US Patent Office Invalidates Apple's "Rubber Banding" Patent
bhagwad writes "The patent that was the cause of so much grief to Samsung in the recently concluded trial with Apple has been tentatively invalidated by the USPTO. The challenge was filed anonymously, but it obviously could have been filed by any smartphone manufacturer. Will this have an effect on further proceedings in the case or perhaps more importantly on the inevitable appeal?"
Signs of life from the USPTO
Seen this on terminals long ago think they were zerox, while it didnt bounce it did behave like it had weight an friction. Oh I forgot "On a Cell Phone"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1CsTH9S79qI&feature=player_detailpage#t=267s
The annoying thing about it is, rubber banding works sometimes, but not always.
The rule seems to be that rubber banding is activated only when the display contains scrollable content.
They should make it behave the same way, regardless of whether the content is scrollable.
Geez... it really gets me irritated, such basic UI concept and they can't even get it right.
If Pandora's box is destined to be opened, *I* want to be the one to open it.
Why can't this crap happening DURING the trial?
Could it be that the USPTO is doing something RIGHT for a change?
Will this have an effect on further proceedings in the case or perhaps more importantly on the inevitable appeal?
Yes.
Why can't the Patent Office do their jobs when reviewing these Bs patents the first time?
Can someone please translate that shit to plain English?
What does the patented "Rubber Banding" do and how important this single invalidation is?
The patent situation has gotten completely out of control. What was once the very capitalist means to inspire and reward creativity is now the very anti-capitalist means to stifle competition and commit lawfare.
The patent system need to be reformed as badly as any government run bureaucracy ever has. It's not just in the US either, these problems are epidemic on a world wide scale. When lawyers become more important in product development than engineers you know the system has reached a crisis point.
So, of course, the USPTO is going to pay for Samsung's lawyer fees, right? ....
Look in HCI this stuff has been done since forever. Academics got really interested in touch technologies in the early 2000s. They've been used spring decay to make "nicer" and more natural interfaces ever since.
Many patents out there are IP theft. They are stealing from public institutions and patenting technology that has been developed in academia.
...doesn't the guy who invalidated the patent know not to upset their #1 customer?
Why would that decision upset IBM?
Money?
Orwell: "In a Time of Universal Deceit, telling the Truth is a Revolutionary Act"
I'm pretty sure some Apply employees already do that..
Don't worry, 'rubber banding' on all mainframes with touchscreen interfaces is still safe...
In it's web browser...try to scroll on a non-scrollable webpage, and the whole screen shifts up somewhat then snaps back into place when you lift your finger.
The USPTO, with these bogus patents, is basically creating value out of nothing. I think the reason the gov't won't touch patent reform with a 10 foot pole is that the US economy doesn't produce anything anymore, and the destruction of this bogus value is the destruction of one of the only things the US produces anymore. Its like they think we can hoodwink the world into believing there's a significant value to 1-click and a stupid rubber band GUI effect. Yes, there's some value to these, but right now its grossly inflated by a few orders of magnitude by our broken patent system.
Just because its said loud enough and repeated by policymakers doesn't make it true. The longer this goes on, the more painful the bubble pop is going to be when someone like China stands their ground.
It's irrelevant. Legal fees are simply the entry fee to the arena. That's the ticket price. The goal of the game is to hamstring your competition. Apple wins even when it loses, because it takes six to nine months for a challenge to a patent to even make a ripple, meanwhile the courts, being forced through lack of meaningful expertise, pretty much give the complainant the power of the state to shut the border to competition until such time as the patent is invalidated.
The patent system has turned the courts into pimps who sell the state's trade powers like expensive whores.
The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
What the linked article doesn't mention, but this one does is that one of the prior art patents that invalidates the "rubber band" patent is owned by the same Apple employee that owns the "rubber band" patent.
That's a key word there...
No point in getting excited about this yet.
Who knows how long it will be, if ever, that they actually follow through with it?
File under 'M' for 'Manic ranting'
Anyone else care to add to the list of misinformation on things Apple and their fans claim Apple invented?
The rectangle.
Unix is user friendly, it's just selective about who its friends are.
Chances are that it was rejected the first time. And the second time. And the third time...
