WordLogic Patented the Predictive Interface 173
Packetl055 writes "Have any of you heard anything about this company, WordLogic, with a soon to be granted/issued patent with 117 claims for predictability software? They recently received a patent approval/allowance letter from the US Patent and Trademark Office. Their patent application was submitted in March 2000. If I read this correctly, any software that gives you any prediction after you type something is infringing on their patent — e.g. vehicle navigation systems, cellular telephones, PDA's, Google with their 'Did You Mean' when using Google for a search, the new Apple I-Phone, Blackberry, Sony Playstation-3, etc., etc. If true, this is going to be huge: lawsuits after lawsuits." Their stock trend over the last few days suggests that somebody was paying attention to the the USPTO news from August 9. WordLogic makes products (assistive input software) and doesn't seem to be merely a patent troll.
Damn it, Thunderbird!! (Score:5, Funny)
I just checked and my damned junk mail filter put that email in the trash!
Hello, incremental search anyone? (Score:2)
Re:Hello, incremental search anyone? (Score:5, Funny)
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Japanese prior art patents from 1989 (Score:3, Informative)
First patent is using dictionaries in predicting incoming text
1) SYSTEM AND DEVICE FOR PREDICTION OF SUBJECT [espacenet.com] ( JP1029972 )
PURPOSE:To analyze the content of a text based on prediction, by analyzing an inputted text by using the grammatical rule of a targeted language, predicting the subject of the text from a word possible to regulate the subject, and predicting the subject predicted from the largest number of words as the subject of the inputted text. CONSTITUTION:The titled device is provided with a subject dictionary 1 in which the candidate of the subject predicted from each word is registered in every word unit, and a subject indicating word segmentation part 2 which analyzes the inputted text grammatically and extracts the word to become the main constituent of the input text. At a subject selection part 3, the subject dictionary 1 is referred, and when no subject candidate to be predicted exists in every word unit extracted at the subject indicating word segmentation part 2, no operation is performed, and when it exists, it is taken out, and the number of taking out is held at every taken out subject candidate, and when the taking out and the counting of the number of appearance are completed, the subject candidate having the largest number of appearance out of taken out subject candidates is outputted as the subject of the inputted text. In such a way, the subject of a supplied text can be predicted.
The second patent uses previous text inputs in helping to predict the incoming text
2) METHOD AND DEVICE FOR PREDICTING SUBJECT> [espacenet.com] ( JP2280272 )
PURPOSE:To analyze the content of a text based on prediction by holding the set of micro features having the number of times of appearance exceeding a critical value as the present status, and assuming a subject expressed in the partial set of the micro features most neighboring to the above set as the present subject. CONSTITUTION:A recent appearance word meaning storage means 2 stores meaning by the expression of the micro feature of a constant number of words appearing recently, and a critical value filter 3 delivers only the micro feature in which the number of times of appearance of the micro feature existing in the recent appearance word meaning storage means 2 exceeds the critical value to a present status storage means 4. A most neighoring subject selection means 6 compares the set of the micro features held by the present status storage means 4 with the expression of the micro feature corresponding to individual subject in a subject dictionary 5, and outputs the subject having the least common part as the present subject. In such a manner, the content of the text can be analyzed based on the prediction.
I predict WordLogic's patent application is not viable.
Re:Hello, incremental search anyone? (Score:5, Informative)
Patent submitters typically know about the most obvious examples of prior art, so most patents are worded to carefully carve out a niche in which the patent almost, but not quite, describes existing technologies.
Re:Hello, incremental search anyone? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Hello, incremental search anyone? (Score:4, Insightful)
Don't you just love our court system here in the U.S.?
Re:Hello, incremental search anyone? (Score:4, Insightful)
I always hate it when people use that expression. Another way of interpreting that statement is, hundreds of people too selfish, greedy or stupid to perform their civic DUTY, often prevents the system from working properly. But then these hundreds will go off complain how broken the system is. Its kind of like throwing lit matches around ones home while pointing out how every day items around the house tends to be flamable. So who is really the stupid one?
IMO, there are three serious problems with the current legal system. One, most any moron can be a judge. Judges are not even required to be knowledgable or communicate with a subject matter expert for issues on which they rule. Two, too many laws are writen by lawyers which only benefit lawyers; serving only to generate more billable hours. Three, people try hard to break the legal system by avoiding their civic duty, thereby insuring the "dumb ones", by in large, are on juries. So we have idiot judges ruling on topics well outside of their expertise, often for laws which make no sense, running a trial for jurries too stupid to get out of their duty because the people that should be there lied their way out of it.
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Not the exact answer to your question, but useful to keep in mind
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But the problem actually is that the
The whole thing does not even contain enough information to talk about it on slashdot.
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I'm going crazy trying to figure out what the software would do for the phrase "bork bork bork".
