Catch up on stories from the past week (and beyond) at the Slashdot story archive

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Google Microsoft Patents Your Rights Online

Google Patents Browser Highlight All Button 150

An anonymous reader writes "Google has picked up another patent on a technology that you might think basic to the web: the highlight all button for searches in browsers. The patent will backdate to 1999 and presents an interesting problem for such software as the Firefox browser and FeedDemon RSS reader. And, in an interesting twist, Microsoft uses a similar mechanism in Windows Explorer. But Microsoft itself said that browser technology can't be separated from the operating system. Does that mean the company owes a royalty to Google for all those copies of Windows?"
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Google Patents Browser Highlight All Button

Comments Filter:
  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 14, 2010 @02:27PM (#34549366)

    ...would be for Google to litigate via this patent to force dissociation of IE from the rest of Windows.

    We all win, with that one; the IE/OS intermingling has caused entirely too many security problems for the Windows OS over the years. ...though, ironically enough, that's sort of the same thing that ChromeOS is supposed to accomplish, isn't it?

    Umm, no. I wish people would STFU and wake up to 2010. IE7 started to get good, and IE8 was pretty nice. IE9 is on the horizon, and sounding better every day. I remember IE 5.5, and I remember IE6. That's when I started looking at other browsers.

    ChromeOS is supposed to accomplish stealing all your data. What better way to steal all your data than to never let you actually have possession of it? How is relinquishing control of your data a solution to IE6's security problems? Seriously, I want to know.

    Irony would be Microsoft suing Google to disassociate the cloud from the OS. Because isn't that exactly what ChromeOS is: OS/browser/cloud bundle?

    Meh.

  • by Sarten-X ( 1102295 ) on Tuesday December 14, 2010 @03:26PM (#34550428) Homepage

    Claim 1:

    ...provide a tool bar within a web browser application window, the tool bar including a button, for activating a highlighting operation...

    Yep, they're patenting a browser feature. Three slight variations (claims 1, 7, 12), but all browser features.

    It appears they're patenting a browser button that will highlight the things you searched for, in any page. I don't use Google Toolbar, but it appears [ehow.com] to be already implemented.

    With no browser additions, the user has to search for something with Google, go to a page, then open find and search for the exact same terms to find where the relevant information is on the page. With this patented idea implemented, one only has to search for pages, go to one, then click a single button to go to the information on the page.

    The summary is, as usual, misleading. To my knowledge, Windows itself has no such feature, nor any other program I've seen for that matter.

Intel CPUs are not defective, they just act that way. -- Henry Spencer

Working...