You see, when Apple doesn't get a patent approved, they just change a few words and keep trying. Take for example the '604 patent. It was rejected twice in 2007, three times in 2008, once in 2009, twice in 2010 and once in 2011. (source: http://www.nytimes.com/2012/10/08/technology/patent-wars-among-tech-giants-can-stifle-competition.html?_r=0&pagewanted=all )
Finally it got approved (tenth time is the charm!).
:(){
Yup...
Samsung just adjusted their next quarterly profit estimates up $500 million.
So now they get no Google maps renewal guaranteed, no screens from Samsung for any products, no licensing for anything Samsung owns, serious 4G LTE patent problems, everyone else in the entire industry hates them and it actively trying to destroy them, and they don't even get their 1 billion in all likelihood. Wow, great business strategy there, Apple.
Obviously, Nokia has prior art on anything having to do with cell phones and rubber bands:
http://rtv6blogs.com/rtv6_gm/files/2008/07/cell-phone-rubber-band.jpg
(what was the model number on that phone, anyway? I had one and can't remember)
Shhhh. Apple fanboys are easily confused by too many choices or controls. Besides, it makes life much easier for tech support.
...
...
...
Q: So how do I
Tech Support: Just press the button.
Q: But what about
Tech Support: Press the button.
Q: or
Tech Support: Press the button.
Q: Oh crap, now it's shut down and I've lost all my work!
Tech Support: Don't ever press that button!
If you aren't part of the solution, then there is good money to be made prolonging the problem
.. If Samsung simply removed it? Because I'm using Chrome on Android right now with no effect and I don't miss it. I suspect most things coming from Apple add little value at best.
Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
Universities and independent inventors that do not want to patent (and therefore prevent anybody else from implementing) ideas should not be forced to protect anything
I think you're mistaken. Under the current rules of "first to invent", one may invent but must have filed within one year of the first presentation of that invention/concept in a public forum/journal. Exposing the concept and not having the patent application in place invalidates your patent application if it is not filed within that year. In that case, no one can patent that idea, as it exists as prior art. But since there is not a patent on it, there is no one to enforce that patent and stop people from using that invention.
.
Under the new to be approach in the USA of first to file, being the first to invent and having the log books and documentation to prove that you were the first to invent will have no benefit at all. You have to be the first to file. Thus, if an idiot exposes an idea without getting a patent application in beforehand, too fuckin' bad; someone else can become the first to file and become the official patent holder and patent owner. In this case, a university academic or anyone else who deigns to not want a patent and exposes an idea without patenting it is just a schmuck who didn't take the available money and has put out candy for someone to steal.
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IADNALNAPA (i am definitely not a lawyer, nor a patent attorney), so anyone with real legal-eagle-ness can correct my misunderstanding of the situation.
Do you want to see scroll bars when there's no scrolling content too?
Yes, for two reasons. First, a scroll bar's presence indicates that the content-type is one that can be scrolled should the document become large enough. A persistent vertical scroll bar shows that it is possible to make the document taller than the viewport through ordinary editing actions. Second, the viewport's width shouldn't decrease and cause a reflow if the document's length increases. If a scroll bar steals 1.5em of window width from the viewport when the document is longer than the viewport, I expect it to also occupy 1.5em of the window when the document is shorter than the viewport. I don't expect a wider viewport just because the document is shorter. I seem to remember that classic Mac OS observed this rule: either a particular kind of window always had a scroll bar, or it never did.
If Amazon knows Joe the Consumer will pay $12.99 for an ebook, they'll charge $12.99 for it; if no one buys ebooks from Amazon for $12.99, and OtherRetailer.com starts selling their ebooks for $9.99, Amazon will either drop their prices or lose out completely.
That depends on to what extent the ebooks that OtherRetailer.com sells can substitute for the ebooks that Amazon sells. For example, if Fifty Shades of Grey by E. L. James is exclusive to Amazon, and all you can find elsewhere is Thirty-Five Shades of Grey by J. D. Lyte, people are more likely to pay more for the real thing. It's called "monopolistic competition".
So let's run with your market-based analysis. What is the market value of copies of a work that the copyright owner refuses to sell, such as the film Song of the South or the TV series Spartakus and the Sun Beneath the Sea or the English translation of the video game Mother for NES (called "Earthbound Zero" in the pirate scene)?
The BBC News website appears to be basing its report on Florian.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-20040549
Please encourage them to do some fair and balanced reporting.
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If you want a vision of the future, imagine a boot stamping on your internet connection forever.