USPTO Increases Scope Of Amazon's 1-Click Patent 98
An anonymous reader writes "While the patent office had rejected earlier attempts by Amazon to get a continuation patent on its infamous "1-click" patent, it appears that an impatient USPTO examiner has approved the continuation, apparently because of the failure of BountyQuest to come up with prior art. This continuation adds claims like contacting the recipient of an order via e-mail or a phone call to obtain additional info."
I just wonder... (Score:5, Insightful)
It just seems an inherently corruption-friendly system that allows any examiner of proper rank to step in and hand monopolies out to companies at a moment's notice.
Ryan Fenton
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Simply put, if the art isn't there, even if the examiner doesn't like it, the allowance has to be given to the applicant. It is an unfortunate state of affairs, but it is a legal requirement. Simply put, the examiner was doing his job.
It may be hard to pay them not to grant it... (Score:2)
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greasing the right palms might still get a patent granted
Greasing the palms?! C'mon these patent assesors are obviously being paid with child-sex prostitutes!
I mean once you go accusing an entire class of people of corruption without a scintilla of proof, why stop there?
Re:I just wonder... (Score:5, Insightful)
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Instead of looking like a fucking moron, you might want to read what the patent office means by obvious:
http://www.uspto.gov/web/offices/pac/doc/general/i ndex.html#novelty [uspto.gov]
"The subject matter sought to be patented must be sufficiently different from what has been used or described before that it may be said to be nonobvious to a person having ordinary skill in the area of technology related to the invention."
These "developers" he spoke of, might they have "ordinary skill in the area of technology related to the invention."? I'm not sure. I am sure however, that anyone who starts bandying about terms like "fucking moron" better have a very clear argument ready to back himse
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I mean, Amazon's 1-click patent should have failed on obviousness at the very least.
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There's no meat in this sandwich (Score:2, Insightful)
Here's how it works...
Amazon patent A: (1 click)
Amazon patent B: (1 click) + (other stuff)
Anyone infringing B also infringes A. All Amazon has done is prevented someone else from patenting this particular flavor of (1 click)+(other stuff). They don't get anything extra because patent A alr
Anonymous Reader? (Score:1)
link [techdirt.com] to evidence.
Wasn't Me, But Here Are More Details! (Score:5, Informative)
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Hey, just give up on the accents. Anyway, we don't need them, we speak English! Seriously, Anglicization of words can legitimately mean dropping accents. I hate the things. Say 'deja vu', and 'cafe'.
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Or maybe Amazon's patent shall have grown to consume any physical contact that triggers an exchange of information, so we'll all be safe in the bosom of Bezos.
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I need to dig up my work did at school. I think there are a few patents waiting to be registred.
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I for one see those new claims as astounding innovations. I know that we were all thinking that we would have had to send a runner to get the info. I know, I know, some of you more advanced types may have been thinking "pony express" or even postal mail, but come on, you know most of you were thinking "send a runner" like me. Naturally, cavemen were thinking of going the
Patents should be abolished... (Score:4, Interesting)
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Re:Patents should be abolished... (Score:4, Funny)
There.
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Woah, obvious troll there. Of course a system run by incompetents is likely to fail, but nothing about the principle of patents says they have to be administered by incompetents. That's just an implementation detail, albeit a rather important one.
What would you think if we replaced current patent officers with an office that retained the services of suitably experienced professionals to vet applications, and then implemented a pricing structure that made it efficient for the little guy to apply for a sma
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What you are doing is like arguing that "copyright" will benefit the
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Says who? The original comment to which you replied was talking about patent reform, as are many others in this discussion. You're the only one who's equating patents (the principle) with the current under-performance by the USPTO specifically.
Since I doubt anyone is going to argue that the current poor state of affairs in the USPTO is a good thing, there's not
nothing to see here (Score:2, Insightful)
No sir-ree, there is noting to see here, just the USPTO doing their jobs just as well as ever.
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The whole racism rant is an assumed thing here in the ghetto. The whole list of possible solutions or fixes to racism has also been beaten to death, and requires no addressing. We don't need to name companies which use immoral tactics, we all know the names. We don't need to cry about all of the projects which have been destroyed. We all know it's commonplace and might as well get used to it.
No sir-ree, there is noting to see here, just the white cracker doing their jobs just as well as ever.
Thankfully not everyone thought the above when it came to the systematic racist policies against niggers.
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*shrugs*
My two cents,
A.A
P.S. I'm curious to see if I get modded a troll simply because I'm agreeing with him. Not that I mind, I've got karma to burn. *dons asbestos suit and
Re:nothing to see here (Score:5, Insightful)
All I can say in reply is that I hope nobody ever tried to tell that to Ghandi, Martin Luther King or Nelson Mandela.
