Is Google AutoLink Patent-Pending By Microsoft? 208
theodp writes "While Google pooh-poohed any comparison of its controversial AutoLink feature to Microsoft's SmartTag technology, Google's generation of dynamic links to maps and use of ISBN numbers to trigger links to booksellers cover the same territory as Microsoft's 2000 patent application for Providing electronic commerce actions based on semantically labeled strings, whose sole inventor - Jeff Reynar - was the lead SmartTag Program Manager while at MS and is reportedly now a Google Product Manager who's being credited as AutoLink's creator. Reynar's patent applications that have been assigned to Microsoft, including one for Smart Links and Tags, describe a world of 'recognizer' plug-ins that automatically look at every document a user creates, receives or views, transmitting messages to 'action' plug-ins - and even to the plug-ins' authors - that can be used to decide what info you'll be presented with, what options you'll be given, what price you'll pay for goods, and even who you'll be permitted to buy from."
Your Rights Online? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Your Rights Online? (Score:5, Insightful)
No, this is about everyone's rights except Microsoft- which includes me, you, and Google. Just because you may not want to implement a goofy smart-tag-like technology doesn't mean you haven't lost the right to do it.
Re:Your Rights Online? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Your Rights Online? (Score:5, Insightful)
I think the point more is, neither one should be entitled to patent such an idea, but both should be entitled, if they wish, to implement it. As should you or I be entitled to implement it, or a similar technology, in programs we write.
Re:Your Rights Online? (Score:2)
Erm...well, in this case, it's Microsoft seeking a bullcrap patent, so google hasn't "done" anything. Anyone who asserts (especially now that it's publically traded) that Google is anything better then a soulless corporation is naive, a corporate whore, or both, but in this case, it's clearly Microsoft in the wrong.
Re:Your Rights Online? (Score:2)
Re:Your Rights Online? (Score:4, Insightful)
Yeah, because Google didn't register the patent and it's not their fault it's stupid. And Google would probably not use the patent for predatory purposes like Microsoft who right now probably have a team of lawyers finding people to sue for patent infringement.
was moderated as a Troll because even though it points out a crucial fact (that Google had not in fact applied for any patent), pro-Microsoft opinions are in vogue at the moment. People like to fancy themselves as independent thinkers, which means adopting opinions that "buck the trend". Look at the moronic post you replied to, which is at 5, Insightful right now:
So, because Google is still "good" (but for how long???), they can own a stupid patent like this, and because MicroSloth is "bad", they can't???
A worthless post- completely incoherent and confused, especially given its context (no one had alleged either of these things). But, the post has a pro-Microsoft attitude. So the herds of "independently-minded" sheep will cheerfully dump mod points onto it to prove what independent thinkers they are, despite the factual error and the obvious projection contained in its one line.
The groupthink on this site is incredible.
Re:Your Rights Online? (Score:5, Insightful)
Sorry to get so offtopic, but I wouldn't call it groupthink. Groupthink implies thinking as a group. I'd call this more of herd instinct, because few people are thinking. Anyway, yes, as soon as someone gets a post to 3 it usually goes clear up to 5 because people with modpoints are too afraid to think for themselves and do original moderation but need to use points.
Ugh (Score:2)
What you're advocating is that everyone adopt your viewpoint because you just so happen not to consider it groupthink as you do for someone who might--gasp--not personally hate Microsoft,
Re:Ugh (Score:3, Insightful)
You misunderstood me then. This is not about "hating Microsoft". I've defended Microsoft plenty of times. They do get bashed a lot here, sometimes fairly, sometimes not. When people attack them simply for selling closed-source software, for example, I always defend them. But look at the context here. The
Re:Your Rights Online? (Score:5, Insightful)
This particular case has some relevance to anyone who develops a particular technology, becomes an expert in it, and acquires a patent for his company. If you change jobs, you might not be able to take your expertise with you.
Re:Your Rights Online? (Score:5, Insightful)
Patents are (at least arguably) a necessary mechanism, but the way patents are being used in the United States is a problem. Especially when patents are being issued that are clearly barred by prior art and then used to extort money from small businesses that cannot afford to fight those patents. See the EFF [eff.org] for more info.
