Apple Wins Mobile Patent On Displaying Lists, Documents
walterbyrd writes "Apple yesterday was granted Patent no. 8,223,134 for 'Portable electronic device, method, and graphical user interface for displaying electronic lists and documents.' According to the patent's description, the technology relies upon a touch-screen display and includes both the function for displaying lists and documents, and how they look on a mobile product."
It looks like Apple has controlling shares in the USPO
I don't quite see the business model of filing an idiotically general patent, waiting around, suing someone for using it, spending millions defending it in court, and getting the patent thrown out and paying the competitor's legal fees.
Did they just try to patent UITableView? as an iOS developer, I welcome our brushed-aluminum overlords.
Seriously.
cb_is_cool knows where his towel is.
I think we should have an iPhone and iPad burning party in silicon valley in protest of this crap. This is just ridiculous.
Let the usual parade of Slashdot trolls who haven't read the patent or any other patent begin their tirade.
The fact that we use the term "win" so often when talking about software patents shows how we really need to change how they are handled at the very least. If we could get it to the point were companies earned patents then it wouldn't be so bad.
with all the smart phones, tablets and slates on the market these days, I can finally use the shopping app that's just been sitting there. And all those documents! Now i can finally read them the way they were ment to be read.
Apparently i was doing it wrong before.
But Apple's law firm does, and you nicely described all of the revenue generating functions.
Of course there's a difference between a business model predicated on bringing something of value to society and the business model of a rent seeking parasite that only owes its existence to an unaddressed inefficiency.
intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
There goes my career as a web and mobile app developer.
sysadmins and parents of newborns get the same amount of sleep.
I wrote a GUI on a portable industrial PC with touch screen in 1996 which
displays a list. Isn't this prior art ?
I couldn't see the images in the link above, but this site has them:
http://www.patentlyapple.com/patently-apple/2012/07/apple-wins-another-major-iphone-ios-interface-patent.html
apple didn't make software patents
I always thought to to be patentable, something had to be either new, or a new way of using what's out there. Frankly, I see nothing here that should be patentable.
What gives?
I went through the patent and it sounds like it is very similar to the page preview in applications such as Adobe Acrobat reader where it shows a small page and box showing which part of the document is being displayed. This is also similar to the other tools available online showing pdfs. The only thing that has been added to this patent, or what it seems, is that this is a concentrating on a touch device. This feels like applications on devices such as the MS's tablets are under threat (?) The other thing with this is it keeps talking about a vertical bar, what if the vertical bar is replaced with something else - i.e a vertical box. Would that infringe this patent ?
________ with a touch interface! Patent awarded!
Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
Let's take inventory. IPhone 4s. A minor upgrade. Ipad 3. A minor upgrade, and a downgrade in terms of weight, thickness and battery life. New products. None.
OK, I think I can see the pattern now. Apple plans to milk its existing assets for everything they're worth and has no intention of creating new ones. That would cost money, you see.
Life's a bitch but somebody's gotta do it.
That site is terribly pro-Apple. The article itself sounds like it was written by them.
fucking paper
The Palm Pilot has got to be prior art. It had a touch screen (all be it requiring a stylus).
This is idiotic.
If you actually bother to read the patent, it isn't major at all. The invention being patented is vertical (or horizontal) bars that appear momentarily near the edge of the screen when the document is scrolled. So it's a minor UI innovation that might be useful on devices with very small screens.
What you should be most angry about is that you are paying someone tens of thousands of dollars a year to pump out this garbage so some asshole can sue your company and cause you to lose your job.
I have said it before. It is really time people shoot start shooting those idiots from the USPTO and Apple's legal team. It's just not possible to change the system when the government is totally made up by ex lawyers.
Okay, so your soon-to-be congress-woman candidate gets elected and becomes a real congress-woman
What she agrees to do now?
I mean, what can you expect _anyone_ in the Congress to do, while the USPO is protected by corporations, patent trolls, and the lawyer union?
Muchas Gracias, Señor Edward Snowden !
Actually you're wrong. In the first claim of the patent they explicitly state the following: "and the vertical bar is not a scroll bar;"
Essentially if you have a scroll bar in your implementation, you can't be sued with this patent as it's explicitly stated that it's not a scroll bar.
