Google Bans Online Anonymity While Patenting It 188
theodp writes "'It's important to use your common name,' Google explains in its Google+ ground rules, 'so that the people you want to connect with can find you.' Using a 'secondary online identity,' the search giant adds, is a big Google+ no-no. 'There are lots of places where you can be anonymous online,' Betanews' Joe Wilcox notes. 'Google+ isn't one of them.' Got it. But if online anonymity is so evil, then what's the deal with Google's newly-awarded patent for Social Computing Personas for Protecting Identity in Online Social Interactions? 'When users reveal their identities on the internet,' Google explained to the USPTO in its patent application, 'it leaves them more vulnerable to stalking, identity theft and harassment.' So what's Google's solution? Providing anonymity to social networking users via an 'alter ego' and/or 'anonymous identity.' So does Google now believe that there's a genuine 'risk of disclosing a user's real identity'? Or is this just a case of Google's left hand not knowing what its right hand is patenting?"
This BANS others from OFFERING anonymity (Score:1, Insightful)
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New Account, Google Bashing... You forgot your Visual Studio plug.
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New Account, Google Bashing... You forgot your Visual Studio plug.
Anonymous account, Google defending...You forgot irony.
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I have already said this but I don't believe in yours or anyone's magical ability to detect puppet accounts. Bayesian matching of styles comes close but I'd have to get the data myself and see your source code before accepting such proofs.
Also I dunno what "New Account" you are talking about, I have seen this Soulskill before (his name reminds me of Castlevania so it sticks) and yes I have seen him bashing Google before although I don't remember VS plugs. Incidentally I only noticed his username because som
The Logic Is Undeniable (Score:1)
Re:This BANS others from OFFERING anonymity (Score:5, Funny)
You cycle through sockpuppet accounts faster than a d&d party through cheetos. Have you tried being less obvious about it, or does your employer not offer you that kind of training?
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Nevertheless, by bashing Google constantly sooner or later he was guaranteed to be right. It's easy to write him off as a shill, but much harder to say anything to his arguments. If Google was patenting defensively, why patent something no other big social networks will use?
Re:This BANS others from OFFERING anonymity (Score:4, Interesting)
Really, you respond with another sockpuppet?
Is google suing over anonymity? Is this article even factual?
Answer to both : no.
If you assume his argument is even remotely valid you've simply started with an invalid premise.
Idiot (Score:2)
Now that was low. Idea, why don't we just decide debates by who has the lowest user id? Google only got their patent today, we don't know yet whether they will use it to sue someone. Also, there's a direct link to the patent, are you questioning the factuality of the USPTO?
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Of course I'm questioning the factuality of the USPTO, except that no part of your comment has anything to do with what you previously said *or* my reply. Try a little harder before you try to strawman a second time.
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However, it was the first concern that popped into my mind.
The second was that it cant be patentable as there is plenty of "pre-existing art".
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Nobody spends the money to get a patent to not use it especially against a competitor. It costs way more money to invalidate a patent with the risks far too high with treble damages for the losing end of that suit. Are you willing to test this patent in court when for a fraction of the cost you can simply license it? It is the licensing these companies are after with the threat of suit behind it.
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There's an inverse relationship between the level of authority you posted with and the level of accuracy of your statements. Defensive patents are extremely commonplace in the industry, and Google has never used a patent non-defensively to date. That is to say, they've only ever counter-sued when sued. You think a few thousand dollars is a big deal to a company like Google? Hell, for Google it's just the cost of the filing fee. Google has their own in-house legal department. They pay their lawyers rega
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Ad hominems are usually a strong indication that the actual message is well worth paying attention to.
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... faster than a d&d party through cheetos. Have you tried being less obvious about it...
By what, consuming something that doesn't stain their neckbeards orange? :p
Re:This BANS others from OFFERING anonymity (Score:5, Insightful)
This prevents nothing from anyone, really. It's only corporations who have to play in the little corner they painted themselves into.
Meanwhile the hacker community, hobbyists and all the netizens boldly go where no man has gone before, regardless of what some lawyer says or thinks they're entitled to!
