Great Timing: USPTO Gives Amazon Patent For 'Reliable Ratings'
from the that-would-be-an-oops... dept
theodp writes "Do bad patents bring bad karma? Less than 24 hours after a hacker identified as 'Weev' claimed he exploited a feature for reporting inappropriate content to wreak havoc on Amazon's product ratings (Amazon blamed a "glitch"), the USPTO issued Amazon.com a patent for the Automatic Identification of Unreliable User Ratings, an 'invention' which - you guessed it - purportedly prevents Amazon's product ratings from being gamed by providing a feature for reporting inappropriate content ('Section 244 also contains a link 254 to a display (not shown) where customer CCC can report that item review 222 contains scandalous or inappropriate material')."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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Filed Under: patents, ratings, reliability, uspto
Companies: amazon
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wow
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What exactly is the point of this post? Is there something specific in the patent filing that you question? Or, is this just an attempt to criticize the patent system through innuendo?
For as much as you accuse others of relying on straw man arguments, you sure seem to rely on them when it suits your cause.
I think it bears reiterating that I really like this site, and I find the vast majority of your posts to be very thoughtful. However, I really think you do a disservice to people who advocate IP reform (myself included) when you revert to populist attacks with little substance.
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(Seriously gringo, I'm kinda slow and not a native English speaker, what's your problem?)
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Ugh
2) Amazon has acknowledged that the error was human in nature, due to crossed up definitions between different organizations, culminating in a big mistake. The "glitch" excuse, while cheesy, is no longer their line. Again, Techdirt should post the *current* state of news, or at least indicate that more complete info is available now.
3) The Amazon issue clearly had nothing to do with this patent, and theodp's characterization of it as a "bad patent" is totally unsupported either in his writeup or by Techdirt. Maybe it is a bad patent, I don't know. Given how error-filled this whole post is, though, I'm unlikely to assign much credibility to theodp or Techdirt on the subject.
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irony
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Conspiracy theory for the day
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It is entirely relevant if the code embodies the invention described by the patent.
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It was funny... that's all... Based on the timing.
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Re: Ugh
We weren't taking it seriously. This post was just supposed to be funny... Based on the timing, the whole thing was just amusing.
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Maybe they should get one
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