Pinch-To-Zoom Apple Patent Rejected By USPTO
freddienumber13 writes "In another patent surprise, a patent application by Apple for pinch-to-zoom has been rejected by the USPTO on the grounds that its claims were either anticipated by previous patents or simply unpatentable. This will be welcome news for Samsung, who back in April asked for a stay of the trial. However, Apple has a short period of time in which they can appeal this finding."
#suddenoutbreakofappledouche
It seems like the USPTO is doing a *slightly* better job of not granting these absurd and frivolous patents. Love to see if they keep up this kind of thing.
YAY!
that's all the text that is needed.
Even made it to the evening chat shows when Samsung lost. I look forward to them now making jokes about Apple abusing the system, or the utter shambles that's the US Patent office. For more lulz, Samsung should buy the original IP holder of pinch to zoom and counter sue Apple for stealing THEIR patents.
Waiting for an amusing sig.
The main reason it was rejected appears to be that its claims were anticipated by patent 7,724,242. But now that patent still covers a pretty wide range of the same things, and is still valid (at least so far).
And if we look at who filed that patent, it's two people whose names appear at the list of Senior Inventors of everyone's favorite litigious organization that doesn't technically hold patents itself...
10 PRINT CHR$(205.5+RND(1)); : GOTO 10
As much as I rag on Apple they should get a refund from the Patent Office, and something for their trouble.
The Patent office should not hand out patents then take them back. It should have never been issued and their fees should at least be refunded. The examiner who granted this as some serious explaining to do.
Seems that the obviousness of using your fingers to reveal more/less of an object is just about as apparent as using a certain gene to tell you if you are at high risk for breast cancer. Let's see how this one shakes out.
Apple seems to be losing much of the gains they made during the initial trial. Not even at appeal yet and already getting patents invalidaded.
Hopefully this is part of a trend, where these ridiculous patents get thrown out, or even better, never granted in the first place.
At least deals could/would be done with the right people instead of Apple fraudulently trying to get the money? Or maybe it's part of MS's plan to weaken the opposition. Then again, don't all the Android makers pay MS for some patent they won't tell us about? Could this be related (as why everyone else hasn't been hit, just Samsung?)
Don't know, it's going to continue to get messier as we go on I'm sure.
But I still want to see Apple sued for infringing on someone else's patent. Which will make for fascinating reporting and highlight how bad the Patent office really is.
Waiting for an amusing sig.
If Apple or any of these other bigCs could patent the letters A to Z, they would.
Any child with Silly Putty would have anticipated the pinch to zoom patent.
The day apple stops innovating and starts spending millions of dollars on lawyers, we know it is inevitable it will go down hill. What I'm surprised though is how fast it comes down. Looking at their slumping market share and the report about 40% drops in their quarterly iphone sales in China are very troubling for the company. I'm not a apple hater but I did short its stock twice in the past and made a few coins. You guess it right, I will be watching their sales very closely in the next few quarters.
How do you know others haven't been hit and settled out of court with a gag order?
For years, Apple adamantly rejected a mouse that needs more than one finger.
Now, they require you to use two fingers to zoom?
Apple, please make up your freakn' mind.
When doing a re-exam they only look at one patent at a time unfortunately. At least now this one can't be weaponized in court.
const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
...in research and development, gone to waste! Now any company can use such marvel of technological achievement, without paying a dime. The world is not fair!
Oh, yeah... that's right... no one. Cause even though there might have been Hollywood movies and demos like diamond touch, no one actually did it in a production device before Apple. yeah this is kinda flame bait, but lets not kid ourselves... microsoft and other touch and tablet tech developers had almost 10 years on apple with the first "tablet" revolution... and NONE of them decided to do this.
Multi-touch screens were the prerequisite, and these were not common on handhelds until the "era of the iphone", so your point is relevant but you are not correct that Apple was the reason for it. And, since Apple didn't invent/patent the multi-touch screen, they might as well patent anything they can think it might be useful for!