The patent system has lost its meaning. It's no longer an incentive to create. The single inventor could never afford to patent something, or to defend it in court. The big ones can. Thus patents create artificial barriers of entry and stifle innovation.
Furthermore, patents are now simply legal weapons used to cement monopolies and prevent innovation from disrupting established revenue streams from stagnated giants who output more Powerpoint fluff than actual progress.
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Actually, I think Google is attempting to patent lying.
So now when Billy Hazkzor say "No, Mom, I didn't drop all those cheetos on the carpet, it was my friend Fred" he gets sent to his room and served a summons at the same time.
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Two things;
1.Someone actually uses Google+?
2. I am still Fly N. Eye on my G+. and logon as flyneye.
(oops, someone reminded me that is my legal name, nevermind)
Prior Art (Score:5, Funny)
I claim it.
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Re:Prior Art (Score:4, Insightful)
Prior art: Yahoo lets you create a separate identity and avatar for commenting on news stories. This identity is separate from my real identity which is reserved for sending emails.
Which their deep packet inspection is perfectly capable of monitoring.
Its difficult to be anonymous to the the government, much harder to be anonymous to the corporation.
But given those limits, the corporations could allow us to be anonymous to each other, but whats the point, its corporations and government that have all the power in society.
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Nuh, nuh, nuh bitch, that ain't even yo real name!
Sigh.. (Score:1)
Yes, please, patent something that I've been doing on IRC since the early 90s... go right ahead.
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Ah, but this is different! This is, uhh... on the WEB! Yes, on the web, that makes it totally different, you see.
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The difference here is that Google will insist on knowing who you are, but they will issue you a pre-approved sock puppet when dealing with social media.
On IRC nobody knew Beth14 a Detective with the NYPD Vice Squad.
On Google+, at least Google will know.
Re:Sigh.. (Score:4, Funny)
On IRC nobody knew Beth14 a Detective with the NYPD Vice Squad..
Ah, the heady early days of the Internet, where men were men, so were most of the women, and those horny 14 year old virgins wanting to come out to my house to fuck me stupid were FBI agents wanting a quick and dirty arrest...
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Oh, Google is fine with anonymity... (Score:5, Insightful)
...so long as they alone know who they really are so the data aggregated goes in the right buckets.
Nothing's stopping Google+ from offering a secondary ID you can become, while Google still knows who you are.
Re:Oh, Google is fine with anonymity... (Score:4, Informative)
Nothing's stopping Google+ from offering a secondary ID you can become, while Google still knows who you are.
A brief read of the patent tells me that this is exactly what Google has patented. It's a system in which a single identity can be used to generate anonymous secondary ones. In that case, Google, and anyone able to subpoena them, would know who the anonymous secondary identity is but third parties wouldn't be privy to the link between accounts.
Re:Oh, Google is fine with anonymity... (Score:4, Insightful)
"In that case, Google, and anyone able to subpoena them, would know who the anonymous secondary identity is but third parties wouldn't be privy to the link between accounts."
You don't know what public records are, do you?
Look up the court case. Filings will be made as to proof of the owner of the 'anonymous' identity for purposes of proper serving of subpoenas and warrants for arrests.
Re:Oh, Google is fine with anonymity... (Score:4, Funny)
This way, when you commit a thought crime they know that it's you and not someone who got your password.
Re: while ________ still knows who you are (Score:4, Interesting)
I'm confused. Why doesn't AOL have colossal prior art on this?
They had a Master Account system with subsidiary names. For those who are too young and need to Get Off Your Lawn, it was Dad who had the Master account, and then we young'uns had all the subsidiary names. (Sometimes several per person!) This was fairly important for RP in the Red Dragon Inn, etc. I hadn't gotten into bulletin boards by then, but it still held. But if you got too nasty, one of the Moderators would report you, and it would trickle up the food chain.
So not knowing Patentese, how did poor ol' faded glory AOL not even get a few bucks of licensing rights?
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I'm confused. Why doesn't AOL have colossal prior art on this?
They had a Master Account system with subsidiary names. For those who are too young and need to Get Off Your Lawn, it was Dad who had the Master account, and then we young'uns had all the subsidiary names. (Sometimes several per person!) This was fairly important for RP in the Red Dragon Inn, etc. I hadn't gotten into bulletin boards by then, but it still held. But if you got too nasty, one of the Moderators would report you, and it would trickle up the food chain.