Re:Hello, incremental search anyone? (Score:4, Funny)
Fine. Then the submitter should almost, but not quite, deserve a patent.
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Maybe they're only patenting stupid T9 dictionaries. The one in my AT&T Samsung is stupid and way behind technology in Japan.
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"Patent submitters typically know about the most obvious examples of prior art, so most patents are worded to carefully carve out a niche in which the patent almost, but not quite, describes existing technologies."
;-)
And then they will sue, or threaten to sue, or offer to "license" the technology with as BROAD an interpretation as possible
Only in the minority of cases.
The vast majority of patent filings never see enforcement. They are used as a "warchest" to implement a system of mutually assured destruction, should one large company decide to sue another. This is why IBM had no problem contributing so many patents to the defense of open source software. It doesn't weaken the primary purpose for which IBM holds those patents.
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Prior art (Score:2)
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I have always been led to believe that if there is a natural outgrowth based on logical trends, that you couldn't patent the idea? Like patenting the premise for a machine that can process 4 trillion floating point operations per second.
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I predict.... (Score:5, Funny)
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Frank Evanshen, WordLogic's President and CEO.
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It's patented, you know.
Not the point (Score:2)
Another company, the aggressor, walks up and says "Hey, we own the patent to that technology!". Hero says "So? So do we!". Rather than slugging it out, where aggressor might well lose the patent (since they're just being litigious and Hero is actually making products), they might as well go after someone else who *didn't* patent it.
It's fucking stupi
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Wait, shit, I just predicted that.
My goodness, we are all doomed!
Yet another reason why software patents are bad (Score:2, Interesting)
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So I would say that the GP contributes very little of value to the current discussion. On top of that he injects
What about Miss Cleo? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:What about Miss Cleo? (Score:5, Funny)
The big question is: Will she see it coming?
Microsoft to the Rescue! (Score:5, Informative)
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From the description it appears to be the same, at least, and it does pretty much describe a form of autocomplete (when a list of choices is displayed not a single choice). I don't know if it requires some form of activity to show the choices, but this sounds a like pressing cont-D after set filec in the csh (tcsh, zsh and bash use tab completion, but filec is
Does this mean I'll be able to turn it off? (Score:3, Informative)
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Google Suggest - not "Did you mean" (Score:1)
Seriously? (Score:3, Funny)
Shouldn't be granted (Score:5, Insightful)
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I didn't read through all the patents but I'm pretty sure worldlogic doesn't have anything on tegic when it comes to the cell phone industry.
just one obvious example of why these patents shouldn't have been granted in the first place..
here's the original t9 patent for reference: http://patft.uspto.gov/netacgi/nph-Parser?u=%2Fnet ahtml%2Fsrchnum.htm&Sect1=PTO1&Sect2=HITOFF&p=1&r= 1 [uspto.gov]
Re:Shouldn't be granted (Score:5, Insightful)
prior art to 'patent the automobile' (Score:2)
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What this means is that obtaining a specific method of prediction in an application is often a straightforward co
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I'm not sure when the code completion based on language syntax became available in any of these but I could swear that even older vi/vi clones have had the word mapping and completion functions for a long time. And when was auto complete added to the bash/c/korn shells?
I'm too busy to go check dates at the moment but I agree that there is absolutely a ton of p
Hmmm...... (Score:4, Interesting)
Just because they make products doesn't mean that they aren't a patent troll.
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Re:Pig in a Tutu (Score:5, Funny)
Dancer Pig! Dancer Pig!
Does whatever a Dancer Pig does!
Can it dance
In ballet?
No it can't,
'Cause it's a pig.
Look out!
Here comes the Dancer Pig!
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Circular Reference. (Score:2)
Thanks. 'Cause we're sure to get the reference once we watch the film after getting the reference to know what to watch.
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Could you spell it out?
Re:Hmmm...... (Score:5, Informative)
And even if they haven't been a patent troll in the past, they may be becoming one.
Let's look at their latest quarterly report (SEC filing) [yahoo.com] and pick a few bits:
So it is a company that is making losses and focuses mainly on a single product. The success of this product depends on the licensing deals related to that patent. It looks like that company is betting a large part of its future on that single patent. So their best hope may be to become a patent troll. It may be a bit sad for the engineers working at that company, but I have serious doubts about their future business plans and methods.
Is it surprising that they issued a press release related to that patent a few days before issuing their quarterly report?
I met them - they're not a patent troll (Score:3, Interesting)
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That alone is at version 4... If they applied for a patent in 2000 why isn't there a more well known product?
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obvious (Score:1, Redundant)
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-Arthur Koestler
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-Arthur Koestler
-Me
This is like patenting dropping rocks on the ground, not figuring a better design to skip rocks across the lake surface.
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It's interesting that we don't really have any idea what their patent actually says yet we all know it's incredibly obvious! Why wasn't it patented earlier? Maybe they do something differently? Maybe it's not that fact that they can do it, but rather how they accomplish it that is patented.