Also, it was filed in March of this year. It would be pretty damned easy to show prior art or that in fact your own implementation of this existed prior to Apple's filing of their application.
Is this the most idiotic patent awarded to Apple, yet?
The tragedy isn't (just) that Apple had the gull to submit this shite to the USPTO, and it's not just a tragedy that it has been awarded: the other tragic fact is, Apple is actually going to use this shit, to thwart competitors.
"The agriculture ministry is not in charge of Gundam" - Japanese ministry official.
The claims and the description explain what the patent actually is.
However, this is Slashdot, so we'll have countless posts explaining that there are already methods for displaying lists, completely missing the point of the patent and how the patent system works.
No, Apple won't be so much fanboysh. That site is so weird that it's actually detrimental to Apple.
In 2007, Samsung, HTC, Google and all others in the industry didn't have a smartphone with the likes of Apple's iPhone features. They didn't have the solutions that Apple eloquently brought to market to make a smartphone truly smart. Apple carefully and meticulously crafted a full end-to-end smartphone solution.
(italics mine).
That sounds like the words of a priest at mass, no offence intended to priests.
The idea of a patent is to grant a limited-time monopoly in exchange for making a non-trivial technical advance available for licensing. This monopoly is supposed to be on the non-trivial technical advance and nothing else.
The current patent practice grants the same protection for trivial stuff which means you get a limited-time monopoly on the whole technical field, but this time it already expires at the end of a multi-year lawsuit. If you managed to squash your competitor in that time, you have prevented innovation against you.
If the competitor decides not to sue because he cannot afford it, he is at least disadvantaged by having to pay royalties/penalties. If you have enough trivial patents in your portfolio, that may suffice for squashing him as well.
How fondly I remember them from the Ericsson R380 back in 2000. I guess it wasn't patented then because not only was it so freaking obvious, it had been done before with various other PDAs. Still, there's a reality distortion field to combat now, so let's see the epic battle betwixt that and prior art begin!
Can I patent double-clicking for petting? How about dragging?
Why not try to create a better informed electorate?
While you may believe that a "better informed electorate" is the key to solve the problem, I'm telling you this fact:
90% of the human population just-don't-give-a-fuck about 90% of the things that happen around them
All they want is to have an easy life, get laid, and be fed
Most of them just do-not-care-enough to lift their little finger to make any change, unless their livelihood got threatened
Muchas Gracias, Señor Edward Snowden !
Screw the US patent office, it is as relevant as a dowsing stick.
I think the authors are sarcastic/trolling, but Apple users don't notice it.
PlusFive Slashdot reader for Android. Can post comments.
Displays a non-interactive bar to indicate how far through the list you are. Not sure if the specific Apple claims are met, but may be close enough to make it obvious...
As I'm referring to an HTC Desire, the implementation is obviously more than two years old...
Donte Alistair Anderson Roberts - hi son!
Karma: Chameleon
... the application was refused on the ground of lack of inventiveness on 13 July. The decision is open to appeal.
That's the only reason I can come up with that we in the US still allow software patents that are non-obvious. I can't wait until these assholes see the error of their ways and use some common sense in such matters. Unfortunately, I feel that, by the time that occurs, it'll be too late for reasonable reform. Much like the rest of the political sphere, unfortunately.
For someone who care as much as I do about what technology can offer, it's hard not to get depressed. Thank God for cannabis.
FC Closer
Captain Picard says it all http://www.quickmeme.com/meme/3q4z0l/ It's great how a meme can capture a moment like this.
Well, here you go, another idiotic patent which patents something which was already done and done, _but_ - wait for it... - this is for a portable electronic device, yay.
:P (ref:pat.8,223,134). Well, I hope it's the middle one, since you'll only see that one from me, from now on.
I won't even go into this, and don't talk about how the US SW patent system is a joke. So many people at so many places have talked this out already, without any effect whatsoever, that it seems utterly pointless to even start any new discussion about it. Yes, this is giving up from my part, since this seems just another thing that we can't seem to be able to fight.
But at least we all know from now on, that "the object is a finger"
I am putting myself to the fullest possible use, which is all I can think that any conscious entity can ever hope to do.
