Bilski’s hearing and software patents

Mr. Stewart shows how minimalist an interpretation of the CAFC ruling he’s seeking when he says that the Bilski method would be patentable if there was an “interactive website in which people — parties and counterparties could essentially find each other by the computer and could agree to terms“.

To this, Roberts replies: “No, no. That’s just saying instead of looking at the — in the Yellow Pages, you look on the computer; and that makes all the difference to you? […] that involves the most tangential and insignificant use of a machine. And yet you say that might be enough to take something from patentability to not patentable. […] If you develop a process that says look to the historical averages of oil consumption over a certain period and divide it by 2, that process would not be patentable. But if you say use a calculator, then it — then it is?

Keeping my fingers crossed that the decision winds up on the side to which the Court seems to be leaning.

Patent Troll Eolas sues corporate giants over AJAX | Deep Tech – CNET News

The ‘985 Patent is a continuation of the ‘906 patent, and allows Web sites to add fully-interactive embedded applications to their online offerings through the use of plug-in and Ajax (asynchronous JavaScript and XML) Web development techniques,” Eolas said in a statement about the lawsuit.

And this my friends is why software patents suck and need to be ended. The fact that a company like Eolas can even bring suit over such generic ideas is ridiculous. Let’s hope the Supreme Court goes the right way in the Bilski case so companies like Eolas can go away for good.