Can Amazon's One-Click Patent (Granted In 1999) Infringe On A Patent Granted In 2004?
from the just-asking dept
Amazon's infamous "one-click" patent has seen plenty of challenges over the years -- mostly unsuccessful. Hell, there was even an entire organization called BountyQuest that was created to help find prior art to bust the patent -- and ended up shutting down when it couldn't find enough prior art to make a difference. More recently, a lone blogger turned up enough prior art to get the Patent Office to re-examine the one-click patent. While that process continues, it looks like Amazon may face a new challenge. According to the Seattle Post-Intelligencer, a company is suing Amazon for patent infringement, claiming that Amazon's one-click ordering system infringes on the company's patent.Here's where things get a bit more interesting. The article does not give a patent number, but does give a basic description of the patent and the year it was issued, which suggests it is this patent on Object-based on-line transaction infrastructure (which was issued to the same company that's suing, though under a different name). Reading through the patent is a chore, as it's even less clear than most patents these days. However, hidden in all the confusing language, it seems to describe a system where a centralized computer system can transfer metadata to another computer, keeping it updated, so that it can be used to automate certain transactions.
Seen that way, you could see where it might run into some overlapping territory with the 1-click patent. Except... Amazon's patent was issued in 1999. This patent was issued in 2004. So, it's difficult to see how how the system invented five years earlier could infringe on the later invention -- though, it's certainly possible Amazon has changed how one-click works during the years, so that the newer system infringes. Alternatively, the newer patent notes that it is a continuation of certain earlier patents -- so perhaps that's how they get around the date issue (though, this sounds an awful lot like the tricks Jerome Lemelson was accused of pulling to update old patents to cover new products on the market, which eventually resulted in his controversial patents being invalidated by the courts). Either way, it would be nice to see more details -- but the initial facts surrounding the case seem to raise a lot more questions than they answer. Here's hoping that Tim Lee over at the Tech Liberation Front will give this patent a thorough review in his weekly software patent review.
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the patent system
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the patent system
What the hell is that all about.
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Re: the patent system
the patent system by Kevin on Aug 9th, 2006 @ 4:51am
Agreed, remember awhile back didn't Ricrosoft patent smileys!
What the hell is that all about.
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2001/01/24/despair_com_trademarks/
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what's next?
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Abuse of the patent system is something I consider an issue. Sue away!! And while Amazon abuses patent law further, I'll be ordering from somewhere else. Doesnt' matter to me who ships the book to me /shrug
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Re: Punished before found guilty
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Patent bloat
Specifically, tech patents need some sort of reveiw board or consortium to distinguish what is exactly a new invention and not just mark-up on technologies that have exsisted but not in so specific a manner as in the so-called patent.
One-click shopping, be for real. One MS goals from the offset was to streamline the UI so it would minimiize the amount of clicks needed to complete a task, wouldn't one-click shopping fall under that umbrella? So how does amazon get the patent? Besides, isn't it just common sense that users would want the least amount of work to fulfill a task? so hiw does amazon get the patent?
Maybe if they were patenting(sp?) a specific process I would understand, but its not the process they patented its the IDEA of one click shopping. Which I don't beleive is a truly novel invention, at least not in this day and age.
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All Losing
Patents are a valuable thing, but in this day and age of hyper info sharing and innovation, I find them becoming almost irrelavent. China and India have no repespect for patents or IP, and they are quickly taking the lead by playing outside the rules.
What are we going to do about it?
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Its not the patent
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As long as....
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global patents.
e.g. set up business in a banana republic and ignore some of the more trivial patents that country doesn't recognise?
as long as you can get your product to the customer, and get your money from them. well its not strictly *your* prblem anymore just how many mouse clicks buying something takes.
I mean have fun enforcing that 1-click patent in a country thats not exactly 100% US friendly. sure it will kill US sales (maybe) but its like allofmp3.com, you can rule it illegal all you like, you don't have the power to enforce it.
patents are not global... and only take effect in countries that recognise them, hence the fuss in the EU over software patents, cus if we decided not to recognise them a huge chunk of business could have moved. I'd say whats the states gunna do about it.. invade? but you never know after all. (last bits a joke btw)
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lookout
;)
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6,757,710
Critically, a patent is the right to exclude others, not a right to practice. That Amazon had a patent on what it was doing is irrelvant to whether that activity was covered by another's patent.
Jerry: for prior art purposes, it isn't the date of the invention, it is the date of the dislosure or the public use / sale (generally). Date of invention only matters in the US if there's more than one inventor claiming the invention as her own.
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One-Crap Patent...