The fact that an injustice persists, and that the abuses remain consistent in terms of action and actors is newsworthy. Talking about it until everyone gets sick of it is a valid tactic.
Sometimes the only way to invade the fortress is by chipping away at the walls inch by bloody inch. It's boring, painful and creates no heroes right up until the walls finally do come down.
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"All I can say..."? Apparently not, since you then go on to say something else.
In any case, are you trying to tell me that you seriously think no body told those guys they were fighting a lost cause. I'll take that bet.
Of course people are going to try to dissuade you, for whatever reason. You can ignore them and stick to your guns, right?
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Actually, I meant to suggest that anyone who suggested to Gandhi et alia that they should sit down and shut up would have sooner or later come to regret those words.
But that's not what I actually wrote. So: Good point, but no bet. 8^)
Given up, have you? (Score:5, Insightful)
Go ahead and mod me flamebait or troll, but my point is that this isn't just about the 1 click patent. There's a company that has the patent on the breast cancer gene. Thats right, you can't try to cure a prevalent form of cancer without paying a frickin' royalty for something that wasn't even invented. At best you could say that they discovered it.
We need to keep trying to stop this insanity.
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What we need is a game plan. Ghandi and Martin Luther King both had their entire nations behind them. We do not. If you ask anyone
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posting, yes, noting no.
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http://zotzbro.blogspot.com/2007/06/simple-idea-f
Have you seen this before? If so, links would be welcome.
all the best,
drew
Voting is 1-click (Score:2, Interesting)
...soon we'll pay Amazon for the privilege of choosing between uniformly corrupt leaders with narrowly deviating opinions.
Oh well, Plato warned us about this. We're in the age of oligarchy and timarchy. Next stop: authoritarianism, then third-world insignificance. But my PS/3 is so cool it makes it worth it, I swear!
only one way (Score:3, Funny)
alternatively (Score:2)
BFD (Score:2)
It's not *fundamental*, so watch it become worthless.
I love that sensual, sand through the fingers, feeling.
Mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm.
This is ridiculous (Score:2, Interesting)
I already boycott Amazon because of their stupid patent nonsense; I wish there was a way I could boycott the USPTO, now that would be fun. . . .
:-)
-ScottRe: (Score:1)
Re:This is ridiculous (Score:5, Interesting)
Realistically, that's how it works now -- if you come up with a useful new algorithm, say, and Microsoft or Adobe or Oracle or someone else with much deeper pockets than yours patents it, do you think your prior art is going to stand up against their army of lawyers? Non-obviousness as a standard for rejecting a patent is already quite dead; prior art is going away fast.
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The Supreme Court's recent decision should do a lot to bring back the obviousness argument.
There is something you can do... (Score:1)
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As I understand it, one of the requirements for proving the date something was invented is that your documentation must be cooroborated by someone who understood it. Your scheme does not do this. This is why researchers in a corporate setting generally have their lab notebooks signed daily.
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Seriously, there may be hints that things are going to change
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I have a solution! (Score:4, Funny)
Why not patent (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Why not patent (Score:4, Insightful)
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Patent reform needed (Score:3, Interesting)
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Then there's the whole "application" patent, where you can take something that is well-
The Real Enemy (Score:5, Interesting)
Or as one poster suggested, "Corruption". This sham has been going on for years. Why haven't the fatcats in Congress done anything about it? Could corporate donations have anything to do it? Patents work in established big businesses favor. Witness Balmer's recent threats to us MS Patents to go after Linux customers. If big business whined about patents, you can bet their Congressmen on a string would change the law quick smart (as they did for the Mickey Mouse^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^HCopyright Extension act for Disney).
Do patents work in small businesses favor? In theory they can. "In theory". By the very act of writing software (which has an absurd number of stupid patents) Microsoft daily must infringe hundreds of patents every day. Not just big business with patent exchange agreements, but smaller ones without. When was the last time a small business took Microsoft to the cleaners over such a patent? Eolas came close... kind of. No one else by a long shot.
The problem isn't USPTO incompetence. It's Congressional Sloth and Greed. What can we do other than crying to the converted on Slashdot?
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"The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." - Thomas Jefferson
Visa! Visa! The Revolution! (Score:2)
1. I thought that was what Slashdot is for?
2. Try not. Do or do not. There is no try.
3. Ok, but only if I get a T-shirt like Che.
"Sometimes I think the world is going mad. Then I think, 'Ahh, Who Cares?' Then I think, 'Hey, I wonder what's for Dinner?'" - Jack Handey
confirmation emails (Score:1, Insightful)
This is what the future will look like: you are living in the slums in the worst designed house (all good designs are copyrighted and you cant pay), with the worse job (you cannot afford the licenses for your buinsess practices, such as say, keeping a running total, or an electronic till with anything close to useful interfaces)(although you could become an enforcer of infractions of those laws and make enough for a a daily drink), if
Well thank God for that! (Score:4, Funny)
It wasn't vague, bizarre and obvious enough! Glad the government came in to clear things up.