So not knowing Patentese, how did poor ol' faded glory AOL not even get a few bucks of licensing rights?
Oh, I remember the Red Dragon Inn well... I was one of the "hosts" for a few years in the mid-90s. But anyway, here's claim 1 of the patent:
1. A computer-implemented method for generating a plurality of personas for an account of a first user of a social network performed on one or more computing devices, the method comprising:
receiving, using the one or more computing devices, information for the plurality of personas from the first user, wherein the information comprises a name, a representation, and a visibility level for each persona in the plurality of personas;
associating the information for the plurality of personas to the account of the first user;
associating a particular persona of the plurality of personas with a second user on the social network, the second user being distinct from the first user;
receiving a selection of one of the plurality of personas from the first user;
determining, using the one or more computing devices, an appearance of the selected persona based at least in part on the visibility level and representation of the selected persona; and
providing the determined appearance for display.
I've italicized claim elements that I don't remember AOL having. Even if you interpreted the multiple AOL screennames as "a plurality of personas" each having their own "name", there wasn't any sort of representation or visibility level, nor did AOL determine an appearance of the persona based on the visibility level and representation.
So, AOL doesn't anticipate the pa
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I thought that was obvious. Apparently others like to come up with crazy scenarios. This scenario helps their revenue stream while allowing for users to be anonymous on the Internet. Just not anonymous to Google or those government institutions issuing search warrants to Google.
You alter-ego helps define who you really are. So the advertising target is even better than your PC personal profile.
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This scenario helps their revenue stream while allowing for users to be anonymous on the Internet. Just not anonymous to Google or those government institutions issuing search warrants to Google.
So, in other words, it doesn't allow you to be anonymous on the internet.
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Short answer: "It's a risk to give access to your identifying information to people on the internet. Unless it's us."
Re:Oh, Google is fine with anonymity... (Score:5, Insightful)
...so long as they alone know who they really are so the data aggregated goes in the right buckets.
Nothing's stopping Google+ from offering a secondary ID you can become, while Google still knows who you are.
Except for people like me who would leave if we had to interact with "MonkeyFucker-69" and the rest of their ilk. Some of us like the higher level of civility that results from real names.
From my experience, anonymity has little to nothing to do with civility; I used to regularly post commentary on the website of my local (Gannett-owned) newspaper. Recently, they (as required by Gannett) went from an anonymous, PHPbb based system to linking comments to Facebook profiles - they, too, claimed that it would lead to "increased civility." however, this has been anything but the case. Sure, there are less vitriolic comments, but that's not because people are being less uncivil, but rather a side effect of the push for real names driving many, many of the regulars from the site, myself included.
Adjusted for volume, the amount of hatefulness on said newspaper forum hasn't gone down one bit, and I would wager that acts of incivility have increased a fair amount. The only 'advantage' to people being forced to use their real names is that if they piss another person off, that person now knows who's house to firebomb.
Not a feature I would tout.
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Maybe it was because they tried to go from anonymous to Facebook linked. Google+ has required a pseudo-real name from day one, and it has to be said that people do seem to behave much better than average. Better than on Facebook in fact, but I think that is because on Google+ people tend to connect with people they don't know personally but share interests with, as opposed to close friends and family who have already heard their potty mouth down the pub.
Note that G+ doesn't require your "real" name, just a
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I have yet to receive and correspondence from Google regarding adding a "real" name to the account.
Re:Oh, Google is fine with anonymity... (Score:4, Insightful)
>>>Some of us like the higher level of civility that results from real names.
Unfortunately multiple studies have shown using Real names doesn't make conversations more civilized. It just invites more revenge scenarios from those who feel insulted & strike back in real life. So real names actually make things worse.
Anonymity is also important for one's longterm sanity. Nothing sucks more than to have an employee dig-up an old postings from 1990-something and say, "Do you really feel Michael Jackson should have been castrated for his abuse of children? I'm sorry but we can't hire such a vocal person. You would be a liability for our company."