"In the example of FIG. 1B, a user 16 has gestured by placing his fingertips on the display surface and moving them in an outwardly separating manner. As discussed in greater detail below, this particular gesture 17 is associated with a zoom-in command. When the computer 126 performs a zoom-in command, it directs the projector to provide 128 a closer, more detailed view of the displayed imagery. "
From the linked patent application http://patft.uspto.gov/netacgi/nph-Parser?Sect1=PTO1&Sect2=HITOFF&d=PALL&p=1&u=%2Fnetahtml%2FPTO%2Fsrchnum.htm&r=1&f=G&l=50&s1=7,724,242.PN.&OS=PN/7,724,242&RS=PN/7,724,242
Worse how many still have to Apple for patents they no longer own due to licensing agreements?
Doesn't matter if they were invalidated if you agreed Apple can sue if you do not pay each month etc.
Next time you pay $699 for a Galaxy 4 S that cost $250 to make be happy you are paying Apple and other millionaires who invested in these rotten companies.
http://saveie6.com/
Cause even though there might have been Hollywood movies and demos like diamond touch no one actually did it in a production device before Apple.
So what? Putting an something into commercial production is not a prerequisite for obtaining a patent, nor is it necessary for demonstrating prior art.
Anticipated, but likely not covered.
Wouldn't stop the trolls from initiating lawsuits if they haven't already, but at least legally they'd be on shaky ground, and would have to settle for far less.
"If a nation expects to be ignorant and free in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be."
People have been pinching penises and watching them zoom for ages.
It doesn't NEED to be done in a production device to be prior art. In fact zero inventions appear in a production device. They ALL appear in prototypes or limited use devices.
None of them did it, because a) the multi-touch haptic functionality had just came down in price b) Apple's #1 achievement was in selling an $800 phone. The market did NOT think that was sustainable.
I'm impressed at how quickly the cool, hip, confident Apple fanboys smugly bragging about every little thing their favoritest company EVAR did came crashing down to desperate, whining crybabies loudly clinging to any shiny plastic silver lining they can get once the very stylish brushed aluminum (or wait, is it all glass this month?) house of cards started falling apart.
SUN had prior art.
I remember back in the 90s SUN having a demo with 2 point zooming.
Giving patents to trolls is better than giving them to big players. That way it's more obvious that the system as it is benefits leeches rather than creators and there will be more pressure on fixing it. (assuming actual tech giants have more political power than IV, which I find likely)
The original IP holder of Pinch to zoom is finger works, an Apple subsidiary.
I'm impressed that that was one sentence.
Just for a couple minutes of your time, you can help stop more bad Software Patents from being granted.
http://patents.stackexchange.com/
If we stop enough of the lazy software patents, a lot of those companies will realize they are simply wasting their money on lawyers and will stop the practice.
meh. apple bought the company that did keyboards that did it and assumed that they pwnor the tech. capacitive multitouch with transparent screens just happened to came along at the same time iphone did.
deciding to do it has little to do with it being technically possible and that has even less to do with it being obvious once you have the sensors.
world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
It just a show off of touch tecnology; "Oh look, we have multi-touch screens!". But I find it annoying to use, you need to use both hands instead of just pressing zoom icons with your thumb.
I better try to pattent the middle finger raised up hand gesture! Just think of how much royalty money I'll get from all those people that use it.
My middle finger.
How can it be a surprise, that such an absurd patent has been rejected?
The surprise was that it was granted, to begin with.
Some signs of intelligent life at the USPTO
Yes, there is previous art for this way before Apple released any touch based device and I am glad someone at the USPTO is doing their homework and reviewing Apple's patent grabs and calling them for what they are.
What should happen is a 3 strikes policy where companies/individuals attempt to constantly patent prior art claims should be banned from submitting any patents for a period of time, pretty much penalized for wasting the patent office resources to deny something that was obvious prior art. If you are going to use patents as a weapon someone needs to impose sanctions on overtly offending parties.
I haven't thought of anything clever to put here, but then again most of you haven't either.