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Apple Patents "Enforceable" Ad Viewing On Devices

Rexdude writes "Apple has filed a patent that forces users to interact with an ad. FTFA: 'Its distinctive feature is a design that doesn't simply invite a user to pay attention to an ad — it also compels attention. The technology can freeze the device until the user clicks a button or answers a test question to demonstrate that he or she has dutifully noticed the commercial message. Because this technology would be embedded in the innermost core of the device, the ads could appear on the screen at any time, no matter what one is doing.'" We've been following this story for awhile now but it seems to have broken into the mainstream.

16 of 439 comments (clear)

  1. Customer Service : My Screen is Broken by tjstork · · Score: 5, Funny

    Hello Apple? I have a problem with my iPhone. Every time it shows an advertisement, the screen gets smashed. Can you help?

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    1. Re:Customer Service : My Screen is Broken by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      You think that's a problem? Get a load of this.

  2. Nothing new, but I can imagine horrible outcomes.. by KreAture · · Score: 5, Funny

    - This is 911.
    * Help, I am being attacked!
    - Hold on sir, I will <click>

    iPhone:
    Video of security-spray followed by the question "Would this product have helped in your situation?"
    Ansver: Yes

    - <click> Sir, are you still there?
    - Sir?
    - hello?
    * gurgle, gurgle.  (bloody mess on ground...)

  3. Buy a campaign of competitor's product... by SharpFang · · Score: 2, Funny

    Buy a campaign of competitor's product using this technology to advertize it.
    Massive profit.

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  4. Want to bypass the enforceable advertising? by L4t3r4lu5 · · Score: 5, Funny

    There's no app for that.

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  5. Re:Fortunately by Chrisq · · Score: 5, Funny

    If they had any sense they would have patented adverts that don't force user interaction, and thereby force all other companies to make their devices too annoying to use.

  6. Unfortunately some will by Kupfernigk · · Score: 2, Funny

    There is often a psychological gulf between US and UK advertising. Often US advertising is based around insecurity and fear: if you don't buy this you will continue to smell/have bugs grow in your crotch/put off the opposite sex/have your neighbors laugh at you/be unAmerican. One can imagine all too well that a sizeable part of the population, forced to view such ads, will react as desired. It is less likely to work in Europe, where there is far more distrust of corporations and official-sounding messages (partly because of our bad history in the first half of the 20th century.)

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  7. Re:And that sums up neatly... by nih · · Score: 0, Funny

    That's nothing, I'm never going to buy any products from anyone! muhahhahaa!

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    I'm a rabbit startled by the headlights of life :(
  8. That's not forced advertising... by taoye · · Score: 1, Funny

    ...it's just the beginnings of synergy!

  9. Re:What has changed? by TheRaven64 · · Score: 2, Funny

    The editors saw a Microsoft advert when they tried searching Slashdot for dupes and couldn't pass the quiz at the end and so didn't see the dupe.

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  10. n900 by dwater · · Score: 3, Funny

    Does this patent mean Nokia can't use it on the N900 (and successors)? if so, "Good, well done Apple." Tough shit iPhone users though.

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    Max.
  11. 1984 by buback · · Score: 2, Funny

    Maybe THAT's what all those people were doing when that crazy lady threw the sledgehammer through the screen.

  12. Slashdot has a similar system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    We've been following this story for awhile now but it seems to have broken into the mainstream.

    ... many readers of slashdot can't move on without demonstrating that they have dutifully noticed the grammatical error.

  13. Re:Fortunately by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    Hopefully they won't polyester you to click it though.

  14. Re:What has changed? by dzfoo · · Score: 3, Funny

    Interesting use of abbreviations. Why not go all out?

    cld b an inbuilt sstm in/, 2 rpt som imp. FAs, just incaso som ppl miss'em.
    gss they cld calc. the no. of comms. by unq commtrs n stories whc huv lowst r rpsted.

    There.

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    ...Can you save Christmas?
  15. Apple officially adopts Evil(tm) by David+Gerard · · Score: 2, Funny

    After bricking unlocked iPhones, kicking applications off the iPhone store that might even slightly compete with iTunes in the far future and filing a wave of patents on basic well-known computer science as well as some of the most obnoxious ideas for advertising ever invented, Apple Inc. today filed a Form 8-K with the Securities and Exchange Commission declaring that it was openly adopting Evil as a corporate policy.

    “Fuck it,” said Steve Jobs to an audience of soul-mortgaged thralls, “we’re evil. But our stuff is sooo good. You’ll keep taking our abuse. You love it, you worm. Because our stuff is great. It’s shiny and it’s pretty and it’s cool and it works. It’s not like you’ll go back to a Windows Mobile phone. Ha! Ha!”

    Steve Ballmer of Microsoft was incensed at the news. “Our evil is better than anyone’s evil! No-one sweats the details of evil like Microsoft! Where’s your antitrust trial, you polo-necked bozo? We’ve worked hard on our evil! Our Zune’s as evil as an iPod any day! I won’t let my kids use a lesser evil! We’re going to do an ad about that! I’ll be in it! With Jerry Seinfeld! Beat that! Asshole.”

    “Of course, we’re still not evil,” said Sergey Brin of Google. “You can trust us on this. Every bit of data about you, your life and the house you live in is strictly a secret between you and our marketing department. But, hypothetically, if we were evil, it’s not like you’re going to use Windows Live Search. Ha! Ha! I’m sorry, that’s my ‘spreading good cheer’ laugh. Really.”

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