Re:Your Rights Online? (Score:4, Funny)
[X] Clueless n00b
[X] Lamer
[_] Flamer
[_] Pervert
[_] Sexist
[X] Spammer
[_] Racist
[X] Dumbass
[X] Waste of Life
[X] Other: Pathetic Moron
You are being flamed because:
[X] You obviously don't know anything about the topic at hand.
[X] You started a pointless thread.
[_] You bumped a pointless thread.
[X] Your post contained nothing but crap.
[_] You can't spell more than 3 words right.
[X] Your awful markup made the post unreadable.
[_] You made a useless assumption.
[_] You posted IN ALL CAPS FOR NO APPARENT REASON.
[_] You tYpEd SoMeThInG lAmE lIkE tHiS.
[_] You don't know how to use the search feature
[X] You say you're "1337".
[_] You posted a topic that's been posted 50 times already.
As punishment, you must:
[X] Refrain from posting until you have a vague idea of what you're doing.
[X] Stab yourself in the eye with a pen.
[_] Give up your internet account.
[X] Eat paint chips for the next 6 months.
[X] Make goat.cx your home page.
[_] Jump into a bathtub with a toaster.
[X] Fuck yourself in the ass with a cactus
[X] Attach a car battery to your scrotum
Re:Your Rights Online? (Score:2)
My kingdom for a mod point!
Re:Your Rights Online? (Score:5, Informative)
Software patents gravely affect the rights of every developer out there, where have YOU been living?
Re:Your Rights Online? (Score:3, Insightful)
The MPAA, RIAA, patent, political and other mechanisms of old are all becoming increasingly abusive with each passing year, all in the name of profits and against all regardless of consequences for the general public.
After bombings and plane crashes comes litigative terrorism - but this form is endorsed by governments so we need an alternative to that.
Re:Your Rights Online? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Your Rights Online? (Score:3, Funny)
And another thing, it really pisses me off that the show was called 'Deep Space Nine' when they went an entire season where they weren't on the station and it was called Terak Nor. For the love of michael, they should have called it Star Trek: Terak Nor for that season!! Of course, after every episode, I was on the internet registerring my complaint throughout the world!
Re:Your Rights Online? (Score:2)
I am Jack's total lack of surprise (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:I am Jack's total lack of surprise (Score:2)
Re:I am Jack's total lack of surprise (Score:2, Insightful)
Actually, yes, as a developer your best bet is to know as little as possible about individual patents. All those "activists" are really hurting open source developers. Yes, the system is fucked up, but it's here and we better learn to live with it.
Re:I am Jack's total lack of surprise (Score:3, Funny)
Re:I am Jack's total lack of surprise (Score:2)
Re:I am Jack's total lack of surprise (Score:2)
You think this is where developers come for their news?
Are you new here?
wonder how many... (Score:1, Funny)
A lot! (Score:2)
Re:wonder how many... (Score:2)
Re:wonder how many... (Score:2)
Or three, excluding dupes.
Re: (Score:1, Interesting)
Doesn't matter. (Score:5, Insightful)
In Microsoft vs. the DoJ Microsoft won (even though it doesn't say that in the court documents)
In Microsoft vs. Google who will win?
Re:Doesn't matter. (Score:3, Insightful)
Now, if you or I decided to set up a Web site to run along those lines
Re:Doesn't matter. (Score:2)
All that'll happen is that Microsoft and Google will enter some kind of cross-licensing agreement
MSN Search licensing Google search technology? Tinfoil hat conspiracy theory, anyone?
Re:Doesn't matter. (Score:2, Insightful)
Google certainly has the capital to fight this (typically, litigation runs at about $1-2M per year), or at least drag it out for a long time.
The end result we eventually will see all depends on how strongly Microsoft feels Google is infringing, and how well they feel their patent will stand up in court. It won't be until after discovery that they have a better picture of the strength of their case.
