Business method patents thriving post-Bilski?
The first claim of the '945:
A method for managing transactions associated with accounts of an individual, comprising: receiving information associated with the individual; receiving information associated with a first account of the individual; receiving information associated with a second account of the individual; processing the received information associated with the individual, the received information associated with the first account, and the received information associated with the second account; and automatically performing a transaction based upon a result of the processing, wherein the processing is based upon comparisons of one of terms and events of the first and second accounts to maximize a benefit to the individual.
Claim 17:
A system for managing transactions associated with accounts of an individual, comprising: a memory unit; and a processing unit, wherein the processing unit: receives information associated with the individual; receives information associated with a first account of the individual; receives information associated with a second account of the individual; processes the received information associated with the individual, the received information associated with the first account, and the received information associated with the second account; and automatically performs a transaction based upon a result of the processing, wherein the processing is based upon comparisons of one of terms and events of the first and second accounts to maximize a benefit to the individual.
The file history reveals discussion of 102/103, but no Bilski matters. Prior art cited against the application (and overcome) included Cataline (US app 2002/0116331) and Poltorak (US app 2006/0277139).
The case was proscuted by BAKER & MCKENZIE LLP. (Anthony V. Flint was a prosecuting attorney). There is a continuing application from the case: 12/484,355 filed on - which is Pending claims the benefit of 11/298,103
**See also
http://ipbiz.blogspot.com/2009/06/supreme-court-to-hear-bilski.html
Airplane toilet queue patent: it's back!
At the 271Blog: Bilski at the BPAI - What a Mess (Part 1):
It has gotten to the point that a given claim may receive 4 different interpretations from 4 different people, and each of them could be arguably correct. In the case of computer-related inventions, the end result of a patentability analysis is rarely supportable with a single, cogent rationale.
***[update] Of General Patent Corporation and Poltorak, from Reuters, June 30, 2009
Jack Granowitz has joined General Patent Corporation`s Advisory Board of Directors.
Mr. Granowitz was one of the founders of the Technology Transfer office at
Columbia University and its Executive Director from 1988 until 2000.
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