Amazon's Latest Silly Patent: The String At The End Of A URL
from the can-we-patent-being-asleep-at-the-switch? dept
Just as it looks like Amazon may be losing its infamous "one-click" patent (though, there's still an appeals process to wait through), the company may have just received yet another ridiculous patent. As pointed out by Slashdot, Amazon has been granted a patent on adding a search string at the end of a URL, without having to include additional characters like "&q=search+query." This technique, of course, was first seen at Amazon's search subsidiary A9 when it launched. At the time, we thought it was neat, but it hardly seems deserving of a patent. This is clearly not what the patent system was designed to protect. It's for major breakthroughs, not how you happen to set things up. This would be like allowing a restaurant to patent the idea of hanging a menu in the window. It's a nice idea, but what's wrong with letting others do it as well without having to pay up first?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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Changing your own rules again?
And you just said "At the time, we thought it was neat" which would support it was "novel".
But, now you seem to have changed your mind in that it's not enough to be just a novel idea - it has to be a "major breakthrough".
Mike, are you bipolar by any chance?
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ISINDEX
The only way this differs in that ISINDEX gets submitted with the input field after a question mark (which acutally makes sense, you're "asking" for documents that match). I wonder how many old scripts that used ISINDEX actually cared about the question mark and just parsed REQUEST_URI or one of the other variables passed via CGI.
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Re: Changing your own rules again?
"Neat" is hardly novel. And by "truly novel" I meant a breakthrough idea. I don't see how that's inconsistent.
Tell me this: do you really think that one company should have the right to tell other companies how they present search URLs?
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Bipolar Mike
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Re:
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Next They'll Patent 'Prior Art'
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Exactly on the money
Maybe the lawyers are extorting the companies they work for by bringing up every little thing that might damage the company so they can assure themselves of always having a job.
Remember, there are too many lawyers in the U.S. so they have to be creative to stay employed.
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prior art..
Ruby on Rails(uses strings like '/search/blog/name')
mod_rewrite
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Improprietary Art
It turns out the patent was approved in the past week, though it was filed in 2004. Any list of prior art should look to before then.
I would like to become part of any organization to create a thousand points of scorn for many of these technology patents. If anyone knows of such a group or website, I would like to hear about--foolish patent hitlist.
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And unless Wikipedia and all its variants were created after 2004, I THINK THERE MIGHT BE PRIOR ART!
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Prior Art?
This sounds suspiciously like the system described here, only without the emphasis on search...
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Re: prior art..
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