What the patent seemed to describe was the thin vertical bar which appears when you touch the screen(which represents the vertical location of the current screen) and vanishes the moment you put your fingers off.
An easy way to circumvent this patent is to display the scroll location whether you touch the screen or not. The thin bar may have been a significant display estate on the good old years, but as the display resolution increase, it may be a better idea to display the bar continuously anyway.
Not sure if the patent is actually innovative, though. It seemed to have an awful lot of clauses to avoid an awful lot of prior arts.
No, really,this patent is merely about the new "you only see them when they move" scrollbars of the iPhone (and OS X Lion). Not about "displaying lists on touch screens".
Obvious
Prior Art
Non-unique
Not patentable
The patent clerks have sunk to a new low.
the samsung music player and adobe reader already has this type of event when scrolling or using a list. sooooo. i expect that Samsung will again be sued for already using something that has now had a patent granted, apple are on thin ice with people.... their bubble will go pop soon.
The Gmail app also does the same thing, but I'm not sure how long its done that.
"For every expert, there is an equal and opposite expert"
So this is a patent on hiding a functional scrollbar until the user starts scrolling through the list?
I just checked Google Drive on my Droid and it has this. I see a list of documents, but no scroll bar. When I touch and begin to scroll, a scrollbar appears along with an "up-down" box. If I press on the box and drag it up or down, the list of documents scrolls in that direction. (This is on Android 2.2 as Verizon Wireless apparently doesn't want me upgrading to the latest version of Android.)
Of course, Google Drive is a bit new, but I'm guessing that Drive was just taking advantage of functionality available in Android. At the very least, it shows that Apple's idea wasn't that novel that nobody else would have thought of it.
My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
Apple now gets all lists and documents on a (mobile) screen. And by God, I hope they are able to defend this patent long term.
Don't get me wrong, this might be the stupidest patent I have yet read about. (Admittedly, the bar is high for that.) But Apple doesn't license. I don't see how Android (or anybody else) can exist with this patent in place.
Which will hopefully, finally, force lawmakers to reform the patent system. I think Apple is secretly trying to break the existing patent system. If they weren't, they'd be happy to license like Microsoft. Unlike MS, Apple can compete just fine in a world without software patents. As can Samsung.
If they pull it off, I'll carry a sign to get teh Steve's face on Mt. Rushmore. I think this is one of the bigger issues our our times. Let's just hope Tim can carry Steve's torch..
This certainly can't be true, as what USPO officer has granted this even though it has prior art and isn't anything new. This is only possible if Apple stowed some money toward some poor civil official.. This should not have been given a patent status. what the hell is wrong with those USPO morons who didn't do their job in looking for prior art..
There are good politicians and bad ones. Problem is we have no way of knowing which is which. So the only way to sort it out would be to vote all of them out and start from scratch.
But that opens up another can of worms. If you have a country run by new politicians who have no clue how to govern... we're screwed anyway. So just go out, get plastered, forget your problems. Just whatever you do, don't sober up and you'll be fine.
Wuddooeyeno? IITYWYBMAD? Like nuts? eclecticallyincorrect.com
This discussion is full of "prior art" that appeared long after Apple filed for the original patent. Apple just has to scan these posts and has a nice list of people to sue. Thanks guys.
It used to be if you added "internet" to any old obvious idea you could get a patent. Now you can throw "mobile" in there and any stupid, done a thousand times before, idea becomes patentable again.
-- QED
Has anyone else started seeing much, much more of these sorts of patent related articles in the media recently? I assume that patents have always been an issue, so why the vigorous focus at this point? Hell, I thought that the big 5 movie studios were built because of patents, and that was a hell of a long time ago. So, why are almost all media sources focusing so much on patents and patent trolls? What's the agenda here?
When it comes to computing devices, the smart business model is: control the standard, and the big money will follow. This strategy is working very well for Apple, and Microsoft, and used to work well for IBM.
Another smart business strategy is to "tax" the competition. Microsoft makes more on Android than Google. This is because of a flood of scam patents that Microsoft owns.
MS makes more money on Android than Google, thanks to MS's silly patents.
Taxing the competition also drives up costs for competitors, making your product more competitive.
This is just another total BS patent that should have never been granted.
Apple copies all the time.
how about a toilet bowl instead?
