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Comments on: Supreme Court hears eBay's patent appeal

Some justices joke that patent related to "Buy it Now" feature in online auctions is too vague to be taken seriously.

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wow
by Bill Dautrive March 29, 2006 1:59 PM PST
Sense from the justices? Of course all software patents need to be invalidated, which will likely never happen, to the detriment of everyone, even those abusing software patents. Copyright is all software needs.
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Breath of fresh air
by Jackson Cracker March 29, 2006 2:17 PM PST
Some of these justices sound like they actually have a clue about the
current silly state of the patent system.

But unfortunately, as the article notes, this particular case is about
a narrow issue of how and when injunctions can be imposed, and may not
even get into the issue of whether this patent is any good to begin with.
Patent life spans...
by Heebee Jeebies March 29, 2006 4:19 PM PST
Besides the fact that the patent office seems willing to allow any one to patent anything including how one picks their noses or how a knat farts the other issue that needs to be dealt with is the length of time something can be patented. A patent should only be good for 10 years. Once that time expires it is open for anyone to use at no charge.

But, the copyrights should work the same way. They should be good for 20 years and then it goes in to the public domain.

Both of these things would keep inovation alive instead allowing companies and people to keep milking the same old dead rotting cow.

But, then greed and stupidity always wins out when you deal with business, government and lawyers.

Robert
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What's patentable about "virtual"?
by hadaso March 30, 2006 12:11 AM PST
The patent in question includes the word "virtual". Does that make it new? Does removing the "virtual" or "automatic" ascpect from the patent description make it something that existed before? If so, patent should not have been granted.

Turing proved in 1936 that any process that can be described can be automated on a "universal computer". If an existing process (perhaps allowing a buyer in an auction, not an online one, to buy the same product for a fixed price) is implemented using a computer, the result should not be granted a patent, since the "added" element of automation using a general purpose computer is trivial: it is well known that a general purpose computer can be used to automate any process. It was the reason computers were invented (the discovery that a universal computer is possible and can actually be built and told to do anything that can be described using language), and no one should be granted exclusive rights on applying this well known fact in particular settings. Any computer "expert" knows that a general purpose computer with appropriate software can replace any component that acts on input in a well defined way. This is standard practice nowadays.

So any patent that refers to implementation of anything using a computer should be subject to this kind of check: does the same thing or similar thing existed before without the general purpose computer element? If so patent should not be granted!
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The parmaceuticals are shooting their own feet
by hadaso March 30, 2006 12:43 AM PST
BY comparing the development of new drugs or any other invention process that requires extensive research and real innovation with the mere trivial automation of well known processes using computers the parmaceuticals are shooting their own feet!!!
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A&P did patent a supermarket
by fgoldstein March 31, 2006 5:36 AM PST
Funny comment from the bench... but IIRC, A&P did originally patent the supermarket. Trouble is, as I have heard it told, their patent had the aisles connected at alternate ends, so you had to walk the entire length back and forth in order to get through it. Competitors left the ends of the aisles open so you could walk around freely, thus avoiding the patent, and having a better store at the same time.
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