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- Path: sparky!uunet!ogicse!das-news.harvard.edu!spdcc!eli
- From: eli@spdcc.com (Steve Elias)
- Newsgroups: comp.dcom.fax
- Subject: more about faxback patent
- Message-ID: <1992Nov15.202836.7026@spdcc.com>
- Date: 15 Nov 92 20:28:36 GMT
- Article-I.D.: spdcc.1992Nov15.202836.7026
- Organization: S.P. Dyer Computer Consulting, Cambridge MA
- Lines: 179
-
- ! From: sl@wimsey.bc.ca (Stuart Lynne)
- ! And your opinion is definitely wanted. After all your name is on the patent
- ! (Invoice and Payment Check, Steve Elias (Programmer), "Exhibit D".)
- ! You were there. You presumably have some idea of what Brooktrout was
- ! doing.
-
- thank you!
- yes, i was involved in the project since its inception, years before
- it was patented, as well as with doing the prototype... about 90% of
- the code in the prototype was code i wrote. i am biased and i
- own Brooktrout stock and i'm friends with many people there.
-
- i now have brooktrout's press release from last month but will not
- post it until someone posts the FRIA one first, or unless i get a copy
- of it so i can post both of em.
-
- to clear up possible misconception, i am NOT the Steve Elias
- who writes books on intellectual property for Nolo Press,
- though i'd like to read his book sometime!
-
- ! !first, the below uses one phone line. the patented system
- ! !uses two, one for voice, one for fax only.
- !
- ! This is not clear.
-
- dude, i think the patent makes this very clear.
- two phone lines. it's shown on every diagram in there.
- our prototype had two lines.
-
- ! Especially in the summary. Where it specifically
- ! says that the user and recipient can be the same.
-
- this statement has nothing to do with the # of phone lines though.
-
- ! The claims section
- ! does specify a separate call for the commands and the delivery.
- ! But it does not address how the messages are input into the database.
-
- it does say that the faxes are *already in the database* before
- the user calls, and that the user can select from multiple faxes.
-
- ! The Globefax implementation does use two phone lines. One for voice/fax
-
- ok, but it doesn't allow user to select from multiple prestored faxes!
- aaaagh! ;)
-
- ! to input commands and messages. The second for fax to perform
- ! the delivery. This is a superset of the Brooktrout patent model.
- ! Not a different model.
-
- i think it's different, neither a subset nor superset.
-
- ! !second, the patent does not cover all fax store and forward.
- ! !it covers dtmf-directed retrieval of a *prestored* fax.
- ! !how the fax got there is actually not relevant, but it
- ! !has to be on the "system" before the user dials in.
- !
- ! The claims section says that the patent covers causing a selected
- ! message to be sent. And that the message is stored. In the Globefax
- ! implementation this is done. The fax is stored and forwarded in
- ! accordance to DTMF encoded commands.
-
- if you wanna talk generally, sure the globefax or whateverfax alleged
- prior art sounds very similar! however, patents are really specific
- thangs and "loose" or "general" interprations aren't valid. (my opinion)
-
- ! !fairly close, i do admit. i don't know what a court would say,
- ! !though in my opinion if FRIA's alleged prior alleged art is
- ! !no stronger than the below, i bet the patent will stand.
- !
- ! What you are saying is that the Brooktrout patent covers:
- !
- ! 1) user selecting destination via DTMF
- ! 2) user selecting pre-stored document via DTMF
- ! 3) system forwards stored document to recipient via another
- ! phone line
- !
- ! prior art demonstrates:
- !
- ! 1) user selecting destination via DTMF
- ! 2) user uploading document which is stored
- ! 3) system forwards stored document to recipient via another
- ! phone line
-
- yes!
-
- my bet is that the Globefax thang is different enough that nobody
- wants to waste legal time fighting the patent if all they have is
- Globefax-ish. if FRIA is using Globefax in their legal fight,
- i really am not worried about patent court! bring em on!
- who knows, i could be in for a surprise. naaaaaaaaah.
-
- ! Part's 1 and 3 are the same. Number 2 is different. But the end result in
- ! both cases is the system has an indentifiable message stored in it's
- ! internal database that it knows it has to forward.
-
- sure, like you point out, some is the same, some is different.
-
- ! You say the difference is new and wonderful and different and is all that
- ! the patent covers.
-
- yes indeed! i think it was new enough and wonderful enough that we
- patented it. where we were coming from was the idea of complete voice
- mail and computerfax integration, an idea that is just recently
- getting some attention from the marketplace.
-
- nobody was interested in any of these fax products/ideas back in the
- mid-80s. fax was a tiny niche and computerfax products would not sell
- for beans. Brooktrout started making fax boards anyway, a gamble.
- shortly after i left Brooktrout in 87, they decided to patent the
- faxback idea since the market wasn't interested in it yet. i did some
- glue code to them do this, they gave me a check, that's the Exhibit D
- on the patent.
-
- ! I say that it is not new and wonderful or all that different and is not all
- ! the patent say's it covers.
-
- well, it seems to me that you are giving a broad reading to the patent
- and as far as i know, patents should be read "narrowly".
- my legal basis here is minimal and amateur, i admit.
-
- ! !the above 3 lines is the abstract of the patent, but if you read
- ! !the rest of the patent you will see that it does not cover
- ! !all types of dtmf/fax/voice products, only the dtmf-driven faxback of
- ! !previously stored documents.
- !
- ! It does cover that. I think it covers more. I don't see any mention in
- ! the patent about how or when the documents are entered into the database.
-
- i do -- they are in the database before the user dials in.
- before is a way to specify "when". how is not specified, i agree.
-
- ! Only that they are stored and then delivered. In fact claim 1 specifically
- ! just says "storing, at the first location, messages including the selected
- ! messages". The Globefax system stores the fax's to be delivered until
- ! they are delivered. So it would be covered by this claim.
-
- i disagree.
-
- each reader can make up his/her own mind on this.
- if you believe it strongly enough, talk to the FRIA people
- and ask if they would add this Globefax stuff to their case!
-
- ! There is no
- ! mention in the claims section of databases. Just this nebulous concept
- ! of messages be stored. That covers a lot of ground. There is no mention
- ! in the claims section of how the messages are put into the database.
-
- agree!
-
- ! Another of their claims (2) covers sending the same prestored message
- ! to multiple remote recipients. I didn't type in that part of the Globfax
- ! document. But they also support that feature. Instead of specifying a phone
- ! number a "minicode" or "group address list number" can be used to specify
- ! the recipients. Again a direct example of prior art that demonstrates
- ! exactly what is claimed.
-
- to me, some of it is the clearly the same and some is clearly different.
-
- ! Of course it may be that Brooktrout is attempting to limit their
- ! interpretation of the patent. Hoping that at least that a smaller
- ! portion of it will be defensible. I think it was drafted to broadly.
-
- to my knowledge (a good amount), neither myself nor brooktrout nor
- the patent office nor the patent court has changed their
- interpretation of the patent, ever. i believe the intent was to be
- as specific as possible from the start! that's what patents are about!
-
- /eli
-
- ps -- i will gladly honor posted or emailed requests to "take it to
- email" if they exceed requests to keep posting on this subject.
-
-
-
-
-
- --
- /* eli@spdcc.com */
-