After that, one of three things will happen:
1. They'll decide Google's argument has a strong foundation, an
Re:Doesn't matter. (Score:2)
There's lawyers heavily involved in their transaction as well. It's simple economics. They both have enough money to hire the best lawyers in the world. I bet the agreement is a hundred pages long and contains as many absurd possibilities, ridiculous conditions, and tortured sentence clauses as you can count. But this is because the two companies are becoming closer competitors in many arenas. By t
Re:Hmmmmm (Score:2)
Tracking in such an evil sense (Score:3, Insightful)
> what options you'll be given, what price you'll pay for goods,
> and even who you'll be permitted to buy from.
All the better reason to not let anyone online know who you are, where you've been, and where you come from.
Re:Tracking in such an evil sense (Score:5, Insightful)
I know it sounds paranoid, but considering Google's insane amount of traffic, and the fact the majority of their traffic comes from outside the US, coupled with their employee ties with the government and their past privacy issues, I've tended to stop using Google so much. Also, their search results have really begun to suck since 2003. Using Google to find anything is a frustrating experience.
Re:Tracking in such an evil sense (Score:2)
Re:Tracking in such an evil sense (Score:2)
In two words... (Score:5, Insightful)
Eventually, as in every other case like this, there will be a lawsuit.
One side will win, the other won't. In either case, the loser will just change some small piece of the technology, and it will no longer infringe, if it even did in the first place.
The lawyers will get rich.
None of us will be affected in the slightest.
Cynical? Maybe. But before moderating, ask yourself if I'll end up being right.
Re:In two words... (Score:3, Insightful)
Not true. Software patents is too complex to evaluate to most businesses. They will simply treat it like any other financial risk.
The result is that some software that we otherwise would have the benefit of using will never be produced and that those who chose to produce software inspite of this risk wants higher compensation for taking that risk. I.e. higher software prices.
The fact that some will not take the risk will mean that less software hits the ma
Re:In two words... (Score:2)
Against Microsoft ? Is that a question ?
Re:Or (Score:2)
Yup, yup, then MS will come out a new product called Moogle beta 1 containing a search engine, a usergroup interface, a revolutionary webmail service, a photo managing application and also a search2map interface
Hey, on second thought, maybe this isn't that much funny.
I can't quite put my finger on it... (Score:4, Funny)
Wierd.
Re:I for one... (Score:2, Insightful)
What is this new that you speak of? They've been there forever, this is just a new form of it.
Time for Google to come out against EU Patents (Score:5, Insightful)
Afterall their patents on search technology are worthless, anyone could use Pagerank and Google could not show they had used it -> failed attempt to protect invention.
Their newer search technology (they changed the algo last year), hasn't been disclosed in patent form and so the SEOs & competitors don't know how it works and MS couldn't copy it -> successful defence of invention.
They don't hold enough patents to join the "big company patent exchange club".
Re:Time for Google to come out against EU Patents (Score:2)
Re:Time for Google to come out against EU Patents (Score:2)
Where's your case? You have nothing but a spurious allegation!
"Whatever is being kept secret, by either side, is subject to duplication without license. "
Spy 1: "I have a secret"
Spy 2: "Quick patent it to keep it secret"
You second conclusion lacks merit. Other search engines haven't copied Google new special sauce because they don't know what it is!
How customizable is the toolbar? (Score:2, Interesting)
I haven't looked that deep into the Google toolbar. How customizable is it? I can only imagine that it doesn't allow you to use any site that you want for maps, directions, etc -- you probably have to choose from Google's list, right? The article mentions a choice between Yahoo and Mapquest. Can I input my own URLs in there (similar to the way Konqueror's URL
Re:How customizable is the toolbar? (Score:2)
Exactly, and the toolbar isn't a compulsory thing either, you have to specifically wish to download and install it and reading it's notes before you do. You're not forced to do anything with it.
