GirlHacker's Random Log

almost daily since 1999

 

While reading through James Gleick’s article on patents for the NY Times Magazine I had a screaming fit. It came when I read this little gem: “Amazon won’t say how many patents it has pending. The one-click patent isn’t its first, as it happens; Jeff Bezos got one in February 1998 for ‘a method and system for securely indicating to a customer one or more credit card numbers that a merchant has on file for the customer when communicating with the customer over a non-secure network.’ The method is this: show the customer only the last few digits of each credit-card number.” The article discusses the concept of “non-obvious”. The fact that this one got through makes me wonder how the term “non-obvious” can be applied when it has everything to do with how naturally creative someone is. When I read patents like those in Amazon’s collection (such as Method and system for placing a purchase order via a communications network) I get the feeling that Bezos said “Let’s just see how many of these we can get through! Heh heh heh.” (articles about him always mention how he laughs a lot.) Gleick’s article gives a fascinating look into the US patent system. I’d like someone to present ideas on what steps are needed to begin an overhaul of the system. (article via metafilter)

Written by ltao

June 6th, 2000 at 2:09 pm

Posted in Uncategorized