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Amazon Seeks Web Services Patent

theodp writes "CNET reports on Amazon.com's latest attempt to make inroads into consumers' wallets, a patent-pending online marketplace where consumers search and pay for Web services. The patent application describes a world in which Amazon collects fees from Web Service Providers who charge $500/month for AAA Street Maps, $200/month for driving directions, and $0.01/use for weather and human genome maps." From the article: "Amazon also notes its marketplace technology seeks to address the lack of easy-to-use methods for collecting consumers' Web services payments, as well as to provide Web services companies with ways to manage and monitor their offerings. In its role as an intermediary for the marketplace, Amazon would collect a fee from companies providing the service."

7 of 178 comments (clear)

  1. This is insanity by Winckle · · Score: 4, Insightful

    How the hell can you patent the ability to charge money in exchange for services!
    Surely thats equivelent to patenting capitalism!

  2. It's the classic tactic... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    perfected by generations of record company executives and book publishers: stick yourself between the money and the talent.

  3. EPIC 2014 by USSJoin · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You know, every time I read something along the lines "Amazon Does Something That Slashdot Users Are Going to Hate," I think of the EPIC 2014 flash, talking about Amazon and Google merging to control the 'net. Yeah, yeah, bad patents, etc.-- but the real question is, who else will do this work? Who else is going to handle the e-business for those too lazy to do it themselves? They have a valid point, that businesses want someone else to do collection and authentication.

    And, of course, they aren't making some kind of patent requiring exclusivity. So anybody who *does* want to do it themselves, still can.

    So, my question to /.: Do we actually resent companies who do things well, doing them? If not, then what's our collective problem?

  4. Hmmm... by le_jfs · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Let's divide the world in two halves:
    - United Patent States of Amerika: formerly know as the land of the free
    - Rest of the World (tm): where every free-seeking developper, webmaster, etc will eventually go.

    Although I'll probably be modded flamebait for this post, let's check in 5 years if the USA can still cope with the current system that eats liberties, innovation and more ...

    Ah, yes, one more thing: I wish you good luck.

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  5. The Real Jeff Bezos? by grumpygrodyguy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The patent application describes a world in which Amazon collects fees from Web Service Providers who charge $500/month for AAA Street Maps, $200/month for driving directions, and $0.01/use for weather and human genome maps.

    I've always thought of Jeff Bezos as some kind of Robin Hood. A guy that doesn't care about money so much as creating great services and technologies and bringing them to the world. Bear with me...but it occurs to me that if someone truly hated the current software patent norm and they had a lot of money, they could simply apply for every software patent they could think of and lock the patents up and throw away the proverbial key.

    So I guess my question is, is there any reason to give Jeff Bezos the benefit of the doubt here? Is it possible, however improbable, that's he's applying for these seemingly absurd patents as a means of keeping the internet alive by not enforcing his patents?

    --
    The government has a defect: it's potentially democratic. Corporations have no defect: they're pure tyrannies. -Chomsky
  6. Re:Online Yellow Pages? by aftermath09 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I totally agree. At their core, web services are a common protocol (eg. SOAP) that allow disparate systems to communicate. As far as discoverable services, have the lawyers checked out http://www.uddi.org? in addition, servers such as juddi from apache (and many others) already implement this protocol.

    Ultimately though, isn't having "discoverable" services very similar to things like jndi, ldap, and even DNS? what, is amazon gonna patent these as well?!

    I hope my American counterparts put an end to this silliness. Surely, Amazon wasn't the first to come up with these ideas, so taking credit for it and being rewarded monetarily seems ridiculous. Monetary reward for a good idea is what a patent is for isn't it?

  7. That is not why Amazon piss me off by tod_miller · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Amazon have pissed in the face of Tim Berners Lee (www.w3.org/People/Berners-Lee/), and every engineer since 1950, who have worked to develop technology that supports the Amazon way of life.

    Amazon only exists because of the work of 100,000 people, NONE OF WHOM work at Amazon.

    I know someone who works at Amazon, he does Perl coding. I don't see Amazon patenting Perl stuff.

    All their credit cards, internet, protocols, databases, are all other peoples work. And now this.

    WEB SERVICES WERE NOT INVENTED OR ENVISAGED BY AMAZON - they are once again stealing other peoples work, and just saying, well, we use them, so lets patent them.

    They are steaking peoples work, and the f*ckers should be flogged, I have said it before and I wil say it again, Amazon are so f*cking arrogant to do this, they just take take take take take. Language? F*ck yeah, they can piss off.

    You know, I bought a shed load of stuff off Amazon, I mean lots, $2500 in about 8 months, which is fairly good. I spend about the same at an online travel company. They have been good to me, so I still use them, Amazon have no pissed me off. Guess what, in the next 8 months, 0 for them.

    So what they make more money than then entire readership of slashdot does in a week in about an hour of trading.

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