A worse scenario is if the government comes after you because they think you might be a terrorist. "What did you mean when you posted in 1997 that you think Clinton should be shot for raping Monica Lewinsky?" - Remember a guy just recently spent 4 nights in jail for saying things far less damaging on non-anonymous facebook. Anonymity goes as far back as the Founders who posted anonymous flyers in order to avoid arrest by the UK Government. It protects you from blowback from those desirign revenge.
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Except for people like me who would leave if we had to interact with "MonkeyFucker-69" and the rest of their ilk. Some of us like the higher level of civility that results from real names.
You do realize that G+ right now is full of anonymous people, right? The only thing that Google stops (or can stop) is people using anonymous identifiers that don't sound like real names.
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Not much considering your post.
real identity (Score:5, Funny)
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Offtopic but .... (Score:1)
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hahaha ... I totally missed that!
Nothing like breaking news for those too lazy to scroll down the home page.
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How appropriate that you posted the news as a dupe
Exactly why I'm not on Google+ (Score:5, Insightful)
"There are lots of places where you can be anonymous online. Google+ isn't one of them."
Yes, that's why I'm not on Google+ or Facebook.
Youtube (Score:1)
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Why bother when you can (Score:5, Informative)
Ms. Concepcion L. Garcia
1769 Clearview Drive
Centennial, CO 80111
Phone: 303-721-9441
DOB: October 31, 1929
Email Address: ConcepcionLGarcia@teleworm.us
(etc)
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Amazon thinks my US address is Wrigley Field...
Re:1600 Pennsylvania Ave NW (Score:2)
You're an intern at the White House?!
Its you! (Score:2)
This is why we are getting unending stream of FBI agents, bill collectors, and brides abandoned at the altar streaming to out home! Damn you!
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Google didn't really have much in the way of 'real' info for me....the youtube account email address, is not the one used for gmail. They did finally get my real info...from the you
Re:Youtube (Score:4, Insightful)
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Two levels of anonymity (Score:2, Interesting)
There are two basic levels of anonymity. The first is anonymity to others by using an alias. The second is being anonymous to Google, which is harder. (To be anonymous in the second case, you'd need to be behind a different IP than normal.) Google cannot prove anonymity in the second one unless they somehow help you be anonymous to them.
No prior art (Score:1)
Wow, what a great idea! There CANT be any prior art, who would have thought of using an assumed name online!?
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"it's about using different assumed names for different communities, with one central location that knows all"
Yep, I've already got one of those. Me.
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For Google's solution, they claim external anonymity, while still being able to have you track al
Some situations demand anonymity... (Score:2)
And some situations demand clarity.
The main problem is that people use "Act like an ass" as an excuse for using anonymity (or is it the other way around?).
Of course, one person's "Act like an ass" is another person's "Saying what needs to be said".
There is probably no good democratic way to resolve many of these cases one way or the other.
(Ie, having a lot of people being offended doesn't necessarily justify exposing a poster's identity.)
Useful google+ information (Score:5, Informative)
To delete your profile:
Sign in to your Google profile.
Click Edit profile.
Click the About tab.
Click Delete profile and disable Google Buzz completely.
Click Yes, delete my profile and posts.
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That's good advice... for the ten people actually using Google+.
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But Google and maybe others (archive.org) still have your data. :P
Law Enforcement (Score:2)
is it that difficult to figure it out? They will, in theory, offer you some anonymous cloak to protect you're real identity from others, except Google. Google can then provide that information any time any law enforcement or investigative body comes knocking. Nothing more than CYA.
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is it that difficult to figure it out? They will, in theory, offer you some anonymous cloak to protect you're real identity from others, except Google. Google can then provide that information any time any law enforcement or investigative body comes knocking. Nothing more than CYA.
And ad revenue. Can't send you targetted ads if you're anonymous. Hey, corporations pay real money for those ads and they fucking want their money's worth!!
It shouldn't be that difficult. (Score:1)
Sure, require the person's real name, but let them choose whether or not to make it public. If you keep your real name private, you can go by some screen name publicly. Someone searching for you by your real name can offer a connection. If you choose to accept, then your public screen name becomes known to them.
