Google Patents Searching Through Multiple Categories At Once
from the this-is-non-obvious? dept
Every week, when new patents are issued, I usually scan through various patents issued to certain companies. Each week, Microsoft usually has somewhere between 40 to 60 new patents. On the other hand, Google has some weeks where they get no patents at all. At most, I think I've seen weeks where Google received three or four new patents. And, of course, to Google's credit, the company has not been aggressive in using its patent portfolio offensively. As far as I know, Google has never sued another company over patents, though there could be cases I do not know about. Yet, that doesn't mean that sometimes a patent issued to the company raises questions. Last week, Google's one patent is for an "interface for a universal search engine." Basically, the company seems to have patented the ability to search through multiple databases at once (say, a web database, a news database and an images database) and present all the results together on a single page.What's unclear to me is how anyone "skilled in the art" could consider this a non-obvious solution. This is (and was) the sort of evolutionary improvement that pretty much anyone in the space would have known was coming to search engines. It hardly seems deserving of a patent. My guess is that Google gets these sorts of patents more for defensive purposes, and probably (hopefully?) isn't likely to sue other companies that do something similar. However, just the fact that Google had to spend time, money and effort in securing such a patent seems like a waste of resources.
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Filed Under: patents, search engine
Companies: google
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Dog pile any one? Metacrawler?
I love Google and all, and I relies this is a defensive thing, but GAWWW!!
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maybe..
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The three inventors and their employer should be located near your work location. Pay them a visit and ask your question. Who knows? Maybe the have some insight that may prove useful.
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If anyone here has evidence of obviousness that was not covered in prosecution and was public prior to December of 2003, then feel free to present your case.
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The technology to search through multiple databases and pull up results on a single page have been around for YEARS, and that isn't what's being patented here (as I can tell from a quick read). It's the way the results are gathered and presented that they're talking about in Claim 1 and further in the Description.
It talks about using a search query to further categorize and present results based on that query rather than having the user manually choose which category to search in. For example if you search for "homes for sale" it might automatically run your search in a "real estate" category. That's the technology in question.
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