ISBN prior art (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:ISBN prior art (Score:2)
Re:ISBN prior art (Score:2)
I would also look for prior art in Alexa's existing patents and public software. In the latter case, I believe zBubbles, Alexa Internet [alexa.com]'s comparison shopping tool from 1999/2000, did dynamic linking from pages to products, going so far as to insert product links (bubbles) into pages as the user visits them
more than just ISBN prior art (Score:2)
Sounds dodgy. (Score:5, Interesting)
Nick
Re:Sounds dodgy. (Score:2)
The action of modifying web pages containing addresses or ISBN to drive click through traffic seems pretty low to me.
Actually you seem to have misunderstood. This is something the user has to actively choose to install. The modification to the web pages is no more dirty play than supressing popups or blocking ads. (Although the copyright holders of those pages may have a thing or two to say on the matter) This is not something they force on the user without his knowledge.
This is basic economics, you p
Re:Sounds dodgy. (Score:2)
seems more like the kind of stunt Microsoft would pull
I don't recall Gates ever proclaiming the ability to define what was "Evil" as a matter of corporate policy, unlike Page and Brin. Should be interesting to see how AutoLink plays out, given the howls when Microsoft introduced smart tags in Office.
I find Google to be quite useful, though I don't use it exclusively. That said, Google management obliterated its credibility with me on the "We won't be Evil" front when they granted themselves stock with pre
Re:Sounds dodgy. (Score:2)
I remember a few years ago having having received a reply to one of my mail. The guy who had replied had used a web-based mail client, and the funny part was that my original mail was quoted in his reply and some word in my mail had been replaced by links to web sites
Pretty upsetting if you ask me.
--
Go Debian!
Re:Sounds dodgy. (Score:2)
Further, it's not limited to working with Google Maps -- you can tell it to use Yaho! Maps or MapQuest if you like, instead.
Slashdot Primer (Score:2, Funny)
Microsoft bad.
Sounds anti-trust to me -- (Score:5, Insightful)
Interesting that anti-spyware has shown fresh installs of MS windows OS has spyware that tracks online use
Where are our privacy laws and fair competition laws?
Or do we really know who has bought them away from us?
The only way for this to be faired up is to allow any and everyone who wants to use such a thing, to be able to. Just like the solution to the "trillion dollar bet">/a> was faired up, via exposure and wide scope use. [pbs.org]
Or in other words: nobody gets an unfair (anti-competition) advantage in marketing via patenting some automated privacy invading information collecting marketing process.
Most software is NOT patentable as shown by abstraction physics" [ffii.org], and that certainly includes this.
Re:Sounds anti-trust to me -- (Score:2)
JHC, what a crappy article! It's full of spelling mistakes and gobbleygook like:
"There is an identifiable and definable 'physics of abstraction' (abstraction physics), an identification of what is required in order to make and use abstractions."
You do the s/w world a disservice with that link, IMHO.
End users (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:End users (Score:2)
Leave our preciouuus alooone..
It's all about convenience and innovation (Score:3, Insightful)
google has evolved (Score:5, Insightful)
When I search for, for instance, HP Laserjet schematics, I get 40 pages of assholes peddling toner cartridges and refill kits.
That's NOT what I asked for, I want to find schematics that I can view. I don't want to buy a frigging CDROM with schematics on ebay, or laddersearch or toner carts or any of the other nonsense that google throws at me.
God I despise google. It has become the most useless of all search engines but the most profitable of all investments for online peddlers..
Re:google has evolved (Score:2)
Re:google has evolved (Score:2)
The people that get high pageranks are the people that PAY for them. Big business ends up at the top of the heap and non commercial sites are tossed WAY to the bottom.
I'm not saying that Dogpile [dogpile.com] is any better but at least it skims over most of the other search engines too.
The days of finding free info and free anything on the internet are done for.
I guess cheapskates like me are doubleplusungood for the e-conomy...
http://www.google.com/contact/spamreport.html. We (Score:5, Interesting)
Whenever I get a google search result that is full of spam, I usually try several other search engines, but the other engines results are normally worse than what Google gives me.
If you know a search engine that is less susceptible to spam than Google, please share!
Doug Moen.
Re:google has evolved (Score:2)
Besides, when I directly searches the hp.com websites, I don't get the schematics I want. I deal with "Legacy" stuff. Things that have fallen off the radar years ago but are still in use by many people.