Meh (Score:2)
It's not that difficult: the Google+ folks want real-world info for ad-tracking, while the other systems (YouTube, etc) don't care as long as you're viewing their stuff.
Mr. Al-Zawahiri (Score:2)
There's a distinction. (Score:2)
Anonymous to Google = no way.
Google Does Not Believe (Score:4, Insightful)
So does Google now believe that there's a genuine 'risk of disclosing a user's real identity'? Or is this just a case of Google's left hand not knowing what its right hand is patenting?
Google does not believe. They do not believe in protecting anonymity, nor in advancing reliable identities. Google wants money and power. There was a time when it was reasonable to think that Google believed in things, that they wanted to do good, but those times are gone. Google wants to make money on anonymity because they want to make money, not because they believe free speech depends on anonymity. They want to make money on reliable identities because they want to make money, not because they believe identities should be reliable. They want to make money on being the only one who knows the real identities because they want to make money, not because they believe one company should be the sole authenticator.
Most sufficiently large corporations have no beliefs. "I want as much stuff as I can get" is not a belief. Beliefs are things for which you are willing to make deep sacrifices. When a company sees that the patent system is broken and its public response is that they need to get more aggressive about patents, it is a clear statement that they lack motives outside of acquisitiveness and will-to-power. Avarice is not a belief, it is our default state when we choose not to elevate ourselves above the animals. Google does not believe.
But fake names are OK if you're the boss (Score:5, Interesting)
Or famous.
The executive in charge of Google+ is Vic Gundotra. But his name isn't really Vic. Mr. Gundrota is Indian and his real first name is Vivek. Yes that's right. The person mandating that you must use your real name, is using a phoney name.
Then there are the celebrities, like Fifty Cent and Lady Gaga who are allowed to use their fake names.
Google gets a +1 for hypocrisy.
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Are you sure it's a good idea to defy the Guardian God-King of the holy land of Vvardenfell [uesp.net]?
And the pendulum swings (Score:5, Insightful)
There were a few people running their own servers who bucked the trend, but it wasn't until AOL joined USENET [wikipedia.org] that pseudonyms became a fact of life on the Internet. AOL allowed each account to have up to 5 usernames, ostensibly for families sharing a single AOL account. Obviously these extra usernames were quickly taken up by people wishing to post things online anonymously, which was good for free speech. But not surprisingly, spam was invented shortly thereafter.
All that's happening now is that the pendulum is starting to swing the away from anonymity as netizens struggle to figure out the best balance between real names and pseudonyms. The people at the pro-anonymity extreme won't like it, just like the people at the pro-real-name extreme didn't like it in the early 1990s. But as with most things the best balance is probably somewhere in between.
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That's a nice post, on the insightful side of informative. I just barely hit the rising curve of the AOL days and one of the 1988-ish versions of Think Of Da Kiddiez was to "never use your real name lest that evil person does evil things."
But it was also a simpler time, I was a good little birdie, and have basically only had two variants of this screen name for my entire internet career. I instinctively worked to build what I now call a "web brand", basically meaning that of course this handle isn't legal t
By patenting it, no one else can have it (Score:2)
Or, by patenting it, they ensure that anyone else trying to allow online anonymity violates the patent in some way, thereby outlawing online anonymity.
At least, that's one use for the patent - to prevent someone from doing stuff counter to your interests.
Google is your friend. Why won't you allow Google to be your friend?
Behead those who insult the prophet (Score:4, Insightful)
Thank you for pointing us in their general direction.
Fuckin' blow me (Score:2, Interesting)
Google+ can fucking blow me. Apparently, unless you took your grade school American history in the US, you don't *get* what part anonymous speech, starting with Paine and Franklin, played in American history and what it means to Americans culturally and historically to be able to say what they want when they want the way they want using whatever literary or social devices they think will best serve their ends.
Google+ is a walled garden of another kind- a walled garden of people willing to submit their ide
Don't use Google+ (Score:2)
I still use Gmail for several deterrent accounts and 1 main account. I've been setting these up over the past 3 months or so. So far, The count is up to 8. Google has tried to force them to sign up for Google+, but each time the sign up page presents itself I just close it down and relogin. Until Google makes Google+ mandatory for using their services, this usage pattern will repeat. When that day arrives, I'll pay for my own domain(s) and set up shop over there.
