Amazon Goes Web 2.0 Wild to Defend 1-Click Patent 77
theodp writes "Six years ago, Jeff Bezos and Tim O'Reilly urged the masses to give-patent-reform-a-chance as Richard Stallman called for an Amazon boycott. On Monday, the pair will reunite to kick off O'Reilly's new Amazon-sponsored Web 2.0 Expo with A Conversation with Jeff Bezos. Be interesting if the conversation turned to Amazon's ongoing battle against an actor's effort to topple Bezos' 1-Click patent, which The Register notes included dumping 58 lbs. of paperwork on the patent examiner, including dozens of articles from the oh-so-Web-2.0 Wikipedia, which the USPTO had already deemed an un acceptable source of information ('From a legal point of view, a Wiki citation is toilet paper,' quipped patent expert Greg Aharonian)."
Caution on /.'s part (Score:1, Funny)
I guess
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Maybe I should patent "one link" slashdot submissions...
A quote for the ages (Score:4, Funny)
Re:A quote for the ages (Score:4, Insightful)
There's disagreeable things in this article - Amazon's ludicrous patent, the whole concept of Web 2.0, and The Register in general. So, it's nice to come away with something that's patently ('scuse the pun) obviously true. Wiki citations are most surely toilet paper, and not just from a legal POV.
Re:A quote for the ages (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:A quote for the ages (Score:4, Funny)
Oh, the irony, I'm replying with a link to wikipedia (grins wolfishly).
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I'm sure lawyers can pick up on this. Whether judges can accurately me
Wikipedia vs. other sites (Score:4, Interesting)
If the articles in question DIDN'T contain citations from other sources, then how could any of the information be trusted at all, given that it was written by one or many basically anonymous users?
Personally, I find Wikipedia to be really useful, but the problem with it from an academic standpoint is that any conclusions arrived at in its articles without citation tend to arise out of the consensus of the user community, and there is really no reason to trust information simply because the majority agrees it is the truth, especially in matters like this one.
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The difference between wikipedia and normal websites is that normal websites aren't editable by just anyon
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Re:A quote for the ages (Score:4, Insightful)
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But, some of the examples the article gave have the court citing Wikipedia for the definition of "jungle juice" in one instance, and "booty music" in another, for which I feel Wikipedia is an approp
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For verifying the history of things that are worth money? Do you *really* need someone to answer this for you?
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That's a BIG "if" (Score:2)
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there are a number of areas where wikipedia is the best secondary source of all. i doubt there are encyclopedias of computer technology or comic heroes which come anywhere near wikipedia's level. does
Ad hominem, ad verecundiam and generalizations (Score:1)
Disclaimer: I can understand which reasons may justifiy a text contained in a wiki not being considered useful or acceptable from a legal (positivist) point of view. [Although I try to disagree with such a point of view. And it is hard, for we live in a quite positivist world...]
Nevertheless...
Why are they toilet paper? Because they come from a wiki? Or because their author and his credentials cannot be identified?
Argui
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No it is fucking not. Jesus, learn what a term means before you try to look smart by using it.
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Re:A quote for the ages (Score:5, Insightful)
But there is no black or white here. Wikipedia is not apropriate for serious use, where it's important to be correct. But it's a massive quick and dirty database. If I want to know what X is and I've never heard of it, I can go to wikipedia and get an overview. If the authors did their due dilligence, I can find a decent collection of links off site that will tell me a bit abotu the subject matter.
Wikipedia can be a useful tool. Just not for most important applications.
Let's use a programming analogy. The "right" way to deploy a new application cross platform would be to code it in C or Java, or some other language apropriate to the task, and fine tune each version for each platform, and hunt for bugs on each platform. Annother, quick, relativly painless way, if it were an unimportant, trivial task, would be to just put together a web based Java applett, or perhaps even a flash object if it's simple enough. Hell, millions do this with YouTube, every day because it's "good enough". Even though an MPEG, MOV, AVI, or other video file played in a stand alone player would be "better".
Re:A quote for the ages (Score:5, Funny)
Dude, I have no intention of goosling you. The only person I goosle is my wife.
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Well by goosling your wife, you can only learn a little bit about her, depending on how well her prior contributors did their homework. If you really want to know more about your wife, you should go read some of the websites dedicated to her.
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Maybe so, but it's dated toilet paper, and if you claim to have invented something that I can find on Wikipedia dated years before you patented it, that should be admissible as prior art against your claim.
