Mid-2011, I was driving through the Rocky Mountains in Colorado along a road that would around the outside of a canyon. My GPS told me to take a right turn onto "Route 82d." You know what was off to my right? Nothing. A steep degrade, through a bunch of trees, and ending up in the canyon maybe 50 feet down.
I was so shocked by it that I turned around, drove the route again, and captured it with my phone: link
Bottom line: Don't blindly trust your GPS.
Please remove yourself from the human race
DRM is bad.
What about DRM in a voting machine that restricts the processor from executing any code that's not signed by a trusted source? Or in an ATM? Those scnearios seem indisputably white-hat to me.
I write software patents for a living. (I didn't write this one.) Let me describe how the patent drafting process goes.
A client comes to me with a simple invention - we'd like to do (A), (B), and (C) to achieve result (X). I talk to them at length about what (ABC) is, and what critically sets (ABC) apart from every similar example. I ask questions about how each of (A), (B), and (C) could be varied; what other elements (D), (E), and/or (F) could be added; and whether (ABC) could also be used for results (Y) or (Z).
And when I write up the patent application, EVERYTHING goes in there. (ABC) is described as the base invention, but all of the other material about (D), (E), (F), (X), (Y), and (Z) is also included as optional extensions or uses of (ABC).
Now, here's the critical thing: I haven't fully considered whether (D) is a desirable feature, or whether (Y) is a desirable result. My client doesn't even know, or says, "we don't really intend to implement (D) or do (X)." None of that is relevant. All that matters is: They are all logical, valid extensions of (ABC), so, typically, they all go in. Anything that could make the basic technique more valuable, appear more useful, or might more fully distinguish (ABC) over known techniques is helpful to add to the specification.
I read this patent the same way. The basic invention is: "Use a camera to count and identify people interacting with a device." Now, you can't just stop there - you haven't said what that information might be used for, and the patent office typically rejects applications that look like, "The technique is: Generate some data." So the patent discloses several uses of that information. That doesn't mean that Microsoft has any interest in using that technique - only that it's logically achievable from the basic techniques.
Look, we all agree that technology is neutral, right? For example, DRM has been *used* for lots of obnoxious purposes (including limiting fair-use rights), but the basic technology of DRM is neither good nor bad - it just is. The same principle applies here.
Ah, but many of those ToS'es include terms that are supposed to apply to activities that don't require registration or ordering - e.g., ToS restrictions on copying content to another site, linking to the site without permission, or suing the company due to information presented on the website.
So, coming next: Visitng ANY major site, even anonymously, will present you with a click-through ToS before you get ANYTHING from them. And to ensure that it remains legal and binding (especially as ToS frequently change), the selection will not be persisted in a cookie; you'll have to complete the ToS click-through at the start of every new session with the website.
Ugh. The web is about to become uglier.
The initial impression is that he's describing a computer with a TV-tuner that does X, Y, and Z that are common functions already present in common software packages and/or as built-in OS features.
Every invention is a combination of previously known parts. What makes it an invention is a combination in a new way that provides new advantages. The first airplane was a combination of a known type of engine and some known aerodynamic structures.
Certainly, having video editing software in a TiVo-like device is a desirable feature (a quick Google search turns up a lot of people asking about it around 2006... four years after this patent was filed), and that combination hadn't been made yet. That makes it a patentable invention.
That's what it describes, at any level, so that's all I needed to read.
You're free to assert that "this patent should not have been issued based on my understanding of the prior art." (And then we can have a discussion about what constitutes prior art.)
But you're not free to assert incorrect statements about "what the patent covers," which you gleaned by failing to read the claims. That is factually incorrect, and blatantly disregards how the patent system works. Worse, it's a very common mistake at Slashdot - other people in this very same thread are arguing, "the only thing that matters in the patent is the abstract / brief summary; the claims are irrelevant."
If you really want to criticize a system, you should try to understand its basic operation first. Pretty simple stuff.
> Actually, that's not true. Yes, the claims are used in court. But the full description of the patent, not the claims, are the basis for the PTO's approval or rejection. The claims are simply checked for accuracy -- are they properly descriptive of what's contained in the main body of the patent or not.
That's just horribly wrong. It's practically the exact opposite of reality.
Patent prosecution focuses ALMOST COMPLETELY on the content of the claims - and specifically the independent claims. The entire rest of the patent application - the title, background section, brief summary, detailed description, figures, abstract - exist primarily to support the claims (in addition to a few other minimal requirements - the written description requirement, the enablement requirement, and the "best mode" requirement).
I talk to examiners at the Patent & Trademark Office several times a week. In most cases, our conversation is ONLY about the claims. And in many cases, I feel quite certain that the examiner has only read the claims - the examiner often has ignored or misunderstood the invention and the field of art. I have to explain the invention to them by reiterating the content of the specification, because they didn't read it; they just read the claims. And that's because the claims are really all that matters in the patent.
No, you can't. You have to read the claims. The summary section has nothing to do with the scope of the patent, and is often very different from the claims. Many patents don't even HAVE a summary section, because it's not required.
If you HAD read the claims, you'd have come across this: "wherein the system controller module provides a user-selectable option of editing one or more sections of the one or more video files..." Does your TiVo allow you to edit sections of video files? No? If so, then the patent isn't "essentially a TiVo."
The takeaway message from this hopefully humbling experience is simple: FOR THE LOVE OF GOD, READ THE INDEPENDENT CLAIMS BEFORE YOU JUMP TO ANY CONCLUSION ABOUT WHAT A PATENT COVERS. Don't just read the title, or the abstract, or the background, or PART of the independent claim. READ THE WHOLE INDEPENDENT CLAIM. Slashdotters are horrible about this, and they get these types of patent issues wrong over and over and over again.