On a related note, will someone please wake me up, or yell April Fools, or give me the red pill or something to let me know that reality isn't some kind of joke?
This gets so very old... (Score:5, Insightful)
The examiner did his research, and gave it his best shot. By amendment and argument, Amazon shot down his case. Nobody came to the rescue with any new art, and the examiner didn't find any. Indeed, despite the FAMOUSNESS of this battle, NOBODY has come up with any art to defeat the new claims or the old ones.
There are better battles to pitch than this one.
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This is the section 102 you refer to: USC 35 s 102 [cornell.edu]. It is followed by section 103 [cornell.edu], "Conditions for patentability; non-obvious subject matter", which states:
(a) A patent may not be obtained though the invention is not identically disclosed or described as set forth in section 102 of this title, if the differences between the subject matter sought to be patented and the prior art are such that the subject matter as a whole would have been obvious at the time the invention was made to a person having ordinar
No, it's not. (Score:2)
And
"Even if the subject matter sought to be patented is not exactly shown by the prior art, and involves one or more differences over the most nearly similar thing already known, a patent may still be refused if the differences would be obvious."
"Obvious" in the context the patent office means is not "Hey I could have thought of that!"
It's
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I'd say that the Supreme Court disagrees [supremecourtus.gov] with you, the USPTO, and the Federal Circuit Court on the definition of "obvious." From KSR v Teleflex:
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Although he appears to be defending the work of others (either on this application or others; the record shows lots of examiner reassignments on this one) it still comprises lots of statements concerning "the vali
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Bartender? Scotch please, on my tab.
And for the true regular at the bar: [Raises index finger at bartender]
Oh but I forgot, it's "on the internets" so it's somehow novel and nonobvious.
New name for the patent (Score:2)
Henceforth, the Amazon patent shall no longer be known as the "1-click patent", but the "1-click and lots of hassle patent".
Setup store somewhere else. (Score:2)
All I can say is, if you're thinking of setting up an online store, for God's sake, do it outside the US. Their patent laws are fucking ridiculous, and only when massive amount of business are driven to a country that doesn't implement US-style patent law (European countries, for example) may the adminisatration be forced to fix it. Until then, boycott the US. Sorry to say it, but otherwise, fuckwits like Amazon and the USPTO will remain com
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US Software patents are stupid beyond belief, the original purpose of patents was to protect innovators, and encourage innovation
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http://zotzbro.blogspot.com/2007/06/simple-idea-fo r-patent-reform.html [blogspot.com]
Patents must be sought as "defensive purposes only" or regular...
Regular, gets much more careful examination, must get everything right from the break.
"defensive only" last twice as long, can't be used to bring a suit, only to defend oneself.
This situation would allow people seeking patents only to prevent them from being given to so
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The real problem with the patent system (Score:1)
This mess reflects the real problem with the patent system - it is an abused system, but for a "little fish" to defend himself against abuse by the "bigger fish" he has to perpetuate the further abuse of the system! Insanity!
Real-world example: I'm working with someone one a great idea that has the potential to be huge in a particular industry. Its implementation is Intenet-based. Now the guy who is driving the idea wants to get a patent to protect his idea, since there are many big players in the indus
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http://zotzbro.blogspot.com/2007/06/simple-idea-f
I would like your thoughts...
all the best,
drew
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This mean there are other ways to protect your self. Put a notarized copy of the idea in an envelope, seal it. Sign your name across the seal and mail it to your self. Then put that envelope into another envelope and mail that to your-self. Now you have dated proof of your idea.
That's not even going into the fact that is several different people are working on
Overlooking something? (Score:1)
Can't you just open your internet stores in Europe and allow shipping to US or just forward the order to US-based warehouse? In EU we can do [0-9]+clicks, why can't you just move the business to Europe ?
Phoning up a customer is innovative? My arse!! (Score:1)
Part of the prior art for this patent... (Score:1)
Customer walks into store, points to item, and says "I want that and put it on my tab." Store clerk recognizes the customer, provides the item, and puts it on the customer's tab. In ancient Babylonia the customer accounts were kept on cuneiform tablets. Later they were kept in other ways, such as on ink on paper.
The other part of the prior art is how the customer is recognized electronically. That method
Quick nitpick about story title (Score:2)
Software patents = Money for government (Score:2)
You can patent the intention of a communication? (Score:1)
First to file? (Score:1)
A first to file system generally reduces uncertainty, especially for licencees and consumers. It encourages companies to file promptly, and doesn't introduce unnecessary delays in the grant of a patent. For example, the delay of 7 years in granting the RSA patent wouldn't happen under first-to-file; instead it would have been granted to