You can patent dropping rocks on the ground if your method is new, better, or improved upon the earlier design. a catapult would be a terrific way of "dropping" rocks on the ground.
I won't even get into how the rest
As if you didn't see this coming: (Score:3, Funny)
Unnecessary Quote from the CEO (Score:4, Funny)
I'll bet you are....
Prior Art (Score:5, Interesting)
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Although I haven't seen one where my knowledge could affect the process, the very first time I hear of a patent application that I can attack with prior art, I will do so immediately.
That way things like this patent don't get so damn close to being approved before we can jump on it.
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Like a spellchecker? (Score:3, Interesting)
In what way would this differ from a spellchecker, said technology being available since at least the 1970s?
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In what way is this the same as a spellchecker? The word "predictive" is kinda relevant.
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command completion? (Score:2)
If I read this correctly (Score:2, Insightful)
Par for the course....
yawn
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I went to the company's website and watched their demo, it doesn't appear that their product is simply auto-completion. It seems to be context-sensitive completion and I suspect that plays an important role in what they're claiming.
Maybe it is a stupidly obvious patent and maybe it isn't. Reading a few opinions about
bad links (Score:5, Insightful)
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Supermarket coupons. (Score:2)
I've been getting these coupons since the early 90s.
We should be able to sue this coupon for "wasting taxpayer dollars" similar to how you can be fined for pulling a fire alarm as a prank.
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When I check out at my local grocery store, I've consistently received coupons for "similar products that I might like" since the 80s. Buy Ben n Jerry's ice cream? Get a coupon for Breyers. Something is predicting I might like another brand of ice cream.
I've been getting these coupons since the early 90s.
Yeah, those sure are annoying. Good thing prediction has been patented. Maybe spammers will have to stop predicting that I want "my sexual life more different and easier!", or I'll "impress my girl with a WonderCum!"
Cell Phones... gadgets... (Score:4, Insightful)
Cell phone input (T9 & iTap circa 1995)
PDA writing interfaces (Newton?)
Shell command line completion. (bash, ksh)
Visual Studio 6...
Emacs
Windows 3.1 tablet edition
Automatic spell checking correction ( MS word 95, possibly before)
I'm sure there's tons more here... but wiring a dictionary up to an input is obvious prior art, no matter how you spin it.
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PDA writing interfaces (Newton?)
Shell command line completion. (bash, ksh)
Visual Studio 6...
Emacs
Windows 3.1 tablet edition
Automatic spell checking correction ( MS word 95, possibly before)
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various completion features were added.
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Definitely LONG before. When I was in my teens (and that was 30 years ago) my father was a COBOL programmer on UNIVAC machines. I remember that he boasted that he had shortened the time needed for typing long programs because he had abbreviations automatically expanded into their long form, as he typed. Haven't got a clue whether he had made that himself or whether it was a standard feature of the editor used.
FEPs (IMEs) (Score:2)
Such predictive systems were on most computers in Japan in the 1980s. They were known then as Front End Processors, renamed to Input Method Editors (to be different?) in the 1990s by Microsoft. The better ones (ATOK) could lead you along as you typed in Japanese for the correct Kanji choice for the Hiragana (pronunciation alphabet) entered.
Any engineer who'd spent time in Japan (typing in Japanese) in the 1980s could have brought this idea back with them for entering English. The need just didn't arise
T9 (Score:2)
Should count as prior art and is widely known.
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This is OLD (Score:3, Informative)
The big issue (Score:2)
IntelliSense pre-2000 isn't infringing, but 2000 on is? How does this make sense?
Prior Art... (Score:2)
LISP DWIM (Do What I Mean) (Score:2)
Folio Views did/does this too (Score:2)
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Prior Art: Shell Autocompletion (Score:2)
Around 1972 (Score:2)
around 1972. I can't find it at the moment.
Predictive INPUT not Predictive TEXT (Score:4, Informative)
(Not entirely sure that its all that much more useful than the standard predictive text stuff that I've already seen or used, but that is not the point.)
Timeline! (Score:2)
Prior art from 1969 (Score:2)
Command line completion has been around since 1969 on the PDP-10, in TENEX [wikipedia.org].
To show how broad these patents could get, many data compression algorithms are based on prediction. LZ78 (from 1978) seems especially similar, as it generates a dictionary (of words, in a sense) from data it has seen, to predict what is coming next. Might that be prior art? Statistics, too, has much from decades and even centuries ago that could be prior art. Bayesian probability, Markov processes... It would be incredible if
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Something predictive would be like the Omron Wnn Japanese input processor which will offer you first the most commonly used completion for the sequence you've just typed. Wnn must be prior art, it was extremely clever because it kept track of what you've typed and selected before and as it learned it got pretty good at offering you first what you wanted to type. Something like the T9 dictionary input m