent FU (Score:2)
A thorough prior art search conducted by a law firm in preparation for an infringement defense will often take over 1000 man-hours of highly skilled labor. The rest of your points demonstrate more of an infamiliarity with the patent system rather than a persuasive argument. I'm not trying to be rude, but a duck is a duck.
Re:"/."'s haven't seen the inside of a courthouse. (Score:3, Insightful)
You'll find that people feel pretty confident in expressing their ideas even though many are completly ignorant about the issues they are discussing.
I'm willing to bet that the ratio of people that actually understand a thing about IP law on Slashdot is quite below the ratio of people who understand a thing about computer systems and programming. And as we all know, that rate is already low enough, hence the term "troll" was
Re:"/."'s haven't seen the inside of a courthouse. (Score:3, Interesting)
While all patents are presumed valid until proven otherwise, only they who are fools believe that a perfect prior art search can be conducted for under $2k in 10 hours on
Re:"/."'s haven't seen the inside of a courthouse. (Score:2)
How about making patent reviewing a matter of public forum? One would submit a patent, then a troup of volunteers/inter
Re:/. doesn't like MS FUD but likes anti-patent FU (Score:2)
Stupid (Score:1)
It's about time... (Score:2)
Re:It's about time... (Score:5, Insightful)
My apologies to President Lincoln -- though his comments on the topic are quite astute, not to mention prescient: "I see in the near future a crisis approaching that unnerves me and causes me to tremble for the safety of my country ... Corporations have been enthroned, an era of corruption in high places will follow, and the money-power of the country will endeavor to prolong its reign by working upon the prejudices of the people until the wealth is aggregated in a few hands and the Republic is destroyed."
This would effect the Check 21 Act (Score:5, Insightful)
Seeing as that was a federally mandated act, I don't think congress is going to think too highly of this company's actions. This really might lead to patent reform, since the only two ways of getting congress to act seem to be to either pay them lots of money (or should I say "donate" lots of money to their reelection campaigns) or piss them off. The last time they really got fed up over something we got the do not call list which has been pretty successful.
So more power to this crappy little IP company, I can't wait to see what remains of them after congress is done. :)
Re:This would effect the Check 21 Act (Score:2)
Re:This would effect the Check 21 Act (Score:2)
Congress technically can't pass an ex post facto law, although it seems they do it anyway. However that's not the issue, there's enough pre-existing matierial to invalidate these patents, and a request from congress to reexamine a patent would guarantee great scrutiny of the patent in question. I'm sure the patents are bogus, for instance my bank's been sending me scanned copies of my cancelled checks for about 12 years now, and they use the
Who should be sued? (Score:1)
From now onwards, after developing the software I'm going to check how many patents does my software breaks. I don't want to see a lawyer at my doorsteps after the deployment claiming a huge amount for the efforts that I have actually put into the development.
Can I patent the famous "$i=0;" code and all its variations?
Then I can go and sue millions of companies and people. Boy, I will be rich.
Re:Isn't SCO doing this now (Score:2)
The Database! (Score:2)
Is it just me, or is that the most basic of definitions of a computer "database"?
Not useful as "trade secret" = shouldn't be patent (Score:2)
Since the patent system was originally created as an incentive to reveal "trade secrets" to the public to spur greater innovation, I say if something is not useful as a "trade secret", it should not even be CONSIDERED for a patent.
Or in other words, if withholding an idea from the public doesn't actually affect the public - as may be the case with this "patent" - then it's not really useful as a "trade secret". Since so many other people seem to have come up with implementations of this same idea already,
They sued the wrong people. (Score:2)
Jealous of the patent holder? (Score:2)
Seriously, these stories are getting boring. Could we have a summary story once a week? The "there is a stupid patent out there and its getting used to hurt businesses" story just isn't news anymore.
This could be fun! (Score:2, Insightful)
wait... can't business models be patented now?! I gotta get me down to the USPTO!!!
Good news! (Score:2)
they don't care... (Score:1, Offtopic)