Location Based Advertising Patents Up For Auction
from the think-anyone-might-want-those? dept
Xybernaut, the wearable computing firm that has been around for ages, but never got around to selling many products... and eventually faced serious problems (and then bankruptcy) after it came out that its execs were using company funds for personal expenses, has apparently decided its latest best bet to survive is to sell off some of its patent portfolio. In the past, we'd already noted that some of Xybernaut's patents not only seemed way too broad and obvious but had some fairly well-known prior art: such as the Star Trek communicator device. The latest patents that they're selling off focus on location based advertising, which they may have timed right for an auction. There's obviously been a lot of attention in that space lately, with Google's recent plans to offer location-based ad-supported WiFi. However, when you look at the actual patents involved, they again seem extremely broad and obvious. There were plenty of people talking about the concept of location based advertising when this particular patent was filed. For a while, you couldn't go to a single wireless trade show without hearing people predict that the day was coming when you'd walk by a McDonald's and receive a McDonald's coupon on your phone (as bad an idea as that is...). The patent in question doesn't really describe anything new or innovative with regards to that. It just describes that basic concept -- which was widely discussed at the time. And, now, someone's going to spend millions on it -- and probably use it to prevent others from actually implementing it (or at least getting others to pay up for implementing this concept that everyone already understood). How does this encourage innovation again?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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Offers a large selection of items such as crates,
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1. Cashing in on other peoples inovation
2. Defending your inovation from people cashing in patents
Sadly, Google or some other entity will have to buy the patent just to protect from #1.
"Defending your inovation from being copied" should be the only reason on that list, but lately it is nowhere to be found.
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Distributions
This whole patent, copyright, and other IP crap is making me look forward to anarchy.
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LBS Not New
Blue tooth offers a form of Location Based Advertising as part of its grand plan. This was proposed quite some time ago.
The people from Lo-Jack or their parent company have patented LBS (read GPS) based services using celular towers for more than 12 years now.
Rockwell Automation and a small bevy of other automation companies have patents sewn up in the LBS arena as well.
Whoever buys the Xybernaut patent will be up for a "Battle Royal" with some other major players in the market. The battle will be over the patent and who actually came up with it first.
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Once again, the problem is...
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hmmm, sounds like congress...
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Re: Distributions
gruss,
tom
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