Once HP or anyone else, has declared a product to be obsolete, they usually remove manuals, schematics, FAQ's
Re:google has evolved (Score:2)
I don't know shit about schematics but to me, it seems useful. It was my second result for that search [google.se], btw.
Re:google has evolved (Score:2)
Despite that things go obsolete quickly, many people still keep and use old equipment.
HP pulls obsolete stuff from their DB as fast as they can, why should they want anyone to repair and nurse along an old product when they can force them to buy a whole new one the first time the old one burps?
Hell, I'll do SMT level repairs when and if needed.
Re:google has evolved (Score:2)
The thing got off track when someone insisted that google brought up links to schematics at hp.com at the top of the list. No, that's not true at all.
Aw, hell with it.. I'm ignoring this from here on out, all the PRO BIG BUSINESS, pro google zealots are on the attack..
The little guy can't win...
it is important (Score:2)
damn the web sucks nowwadays.
the problems is, popups, spyware, malware, far less concern for me (I never see any) that the likes of pipipiqipqiqp [slashdot.org] and his fuck-tard antics.
see sig.
Seems Jeff Reynar would know (Score:2)
Well, who more better qualified than Mr. Reyner to know that what Google is doing does not conflict with his previous patent, right? ;-)
Re:Seems Jeff Reynar would know (Score:3, Funny)
(anti-MS paranoid mode ON)
1) get ex employee into a competing company (as a "mole")
2) the employee, as previously instructed, comes up with an idea the ex-employer has already patented
3) wait until idea is deployed
4) sue
5) (no ???)
6) profit!!!
BTW I don't like smart tags, Google's or anyone else's.
does this cover www.domain.com autolinking (Score:4, Interesting)
Has it finally happened? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Has it finally happened? (Score:2)
Derivative Work (Score:5, Interesting)
Of course, you could argue that the user is creating the derivative work and just using google as the means to do this, but I think modifying content to this extent falls outside fair use.
Ironic then that they are (allegedly) infringing on Microsoft's patent (a form of intellectual property) while they infringe on other people's copyrights (another form of IP).
Re:Derivative Work (Score:3, Funny)
As for copyright violations, I seriously doubt it. That would be like filing suit against me for making a mandatory minimum text size in my browser. Or perhaps even like me looking at a book through sunglasses. I haven't changed the content and republished it, I've just modified the way I see the original work.
An interesting idea though.
Re:Derivative Work (Score:2)
Complex and I don't think it has been resolved. For example if you give a film to a friend to edit for you is thi
Answer (Score:2, Funny)
I love it when Slashdot uses headlines that can be answered in a single word. Makes commenting so much easier.
Was Deja.com prior art? (Score:2)
Interestingly enough, with both Deja and Remark, the users complained enough that the companies dropped the plans.
Apple did it first anyway. (Score:5, Informative)
The only thing this patented Microsoft system seems to add is the idea of the link being calculated on a remote server rather than locally; this is a truly trivial step from what Apple's system explicitly did, and one that may not even exactly describe the google toolbar system.
Microsoft didn't invent it (Score:2)
The US is becoming irrelevant... (Score:5, Interesting)
We no longer are the premier manufacturer, and soon we won't be the largest customer/consumer base either. Within this decade this is happening, all the think tank analysts have said more or less the same thing, because the raw data is just raw data and it's just not that hard to see it.
Software can be written anywhere, it is no longer the arcane and exclusive province of a few thousand people in high level corporate or governmental/academic circles. It's a cheap commoditised "product" that x-millions create daily and x-tens of millions will be doing shortly within a few years. And most of the rest of the world is going to a FOSS model a lot quicker than we are, because of the benefits they see in it. That's not my call, just what you can see happening and read about.
Manufacturing of tangibles goes to those who care to do it, see Asia,the west made a decision via their "leaders" to minimise that because it was "too hard" or something, so there ya go. And despite people thinking software is all that important, tangibles still rule economically and in geopolitical importance, people eat real food, not virtual food, they drive real cars, not video game cars,they live in real homes not some ridiculous sim city environment. And etc, etc, etc.
