Amazon Pursues Plogging Patent 110
theodp writes "When it unveiled a beta of Plogs (personalized blogs), a nonpublication request Amazon had in effect prevented the USPTO from disclosing that Plogs were patent-pending. But now you can check out Amazon's patent application for the Personalized selection and display of user-supplied content to enhance browsing of electronic catalogs, which describes how 'blurbs' can be made available in a blog format for viewing by others."
Re:First plog (Score:1)
Re:Hang on! (Score:1)
What's next?
Pell-Phones - Cell phones that have their own personalized number!!
Re:Hang on! (Score:1, Offtopic)
Comments? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Comments? (Score:1, Funny)
First Thought No Way, but maybe... (Score:1)
Re:First Thought No Way, but maybe... (Score:1, Funny)
Wait .. don't you mean (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Wait .. don't you mean (Score:1)
Re:Wait .. don't you mean (Score:1)
RSS feeds :-) (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:RSS feeds :-) (Score:2)
Not to mention the scaling problem by folk's browsers requesting RSS content even when they don't read it. Much like running your TV while doing something else.
I mean RSS is great for cross-site syndication, but it is not really cool for personal access.
Re:RSS feeds :-) (Score:2, Insightful)
RSS is one of the greatest things to come out in recent history. (I daresay even better than "plogs")
The whole purpose of RSS is so that you don't have to visit all of those sites, unless something catches your eye. XML kicks ass, even though it's a wee bit bloated. I have about 10 sites' RSS feeds on my MyYahoo page, and I cannot live without it now. If Google would give me an easy way to do it, I'd probably switch to that. Either way, my RSS content is what I WANT to view from sites that I WANT to monito
Re:RSS feeds :-) (Score:2)
Sounds like yet another client/module that I would have to have running and learn how to use.
Re:RSS feeds :-) (Score:1)
RSS is a standard form of XML that has been adopted. What it allows the parent site to do is publish and update an XML document that has article summaries that can include title, time, summary, link, etc. to their own web site.
Then when someone like me comes along and enters the URL for the RSS document into either an RSS reader or site like My Yahoo, it will take the content of the RSS document and display it using the format of My Yahoo or the RSS reader. Unlike HTML, RSS (and XML) is strictly for the tr
Re:RSS feeds :-) (Score:1)
Re:RSS feeds :-) (Score:2)
Many sites nowadays, especially blogs, have an XML file that lists recent articles. You copy the lociation of the XML file into an RSS reader and set it to check for updates every so often. Then, when you want to surf the web, instead of going to two dozen sites and finding that half of them haven't been updated, you just look at your feed-list, find the sites that have been updated, click on one, and then scan the list of new
Re:RSS feeds :-) (Score:2)
If you were trolling, I fell for it. If you were being straight up, you're an idiot.
Well, at least I am straight.
My site visiting behaviour does not match yours:
Either I will be heavily procrastinating, in that case I will visit most sites anyway even without RSS preview, or I will be working under a spell of concentration, in which case no site will be able to distract me, except maybe the one or two sites which I know to have fresh quality content every day, and there would be no benefit in having
Re:RSS feeds :-) (Score:1)
Re:RSS feeds :-) (Score:2)
RSS is, for all intents and purposes, a bookmark, just to an XML file instead of HTML. It also has the advantage of letting you see if a site's been updated without opening it. That may not sound like a big time-saver, but it's halved (at least) the amount of time I spend surfing the web.
Not to mention the scaling problem by folk's browsers requesting RSS content even w
Re:RSS feeds :-) (Score:1)
Blurb authoring (Score:5, Funny)
It sounds like they are talking out of their blurb authoring pipeline
Re:Blurb authoring (Score:1)
Re:Yea yea... (Score:3, Insightful)
How many of us do something other than discuss it on slashdot, and dont bother communicating with the people who can actually change it? It's not as though many people (if any) here are running for office that could change things like this: so who is?
Plogging (Score:2, Funny)
Soon you will all bow to me!
Re:Plogging (Score:2)
Re:Plogging (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Plogging (Score:2, Funny)
(OK, OK, so I couldn't think of a synonym for "friends" that began with a G. So sue me.)
Re:Plogging (Score:2)
Re:Plogging (Score:2)
No, thanks. It's more fun to say galang-alang-alang-a [nyud.net].
Re:Plogging (Score:1)
And it does not run on KDE...
Re: (Score:2)
New composite words and give me a stredach (Score:5, Insightful)
Did you mean plugging?
yes these new words annoys me , but what annoys me more is companys trying to get stupid patents
"According to a note on Amazon.com, the Plog is a diary-type feature of the users' shopping experience. "]It will help] you discover products that have just been released, track changes to your orders, and many other things. Just like a blog, your Plog is sorted in reverse chronological order. When we think we have something interesting or important to tell you, we'll post it to your Plog.""