LoB
"Anyone who stands out in the middle of a road looks like roadkill to me." --Linus
Know what tech company files nearly 10 times the number of patents in the areas of UI and what people claim are "obvious" technologies that Apple does? *Samsung*. Good for the goose, good for the gander. This is how every major (and minor) technology company plays the game these days. This isn't Apple's fault, anymore than it's the fault of IBM (huge, huge patent filer), Microsoft, Motorola, HP, Yahoo (also huge number of patents filed every year), Google, Asus or anyone else. I get tired of folks who focus solely on chastising Apple when these sorts of patents get noticed; they seem blinkered to anyone else's insane patents. For fun: take a look at the PatentBolt website and just see some of the "obvious" stuff coming out of tech firms ... Apple is no worse than any of them. A "chameleonic device" that runs different OSes from Google? A laptop with a "built-in stylus" from Toshiba! A hybrid laptop-tablet! Wow! Whatever will these multi-billion dollar tech giants "invent" next!
DaveyJJ
Because the cost of court + legal fees may be exceeded by the revenue of blocking your opponent's product from market at launch, crippling their initial sales, or damaging their reputation.
If company [S] comes out with a product that has new technology and features, but company [A] blocks it at launch for 6 months using a B.S. patent... then company [A] launches their own product with similar tech features, it's completely worth it for them to tie things up in court and even pay out legal fees. It's also terribly anti-competitive, but the courts don't seem to be dealing with that yet.
how the fuck does this shit get a patent? that it only appears when you touch the screen some how makes it magical? the one government institution al qaeda will never destroy is the patent office which seems to be able to single handly ruin the eekonomy.
I hope they have permission to reference U2, King Kong etc in the diagrams - sue sue sue
Apple will soon file a patent for "the use of ones and zeros in a mobile device for the storage of data"
I swear. the USPO has outlived it's usefulness. Ever since Edison decided to rape patent law to monopolize the film industry for many years.
#include <disclaimer.h>
Let it be known henceforth and herafter that 1) using any kind of electronic device to store, process, or display any kind of information, and 2) providing graphical, aural, tactile, or physical controls to manipulate, browse, or otherwise act upon the data are obvious to all skilled in the art and therefore not patentable !
Jesus Fucking Christ...
I'd like to hear what people think should be patent-able? And what is defend-able?
I say patenting something for the sake of patenting it is not enough. I feel that you need to be actively selling a product or service that uses that intellectual property for you to be granted the defend-able patent. If you/your company spent the money/time/resources to invent it, you/your company should reap the rewards. However, if you or your company does not actively sell a product or service that uses that intellectual property, then you should not be able to sue someone else for using/copying it.
Think of a drug company that invests billions developing a new drug to treat some disease. Without intellectual property protection, any drug company could copy the formula and sell it for much less due to no overhead of developing it...what incentive would there be to develop it in the first place if you would go out of business doing it?
slashdot stories contain "lists (of comments) displayed on electronic devices"...
Auto-hiding scroll widgets have been around for ages, on everything from flash-driven text display widgets through video games. Even the 'touch screen' magic does not make this innovative, as touch screen equipped kiosks have been around for a long time as well - just show one of those displaying such a flash widget from the early 2000's and this patent meets its maker.
To be honest it should not even be necessary to point at auto-hiding scrollbars to defuse this patent. In essence it comes down to auto-hiding visual interaction widgets after a period of user inactivity, so all those auto-hiding pointers (from the lowly inverse block cursor in text-based interfaces to the mouse-driven arrows and other shapes in GUIs) should be enough.
Even on a mobile device.
Or on a touch screen.
Or on a combination of both.
Or on the mobile touch-screen-driven rounded cornered internet.
Why has the USPTO not been reined in? Is it all lawyers supporting lawyers supporting lawyers (ad infinitum) or does the political establishment still believe this is the way to further progress in the arts and sciences?
--frank[at]unternet.org
One unfortunate drawback to such a strong, liberal patent system is the plague of overly broad patents that tend to contribute to the growing "patent thicket." Regrettably, the Bilski decision seems to have done little to discourage or limit these.
Because it is further proof that the patent system is not only damaged, but irrepairably broken. This will only speed up it's demise.