"FIG. 4 is a diagram of an exemplary story line 400 according to an implementation consistent with the present invention. In this example, the story line 400 involves aliens that steal a company's logo and includes five animated images 410-450. The animated image 410 represents the beginning of the story and shows an alien spacecraft approaching the company logo. The animated image 420 shows the alien spacecraft landing on the company logo and an alien inspecting the logo. The animated image 430 shows the aliens leaving their spacecraft to further inspect the company logo. The animated image 440 shows the aliens hauling away the company logo with their spacecraft. Finally, the animated image 450 shows the company logo after being deposited on another world by the aliens."
Since this is apparently patentable, I'm actually kind of happy that it's Google that got it.
1) They're not going to actually enforce it because that would damage their image significantly.
2) In the absolute best unicorns-and-rainbows case, I can even see Google using it to demonstrate how ludicrous the patent wars are getting these days. This even makes a little bit of sense, given that the first hundred hits (on bing!) for '"Google sues" patent' are for patent countersuits.
"Power tends to corrupt, and absolute power corrupts absolutely." (c) John Emerich Edward Dalberg Acton
even if current Google will not use this patent immediately, future Google (5 years, 10 years, 15 years, ...) will use ever patent in its pocket to hinder competition.
Or Google gets bought by someone who would like Oracle's use of Sun's patents (although imagining Google being bought out is hard at them moment). Would be nice if there was a way of actively public-domaining patents (so you can use them defensively, but no-one can ever use them offensively. Would be a non-issue if prior art was more reliably a defence (or IMHO non-obviousness was more rigorously enforced)).
(edit: Maybe there is already, IANAL. Like what Manfred does in Charles Stross' Accelerando).
> 1) They're not going to actually enforce it because that would damage their image significantly.
The motto again? They are a public company. They have a silly motto on a wall and laws they must obey. When the two are in conflict with each other which do you think is going to be followed?
I have to say though, if this whole thing has taught me anything it's taught me that every business I make from here on out is going to have some sappy stupid motto. That way, even otherwise intelligent people like are found on HN will give me the benefit of the doubt every time I do something that is in my interests and against everyone else's.
Not the motto so much as how everybody else currently perceives them. It's difficult for them to do something that would overcome their reputation, but if they manage it, that reputation comes right around and bites them in the rear. Suing everybody over something this trivial would do a lot of damage, and the giant reminder they have posted on top of the most visited page on the internet would push it straight into backlash territory.
As a huge public company providing services to consumers, any damages they could conceivably win would be dwarfed by the damage to their public image by doing it (not to mention the high likelihood of the suit failing, countersuits or scrutiny of other areas of their patent portfolio they'd really rather protect)
If I held Google shares I'd actually consider it a breach of their fiduciary duty for Google's management to waste resources and goodwill pursuing a suit over something so trivial.
>any damages they could conceivably win would be dwarfed by the damage to their public image by doing it
Given the things they've already said and done (e.g. the cell thing, "if you've got nothing to hide", the fake china pull out) I don't buy it. They've got enough people to buy into this "Don't do evil" nonsense that even if they did sue someone over this silly patent a million google defenders would pop out and explain why they just had to do it.
I don't think it is cynical, I think its more in line of "Having a zillion patents helps you when Oracle bitch slaps you about your use of Java."
So while I agree that its a silly patent, the idea of patenting as much stuff as possible to defend yourself against silly patents (ammunition for countersuits) is understandable.
It has indeed been granted. According to the USPTO Public PAIR system, the status is "Patented Case", and has a Patent # of 7,912,915 and an issue date of 03-22-2011.
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[ 2.9 ms ] story [ 62.7 ms ] threadGoogle Mars.
1) They're not going to actually enforce it because that would damage their image significantly.
2) In the absolute best unicorns-and-rainbows case, I can even see Google using it to demonstrate how ludicrous the patent wars are getting these days. This even makes a little bit of sense, given that the first hundred hits (on bing!) for '"Google sues" patent' are for patent countersuits.
even if current Google will not use this patent immediately, future Google (5 years, 10 years, 15 years, ...) will use ever patent in its pocket to hinder competition.
(edit: Maybe there is already, IANAL. Like what Manfred does in Charles Stross' Accelerando).
The motto again? They are a public company. They have a silly motto on a wall and laws they must obey. When the two are in conflict with each other which do you think is going to be followed?
I have to say though, if this whole thing has taught me anything it's taught me that every business I make from here on out is going to have some sappy stupid motto. That way, even otherwise intelligent people like are found on HN will give me the benefit of the doubt every time I do something that is in my interests and against everyone else's.
If I held Google shares I'd actually consider it a breach of their fiduciary duty for Google's management to waste resources and goodwill pursuing a suit over something so trivial.
Given the things they've already said and done (e.g. the cell thing, "if you've got nothing to hide", the fake china pull out) I don't buy it. They've got enough people to buy into this "Don't do evil" nonsense that even if they did sue someone over this silly patent a million google defenders would pop out and explain why they just had to do it.
Coca cola used to have a variant of their logo and jingle for adverts at Christmas. There must be stacks of other examples.
codeproject.com have a alien logo that they dress up for special events. (Although admittedly I'd guess Google doodles probably pre-dates this one)
It changes every day and is very elaborate.
So while I agree that its a silly patent, the idea of patenting as much stuff as possible to defend yourself against silly patents (ammunition for countersuits) is understandable.
You can view the status at http://portal.uspto.gov/external/portal/pair