So its an information system based on your previous purchases, Im sure many catlog order companys have been doing this for years , with target special offers etc
Plus im sure several advertising companys have with tracking cookies and other forms of spyware , been doing the same thing to provide ads that may intrest the customer/victim
Re:New composite words and give me a stredach (Score:1)
Yeah, but because it's the internets, it's special.
the other problem with "plog"... (Score:3, Informative)
Plog is short for "plastic clog" [google.com] (as in shoe). You'll see them quite often in hospitals because they're comfortable for standing and very easy to disinfect.
Have you seen my.... (Score:2)
I hope this word doesn't catch on... otherwise it'll cause almost as much confusion as spelling out orally the slashdot URL.
It's dejavu all over again .. (Score:1, Flamebait)
We have another potencial litigious bastard here, but, what do we gain by saying the same stuff each time we see such a story? (and beleive me, you will se a lot more in the future)
Just add this to your
127.0.0.1 www.amazon.com
127.0.0.1 amazon.com
Don't buy anything from them, don't recommend amazon to friends, don't keep a wishlist, don't even go to the frkn site, don't click on banners, etc,etc.
It's the only w
This is why I'm still boycotting Amazon (Score:4, Interesting)
Amazon is really pushing its APIs to open-source developers and is trying very hard to become part of the open-source community. Jeff Bezos and Tim O'Reilly sat side by side at OSCON to tout how small developers could use Amazon's API to make lots of money. This worries me.
Re:This is why I'm still boycotting Amazon (Score:2)
All I can say is that many of their team members spend all day thinking about how to improve customer experience, which is great. But unfortunately for the rest of the world, those ideas turn into patents which then no one else can use.
I agree that Amazon ought to be rewarded for the amount of innovation they produce, but it seems that they already are being rewarded by a high percentage of
Re:This is why I'm still boycotting Amazon (Score:1)
Has a company ever been successfully boycotted, where success means the company saw a significant drop in their bottom line?
Re:This is why I'm still boycotting Amazon (Score:2)
Next Up (Score:5, Funny)
Amazon combines Plogs, Reviews, and One-Click and gets a patent on Prick.
Now THATS (Score:1)
Prior art (Score:1)
Concepts (Score:3, Insightful)
Patenting concepts (Score:2)
In the early 1900s, a guy named Selmer? patented the Road Steamer, IIRC, which covered everything about the automobile. It was so comprehensive that no one could compete in the car industry without Selmer?'s license. Ford couldn't get one, so he manufactured anyway and fought the patent. In the end, he won and the USPTO withdrew the patent.
Note: I searched for the patent once and couldn't find it.
Re:Concepts (Score:2)
Additionally, I think you would enjoy reading about "constructive reduction to practice" compared to "actual reduction to practice". The former is quickly defined as documentation
06-21-2004 Rescind Nonpublication Request (Score:2)
We should patent the process not the idea... (Score:3, Interesting)
I think its more fair... Medicines for one, a Lab should be able to patent a process to achieve certain compound. But not be able to patent the compound formula... if some poor country find a way to produce the medicine, the Lab would not be alowed to charge for royalities... unless they're using the patented process to make the medicines.
Take a look at the HIV case here at Brasil, the governament tried to produce generic medicines, to distribute among the population for FREE, but the Labs couldnt allow that, and sued the governament. When the Labs were about to LOOSE the case, they lowered the price of the meds to a fraction of the original cost, so would be cheaper for the governament to buy the meds, instead of produce them!!!
What I mean is, patents doesnt suck. What is wrong is the way theyre used nowdays.
Re:We should patent the process not the idea... (Score:1)
Drug companies take out patents all the way through the trial process, it's a fairly low risk business.
Patent a drug, try it out doesn't work, patent a new drug.
Patent a drug, try it out, works, patent a more efficient way of making the drug, human trials, patent making the drug in bulk, advertise on FOX.
Re:We should patent the process not the idea... (Score:5, Insightful)
e.g. When I'm down the pub I know what beers my friends drink, and if they are drinking something different tonight.
I also know what new papers many friends read and what they are interested in taking about.
How can anyone be granted a patent for this (or even consider putting one forward)
Lets, use the word gossip instead of blurbs.
An electronic catalog system provides an interface for users to author and post pieces of content, referred to as gossip The gossip submitted by a particular author are made available for viewing in an any format you like.
gossip may also be obtained from external sources, such as the post man, or a news paper.
A personalized gossip selection component selects gossip to present to users based on histories of catalog items selected by such users, and/or based on various other criteria.
We call this the postman.
The gossip selected for a particular user are presented within a personal log or "plog," which may be updated daily and will typically contain entries from many different authors.
We call this the bartender.
User feedback provided on specific gossip is taken into consideration by the personalized gossip selection algorithms.
We call this the mothers meeting.
Looks like Amazon is patenting the wheel.