This whole social aspect of the Internet
Re:Google makes Google+ mandatory (Score:2)
What's precisely so special about gmail, now that there are all of these hidden downsides lurking?
I'm giggling because I've been a yahoo mail user for some 8 years, and while dear ol' Yahoo isn't doing all that great, Yahoo Is Not Google (YING?) so they aren't too deeply hooked to anything else and I don't see these kinds of stories about them.
What exactly is being patented here? (Score:3)
I just read through the patent and I can't make head or tail of what exactly is being patented. The best I can tell is some sort of system that has multiple identities that it shows to different people depending on your relationship.
And if it's difficult to tell what is being patented should it really be patented?
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I just read through the patent and I can't make head or tail of what exactly is being patented. The best I can tell is some sort of system that has multiple identities that it shows to different people depending on your relationship.
And if it's difficult to tell what is being patented should it really be patented?
Claim language can be confusing, as the need for repeating terms makes reading a claim very clunky. The specification (written description) is always secondary to claim language when you're talking about what is covered by the patent. It's useful for claim interpretation and defining scope, but the claims are the name of the game. Here's the first independent claim of the Google patent:
1. A computer-implemented method for generating a plurality of personas for an account of a first user of a social n
patent system broken -- news at 11 (Score:2)
At any company that's ever designed or manufactured a cell phone, the modern doctrine is "patent first, ask questions later".
The idea that any such corporation would ratify their patent application stream against their patent-pending portfolio under any metric of superficial common sense (common sense is always superficial) is beneath the dignity of nerds anywhere, except on a slow news day, or at a once-proud page view hamster wheel and troll feeder.
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How oh HOW is this patentable?
Simple: File it with USPTO.
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How oh HOW is this patentable?
Simple: Have your veritable army of on-staff patent lawyers file it with USPTO.
FTFY.
They'd never allow little guys like you and I to patent such a thing.
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How oh HOW is this patentable?
Simple: Have your veritable army of on-staff patent lawyers file it with USPTO.
FTFY. They'd never allow little guys like you and I to patent such a thing.
Sure they would. Then their invincible army of patent l*wy*rs would rape pillage and plunder you and your family's bank accounts and scam up the patent. Why innovate when you can litigate?
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They'd never allow little guys like you and I to patent such a thing.
Of course they will, there is nothing personal in this, matter of fact there is a garden variety solicitor here in Melbourne who (as a joke) applied for and obtained a patent on the wheel in the late 90's. The patent office will stamp virtually anything you put in front of it, there is no incentive for them to take any care in the process because they don't have to clean up their own mess, just stamp it, collect the filing fees, and dump the real work into the lap of the judicial branch. Now when it does ge
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Mea culpa for the lack of clarification.
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If you allow only real names, then you preclude the second group..
And I'm perfectly OK with that. In fact it's why I use Google+ and not other social networks. There are dozens of other social networks that allow anonymous accounts, if you have something that can only be said anonymously then go use one of those, some of them even have more users, and larger audiences than Google+. In the mean time I'll enjoy a network free from the likes of "MonkeyFucker-69"; one where people behave better.
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By your comments it appears that MoneyFucker-69 is someone who has seriously wronged you.
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The real problem with that part you quoted is that the logic is completely backwards. How do people I want to connect with know to try to find me? If I wanted to connect with them, it should be my problem to go find them, not their problem to come find me.
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In the USA, Google fsck YOU.
(Apologies to the Russians, but I'm afraid they've fallen behind us again.)
We must not allow the Russians to win the search engine war! We cannot afford a search engine gap!! [/drstrangelove]
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Weird, I don't think Google is the epitome of evil. All their technology offerings have sticky strings attached and are geared towards data mining you. But
a) There's plenty of worse monsters out there (like facebook, MS, ORACLE).
b) There's still a lot of good stuff coming out from them. Things like Go and SPDY.
c) They are a good influence in the Internet. They do much more good than harm as far as I'm concerned.
I, however, don't use neither gmail nor chorme nor search, nor android.
Basically I'm ok with Goog