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Google Patents Browser Highlight All Button

An anonymous reader writes "Google has picked up another patent on a technology that you might think basic to the web: the highlight all button for searches in browsers. The patent will backdate to 1999 and presents an interesting problem for such software as the Firefox browser and FeedDemon RSS reader. And, in an interesting twist, Microsoft uses a similar mechanism in Windows Explorer. But Microsoft itself said that browser technology can't be separated from the operating system. Does that mean the company owes a royalty to Google for all those copies of Windows?"

9 of 150 comments (clear)

  1. Seriously by TheL0ser · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Can we just find every single patent that mentions "on a computer" or "in a browser" and have a bonfire?

    1. Re:Seriously by SpaceLifeForm · · Score: 4, Funny

      That should be easy. They are all 'Hightlighted'.

      --
      You are being MICROattacked, from various angles, in a SOFT manner.
  2. What a Mess.... by Haedrian · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Wasn't there ever a clause in patents SOMEWHERE, which said you couldn't patent something which an 'average expert in the field' could come up with?

    Because there are quite a few 5 year olds who could have thought this up.

    1. Re:What a Mess.... by Sonny+Yatsen · · Score: 4, Insightful

      That'd be the "Person of Ordinary Skill in the Art" standard for obviousness. Of course, that standard is applied to a POSITA at the time of invention (i.e. 1999) rather than a POSITA today.

      --
      My postings are informational and does not constitute legal advice. Act on it at your risk.
  3. Re:Does that mean the company owes a royalty to Go by Garridan · · Score: 5, Informative

    No, it means y'all need to read the fucking patent. It doesn't patent anything going on in the browser. It patents the feature in Google search where it alters the document to highlight certain words, and then pass that modified document back to the client.

  4. Re:In particular, by Meshach · · Score: 3, Informative

    it is high-lighting all terms in all documents received from an internet search. How is that the same as a "highlight all button?" Whatever the case, highlighted searches have existed for a while, so why should this be patentable just because they batch the highlighting to all search results in a "network search"?

    What this patent actually is for (from my reading) is a system that highlights the search terms in every page that a user loads. So if I am on the NYT and I do a page search (ctrl-f) for "Julian Assange" it will highlight all the occurrences. The patent is for the notion that when I transfer to the Washington Post all the instances of "Julian Assange" will be highlighted in the new page.

    Still pretty weak but not the head slapping obvious it initially looks like.

    --
    "Maybe this world is another planet's hell"
    Aldous Huxley
  5. Re:Microsoft by Ark42 · · Score: 5, Informative

    Windows 98 (but not 95 or 95 OSR2) has this feature in the system Help (winhelp.exe). I have every old version of Windows in VMware, in their default install state with auto-revert.
    Just load a fresh Win98 install, press F1, and go to the Search tab. Whatever you search for is highlighted in blue in the help topic that appears on the right side.
    The Options button at the top can disable this if you select "Highlighting Off" and you can turn it back on by selecting "Highlighting On"
    winhelp.exe is dated May 11, 1998. Must be prior art.

  6. Re:Does that mean the company owes a royalty to Go by Sarten-X · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Claim 1:

    ...provide a tool bar within a web browser application window, the tool bar including a button, for activating a highlighting operation...

    Yep, they're patenting a browser feature. Three slight variations (claims 1, 7, 12), but all browser features.

    It appears they're patenting a browser button that will highlight the things you searched for, in any page. I don't use Google Toolbar, but it appears to be already implemented.

    With no browser additions, the user has to search for something with Google, go to a page, then open find and search for the exact same terms to find where the relevant information is on the page. With this patented idea implemented, one only has to search for pages, go to one, then click a single button to go to the information on the page.

    The summary is, as usual, misleading. To my knowledge, Windows itself has no such feature, nor any other program I've seen for that matter.

    --
    You do not have a moral or legal right to do absolutely anything you want.
  7. Re:Microsoft by Scootin159 · · Score: 3, Funny

    But Google is patenting them in YELLOW, Microsoft did it in BLUE. Clearly not the same thing.