And Then There Was One: Only One One-Click Patent
from the amazon-keeps-the-ring dept
Last year a company sued Amazon.com, claiming that Amazon's infamous one-click patent actually infringed on their own electronic transaction patent. A court has tossed out the suit, leaving Amazon.com as the one true holder of the one-click patent.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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Am I the only one..
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Re: Am I the only one..
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Re: Am I the only one..
[See who's a butthead and place my order]
*click*
Jeff Bezos is a butthead!
[Place my order]
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well...
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Re: well...
Amazon Sues Barnes & Noble Over One-Click Patent (1999)
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learn correct terminology
talking about patents and not knowing much about them...
First, a patent cannot infringe on somebody else's patent: only product can infringe on a patent, so the patent holder can sue for patent infringement.
There is a procedure called "interference", when two different patent applications claims the same subject matter. But this is all handled by the PTO: they are supposed to determine which patent is valid.
Second, as much as I hate Amazon.com and their patents myself, believe me, 1-click patent is actually a *good* patent when you compare it to a typical patent issued to e.g. MicroShit...
Yes, it is a *good* patent, despite all the hysteria. After all, Tim O'Reily issued an apology to Jeff Bezos for calling a boycott on amazon.com when the prior art search bounty failed to produce anything of importance...
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