What (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:What (Score:5, Funny)
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toilet_paper [wikipedia.org]
I went to that link and it simply said "See entry for Wikipedia."
From a legal point of view (Score:5, Funny)
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If the white-collar crime were any sweeter, 'twould be government itself!
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I've patented One Swipe wiping(TM). Cameras are being installed in stalls to verify royalty payments.
I don't quite get it... (Score:5, Insightful)
The summary speculates that Bezos might get called out over the one-click patent.
The article says... wait... this isn't summarizing any article.
So what's happened? Nothing new. What's going to happen? Very possibly nothing new.
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RTFM, John Doll (Score:5, Informative)
Just click on "Permanent link" and you will have a version that won't change. Or click on Cite this article.
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I think someone thought of this before wikipedia came along.
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MLA and APA citations are worthless (even with the date) if you have no way of accessing the content as it was originally displayed. Who cares that you claim you accessed it on December 6th if it's now April and the site doesn't keep
Huh? (Score:3)
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What was the result.. (Score:3, Informative)
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When did Tim O'Reilly become such a scumbag? (Score:5, Insightful)
From the FTA:
O'Reilly has the money and the influence to help strike out this dumb patent, but he chooses not to do so. It would be a nice irony if the USPTO threw it out because Tim's chum Jeff used Wikipedia. I'd laugh my fricking ass off.Re: (Score:2)
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I won't defend the patent (it's the reason I do not do business with Amazon.com), but I do think you severely underestimate the amount of money and influence it would take to challenge that patent.
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I spent much of my younger years fighting every perceived wrong I could find. I won a few battles. I lost most of them. Most importantly, I learned a few things.
Not every battle matters. I'm not the right person to fight every battle. Sometimes you can win one battle and lose more important ones. Sometimes fighting isn't the right thing to do.
Like I said, I'm not going to defend that patent, and I oppose the practices of software patents in the US, but I believe it's, at best,
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From a legal point of view (Score:4, Insightful)
The "patent expert" might as well have said The journal of machine intelligence and pattern recognition is toilet paper because the pages change from issue to issue.
If archive.org could take an examiner, or anyone else, to a wiki version dated before the filing date of a patent, then I think it can be used to establish prior art.
Even if the USPTO says it won't accept the wiki, a court could over rule them.
Beautiful symmetry in patent law vs. Wiki (Score:5, Insightful)
And from any sane person's point of view, 99% of comments from patent experts are toilet paper, which is why we're in such a mess today.
So, it's beautifully symmetric. Patent lawyers and Wikipedia were made for each other.
Although in Wikipedia's defence, it gets it right ***far*** more often.
In any case, Wikipedia can always be corrected, and very easily, that's the power of it. Whereas the only way of correcting a patent lawyer is with a lobotomy.
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Greg Aharonian should be your friend (Score:3)
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Well, ok, now are you saying that something written on a public wiki should be accepted as legal evidence?
Or are you just making fun of him? Because if it is the latter, go on.
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For example, if you claimed to have copyrigth on a certain text, but the same text could demonstrably be found on Wikipedia at a point *before* you claimed to have written it, thats pretty clear evidence that you're lying.
One shouldn't, offcourse, on the other hand assume something to be true just because Wikipedia says so. But this is true for any other source too, and something courts deal with all the time.
Commodore killed by patents? (Score:5, Interesting)
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1990 -- Put out a cheaper version of what your competition has (even if stupid).
2000 -- $1000 spent on advertising and marketing is better than $1000 spent on R&D.
2006 -- Take it to the court system. $10,000 for lawyers is the best business ROI.
Proud Amazon Boycotter. (Score:3)
The One-Click Patent in Not a Bad Patent (Score:1, Informative)
1. It was filed in 1997, and its subject matter may have been invented even a while before then. When you look at whether at patent is obvious or not, you have to look at it at the time of invention. Of course it's obvious, after it's been used for a decade. Do you remember what the Internet was like in 1997? Was it obvious in 1997? Probably not.
2. It does not claim every single kind of e-commerce involving single-clicking. Here's
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Let's suppose they really were the first to make the (tiny) leap of logic of "I have the customer information, credit card, item information, all in my database, but I'm asking for confirmation item by item. Let's tie all of this in one step instead of the (n) steps we were making before"
If anything, the real feat is making the customer comfortable enough with Amazon to trust them with buying in one click (I don't like that, I'd rather confirm my purchases), the amount
Moo (Score:1)
If Amazon messes up here and there, i don't care much. They offer an excellent service.