Re:We should patent the process not the idea... (Score:2)
However, patenting of processes is something far more insidious. When you patent a process you are granted much broader powers. Now you not only own a end-product, but the steps it
Quick question (Score:3, Interesting)
We'd like to keep our name because it's been our identity for almost 2 years now but we cannot affort legal litigation (being a free community effort, etc)
Re:Quick question (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Quick question (Score:1)
Re:Quick question (Score:2)
http://tess2.uspto.gov/bin/showfield?f=doc&stat
You may be looking at a name change soon. Good luck!
More Prior Art (Score:1)
Also, haven't countless Content Management Systems , Groupware, and Portals had personal log features forever? I know my previous employers intra-net has has this feature for years. (PHP Nuke must for sure!)
http://www.opensourcecms.com/
After looking at all the Web site management systems out there, you can't tell me that this is not already a well known feature. Some people call it "Stic
My patents (Score:3, Funny)
WLOG (TM)
A whining blog. Log in, bitch all day about traffic/technology/your boyfriend/your tatoo/your parents/your friends/school. Under this new concept, users will be able to whine more fast and more effectivelly than ever, thanks to our Instant-Whine(TM) technology that allows for up-to-the-second bitching about the upcoming issues.
SLOG (TM)
The server blog. With this breakthrough concept, now servers (and other applications) themselves can write blogs about what's happening to them. We find this kind of blog will be most interesting to system administrators and aficcionados alike. You'll fully understand the advantages of this system when you read your server's SLOG (TM) and find entries such as "I'm feeling bored today. I took 10.6231 seconds to process the last data backup. I had to rewrite 12731312kb of old files in the process. Those people can't create new files or what?".
DLOG (TM)
The dead blog. Create once, never post anymore. We think we can make big bucks with this tech, as most blogs effectively become a DLOG sooner or later. With our post lock feature, you can force your own blog to become a DLOG (TM) and never be able to post on it anymore.
SPLOG (TM)
The spam fest blog. This is actually an improved version of DLOG (TM); it not only makes your blog dead, but also leave comments open for comment spammers so they can build up their google rankings. Enjoy having thousands of posts about free onl1ne poker, v1agra and pen1s enlargement on your 6-words "I'm feeling bored" post.
This is just a preview of the many technologies we're creating that enable YOU - the user - to blog more effectively than ever. Stay tooned for several new exciting releases in the future.
Laugh all you want ... (Score:2)
New portmanteau words make my head hurt (Score:5, Funny)
'plogging'?? This is the sort of gratuseless neologism that's making modern webontent so incomprusing. Why can't they use ordular, regdinary words that we've all heard of? Why must they inventorate these mad brandologues, taking the initialet of a well-known verbagos and sticking it haprandom onto a pointuculous wundragubbin?
This frumblotionary addlepoopery is threatening to grurmstipth crumbobblious fremd eebree zorn frell completely and utterly INCOMPREHENSIBLE.
Re:New portmanteau words make my head hurt (Score:2)
It's the Grammar, Stupid (Score:2)
"Sell" is a verb.
"Things" are nouns.
Verbs and nouns. Amazon is in the Verbs and Nouns business.
Conclusion: Amazon should simply patent "Verbs" and "Nouns". That would cut to the heart of the matter, eh?
-kgj
Lots of examples to break this (Score:5, Informative)
David Blair's waxweb system (also about the same time) also should break parts of this as it included an advanced system allowing users to add annotations to a movie that is broken up into scenes, and edit the movie.
I think if you take apart the patent line by line you will find lots of things that beat it piece by piece, and some which have more than one piece. I don't buy it that these guys invented blogging.
For example Wiki's are based [c2.com] circa 1994 on work from the 80's.
It looks more like the patent describes some things that have been around a while, and some already established techniques to extend them. Maybe some good development in there but not the originality as far as I can see from Amazon to be worth a patent. Not if it is circa 2003.
Anyway, I'm against software patents in general since they seem to act opposite from the way patents are supposed to act, but the main thing here is that if there is going to be such a thing as a software patent it better be something more revolutionary and less obvious to experts in the field at the time, than what they have. I'm tired of seeing "software patents" for things that ought to be laughed out of the patent office if they were based on the physical world. And then you get more into mathematical / algorithmic discoveries which are not patentable for even better (similar) reasons. I wish Amazon would fuck off. They have enough of the fucking pie.
I'm confused... (Score:1)
Personalised Blogs... (Score:3, Insightful)
Another excellent example... (Score:1)
Perhaps I'm missing something here... (Score:2)
Amazon is not talking about patenting the idea of a Blog. What they are looking to patent is the idea of attaching "blurbs" from users and other blog sites to specific items in their online catalog. Sort of like comments attached to a story here on Slashdot, or an RSS feed from another site. It even refers to blogs as an external concept it is trying to mimic in the patent itself.
They're combining the power of blogs with their sear
Plogging is what Roland the Plogger does (Score:2)
patent terrorists (Score:1)
don't forget the comb over (Score:1)
Patenting linking to peoples blogs is like patenting the comb-over.
Re:don't forget the comb over (Score:1)