Software is important,no one will deny that, but it's still the tool, not the product. Software more exists (outside of "entertainments") to facilitate production of Tangible Stuff mostly, of and by itself it's not as important except for that task, and the freer the better the faster the gooder it is,and patenting really balls up that process, s-o-o-o-o, software is coming from the FOSS world now, and it will only get better. and the two just don't mix, patents and FOSS. It's a bad idea really to even try.
Raw materials and energy come from where they come from, the US uses a lot more than we produce, so we fail it there as well economically. Just this year we even switched to a net ag products importer from exporter, the last thing we were the world leader in.
In short, all we have are weapons and hollywood and music as exports of note,all the other traditional exports are in decline,they are not going to recover, and patents on dubious software advances are a phony way to say we are still producing ultra valuable commodities, and are a last ditch paper work shuffling effort to make that fantasy come true, but the rest of the world ain't buying that. It's like calling all the stock market numbers the same as real money, it just ain't so. Patented "IP" is beyond a "tech bubble" phenomenon, it actually serves as a form of economic strangulatory suicide, except for a few people for a relatively short period of time. It's a smokescreen to feed to the US public to keep them faked out we still produce much.
Really, the only thing keeping the US afloat and uberimportant economically right this second is we have a force projection expansionist based military, a doofus at the top who is more than willing to use it, for all practical purposes a mercenary military dedicated to a small handful of transnationals and their controllers (I am sorry for that but it's true and I wish it weren't so...sorry), and the amount of our global debt we have accumulated. And we are in no position to actually pay this debt with anything real or intrinsically valuable, so they came up with this whopper fantasy game of "patenting" IP so that we could demand real stuff-money,goods and services for it, from "everyone else", that guy, and coincidently help to assuage the day of reckoning with this debt and no-tangible-work fiasco they got us into.
And it won't work, because the rest of the planet just ain't that dumb no mo' no mo'
Re:The US is becoming irrelevant... (Score:2)
I control the vertical a-holes! (Score:3, Funny)
Better come lock me up! I know how things work and how to program; I'm a dangerous fellow!
How to defeat Google's linking (Score:3, Informative)
Prior Art (Score:4, Informative)
I can't for the life of me remember the name for it, but back in the days of MacOS 9, Apple had some software that would parse any text on the screen and present you with a contextual menu that would be full of links to various things you could do with it.
It would be able to recognize a physical address and present you with a map. It could recognize email and web addresses in any application. It would add dates to your calendar and any number of other definable things.
Thats the name...
Apple Data Detectors.
http://www.miramontes.com/writing/add-cacm/add-ca
Would this not be exactly what the SmartTags patent is all about?
So long as we have software patents (Score:4, Insightful)
The only real voice we have in this battle is our wallets. I'm sending my spare dimes where they can best help fight [fsf.org] this stuff.
Don't hate the players - fix the game.
Wouldn't One Click be considered "Prior Art"... (Score:2)
Re:Wouldn't One Click be considered "Prior Art"... (Score:2)
Re:Wouldn't One Click be considered "Prior Art"... (Score:2)
Re:Wouldn't One Click be considered "Prior Art"... (Score:2)
Re:Good idea for a patent (Score:2, Interesting)
While SmartTags for IE were THAT as useful (though still useful, IMO), SmartTags for Office is probably the best feature that has been added to Office thus far.
Re:Hey is this evil? (Score:3, Interesting)
Google is snapping up Microsoft employees (current and ex) left and right. While there's nothing wrong with that, in this case it is a problem for the part that you failed to quote:
In other words, he's breaking his NDA and knowingly v
Re:Hey is this evil? (Score:2)
Here's Tim Bray's opinion on google's autolink "feature", just to prove that Google is actually being evil. (BTW slashbots, Tim Bray is at Sun and co-invented XML, so he can't be evil).
It seems so obvious that this move is not only evil but stupid; I keep hearing that MSN is pretty good these days, but Microsoft isn't trustworthy, so I don't go there. If I don't trust Go