>
Couple with that the title "U.S. patent officer." There's no such thing.
Blaise Mouttet is a former patent *examiner* for the U.S. Patent & Trademark Office. The USPTO currently employs over 6,000 patent examiners, each of whom is expected to be of "ordinary skill in the art." There's no indication that this individual's opinion is any more significant than that of any other electrical engineer.
Either it's an error, or the title was sexed up to fabricate an aura of expertise. Can anyone explain why this article made it to the front page of Slashdot?
I doubt that they resent *your* interest in learning about new technology. There's nothing wrong with that in isolation, and it's difficult to imagine your colleagues resenting your enthusiasm by itself.
Also, you mention "nearly all of my coworkers" - that implies many people. In any social conflict of one vs. many, what are the odds that all of the many are wrong?
I'd like to suggest three alternative explanations that seem more plausible:
The bad news is that all of these problems are not simply "their resentment," but real effects of your behavior. The good news is that when your behavior is the problem, the solution is simply changing your behavior. It's fully within your control. You can evaluate the adverse effects of your actions and find alternative behaviors with less adverse effects.
And submarine patents do exist; there's much FUD by MPEG-LA members being spread about the possibility of Vorbis infringing yet unknown patents.
That's not a "submarine patent," which has a very specific meaning in this field.
What you describe is just MPEG-LA spreading FUD. And the standard response here is: "patent app serial numbers or STFU." Either MPEG-LA can point specifically to the applications which (if they actually mature into patents) it believes are being infringed - or it can't, and its accusations of infringement are meritless. It's that simple.
What we really need is compulsory licensing at some percentage of the per head sale price.
Even looking past the obvious question ("How does this point relate at all to anything in this thread?")... compulsory licensing suggestions have a common problem: who establishes the pricing, and based on what data and guidelines?
Usually, what people mean by these suggestions is: "Let's craft a body that's allowed to grant licenses to patented technologies for $cheap!" The problem with all such suggestions is that if you establish a body that (based on applicants' estimations) consistently underprices the value of those licenses, applicants will simply abandon the patent system - and keep their inventions as proprietary trade secrets. No more industry coalitions, no more industry standards like 802.11 and USB and HDMI... every company will make its own protocols, just like back in the 80's. Is that your notion of an ideal computing industry?
Maybe this "World Wide Web" technology will catch on some day.
Ah, but what did Facebook bring us over Geocities and personalized web pages?
And... well, that's about it, really. Other innovations (Facebook apps, in particular) are neither new nor particularly interesting or useful.
In exchange for these features, Facebook has imposed a whole swath of misuses and abuses, including (but hardly limited to):
In short - the social network and information delivery advantages that Facebook offers us are beginning to not be worth the costs that Facebook is extracting as the owner of that social network.
Yes, the author is right - we need a free, open, non-centralized alternative to Facebook.
Of course, it can't be a return to the Geocities model. We do need the advantages of Facebook - discoverability, standardization of information, message delivery, and a clean and easily prepared presentation. But requiring everyone to buy web space, learn HTML or a CMS, and design and deploy their own profiles is just not a viable solution.
So what do we need? I propose the following:
In other words - we can ditch Facebook for a decentralized model. It will be complicated for a while, and compatibility issues will definitely arise - but the end product can easily have all of Facebook's advantages, and many more, with none of its intrusive and abusive practices.
All we need is the motivation. And Facebook is giving it to us with their terrible business choices.
...any patent infringement claims against H.264 must be made known within 6 months of the passage of this law.
I don't think that's what the OP means. Here's what he wrote:
any patents that contribute to an industry-recognized standard were unenforceable in the application of that standard.
I think he means that any patents contributed to an industry standard consortium (like the WiFi Alliance) can't be enforceable. You're suggesting something about patents not contributed to the standards body being enforced against implementations of the technology that are authorized by the standards body. Or something.
Honestly, I'm not entirely sure what either of you mean, or why. And IAAL - in fact, I practice in this area every day.
Is this about making sure that technologies issuing from the standards body are freely available for use by anyone? That's the whole point of the patents owned by the body - to ensure that implementations follow the guidelines of the standards body (particularly about compatibility.) So you're lobbying to allow people to implement standardized technologies in non-compatible ways - i.e., in favor of "embrace, extend, extinguish?" I don't think anyone wants that.
Or maybe you're arguing that if a company has technology and patents verging on the subject matter of an industry standard - e.g., a technology competing with WiFi - but chooses to keep it proprietary, then the company can't assert its patents against implementations issuing from the standards body. That's also a bad idea - should we really force the entire industry onto one standard? Doesn't that deter the advancement of technology through the development of alternative standards that might be better? Bluetooth was first conceived as a potential competitor for WiFi, but it has its own niche and is widely implemented for headsets and such. Under this type of rule change, Bluetooth would have been scrapped as soon as WiFi took hold.
As an aside - the "submarine patents" cited by the author of this post haven't existed for decades, because (1) the patent term calculation was changed to be measured not from the date of issue, but from the date of filing, and (2) most patent applications are published at 18 months.
This is a complex field. It's easy to get confused. But the field suffers from a wide range of folks who don't understand it, and yet still want to "fix" it. Hence, this post, and many like it on Slashdot and elsewhere.
If God had not given us sticky tape, it would have been necessary to invent it.