If you go back and look at the patents that Lemelson started with back in the '50s he cearly has no idea of robotics or mechanics.
In a sense it is sort of like he's a fiction writer and he's conjuring up ideas without any solid understand of a working concept.
Jules Vern and Orson Wells would have made a fortune if they patented their ideas via this method!
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Re: One-Crap Patent...
How, exactly, would you have any knowledge of Jerome Lemelson's career during the 1950s? He received more than 600 patents during his career, and licensed numerous patents to companies such as Sony and IBM without resorting to ligitation. Those (relatively) few of us with direct knowledge of his career and his work have a somewhat more balanced view than that professed by a handful of hack reporters and corporate patent lawyers.
Your letter paraphrases, almost verbatim, an AP article on Lemelson published late last year. You cite as fact statements in the story that were made by litigants in Lemelson cases, including the Jules Verne reference. Do you have any original ideas on the subject of patent law or reform of same, or are you simply regurgitating?
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Re: Re: One-Crap Patent...
Yes, I regurgitated some of the information for the sake of this blog.
Truth still remains that Lemelson had a pretty uneventful career and spent most of his time defending his patents...and losing.
He had a penchant for thinking of stuff. So did Edison but for the most part Edison too was pretty much a nobody in any professional sense. Edison did what he did by sheer persistance and not by any stretch of genius. So too did Lemelson.
I'd like to know, please provide explicit examples, what makes Lemelson all that you purport him to be. He was a nobody who abused the system so he could milk money from people when they stepped in his patent traps.
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Re: Re: Re: One-Crap Patent...
"what makes Lemelson all that you purport him to be"
What, exactly, did I purport him to be? I suggest that you re-read my post. I cited the number of patents granted to him (fact - not disputable). I also stated that companies, including IBM and Sony (among others) chose to negotiate and sign license agreements with him and pay royalties. Also fact, and not in dispute. That's essentially what I said.
I did not mention that these patents included the drive mechanism for the Walkman, which Sony sublicensed to nearly every significant electronics company in Asia. Japanese companies knew of Lemelson's work and had considerable respect for him, by most accounts. That's all part of the record of his career, and in both cases (IBM and Sony) the negotiations occurred years - or decades- before the controversy over certain of his patents in the late 1990s that was the motivation for the recent spate of articles written about him.
I also did not mention the extent and diversity of his patents, which is also part of the record - including toys, medical devices, electronics, industrial robots, numerous specific industrial processess, as well as automated warehousing (licensed to Molins, a UK company, in the 1960s, also part of the record). History may judge him to be a "nobody," but I am not sure how you are qualified to judge him as such, unless you have done more than read a sensationalized article on him. Anyone can repeat something they read in the newspaper, but does that make one an authority on a particular subject?
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Re: Re: Re: Re: One-Crap Patent...
Neither of those facts actually says very much about Lemelson's legacy.
If the patents were questionable (as some clearly were), than who cares how many you got.
Secondly, the fact that large companies chose to license them is meaningless. Companies often do that with patents they don't think are valid, knowing the process of litigation or getting a patent invalidated probably outweighs the license fee. That's what has made patent trolling such a lucrative profession these days.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: One-Crap Patent...
The Lemelson/Sony deal was signed in 1972. You probably weren't even born then. The Lemelson/IBM deal was signed in 1980. Lemelson had virtually no financial resources during this early period in his career, and his patent lawyers were of less than little consequence to these companies. If I am not mistaken, the term "patent troll" wasn't even conjured up till the 21st century!
The idea that two major multi-nationals signed deals with an (at that point) unknown inventor to avoid litigation, when American courts during the period were notably hostile to patent claims by independent inventors, is absolutely ridiculous.
You might consider the extent to which your feelings on this subject (I have chosen my words intentionally) have been shaped by a limited number of pretty biased media pieces. There is another side to this story, as is often the case.
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Patents are good, but abused
However, the system is widely abused by all these lawsuits. I think the system needs to be redesigned so that it's much more thorough in establishing exactly what you are patenting. I think the biggest problem is that the documentation on some patents is so vague that it opens the doors for a bazillion pointless lawsuits because of the loose interpretation involved. There needs to be a guideline for accurate documentation, and not only that, there should be regulations involving researching existing patents when filing for new ones so that we don't end up in these "double-up" situations. With all the computer technology available today, such requests are not unreasonable.
Our patent system, like everything else in this world, must learn how to change with the times, or else everything will fall apart and cause a big mess for everybody. And I think that's exactly what's happening now.
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My Patent
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another idea
I think ill retire for now and plan to go back to work in 20 yrs ;)
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