Patent Abstract:
The art of present discloses a method and system for enabling mobile network operators to collect charging information from various other network elements; and indeed, is intended to exploit the resiliency of open network architecture and lessen the requisite dependency on proprietary network elements services and billing systems. The Open Charging (OC) middleware platform and gateway system interacts with proprietary network elements and effectually creates a unifying, enabling layer in mobile networks. Indeed, the art is directed at permitting mobile subscriber access to, among others, third party content and services with the simplicity and convenience of such charges appearing on either mobile phone bill, or decremented from said mobile subscriber&#39;s pre-paid account.

Full Description:
BACKGROUND ART  
         [0001]    Formerly, wireless and/or mobile subscribers faced the irksome option of multiple billing for whichever content and/or service(s) they wished to utilize. Needless to say, the arrangement remained most inconvenient. With the growth and sophistication of modern telecommunications networks, and in particular, the subsequent evolution of open service architecture(s) (OSA) we have seen the decoupling of application and network layers together with an augmentation of multi-party applications and related infrastructure.  
           [0002]    The Open Charging (OC) middleware platform and gateway system disclosed herein presages a new era of mobile subscriber access (and ease of access) to content and/or service(s) by allowing such content to be charged to subscribers existing account(s) with their mobile provider.  
           [0003]    Indeed, none of the prior art reviewed teach or intimate the subject matter hereof seeking the protection of Letters Patent. Consider U.S. Pat. No. 5,963,630 to Dabbs et al., entitled Mediation service control point within an intelligent network, which teaches of a mechanism whereby a mediation SCP provides for a SCCP based mediation and redirection function whereof messages originated by SSPs are directed to the appropriate SCP(s) on the basis of subscriber identifiers which are encapsulated within the aforementioned messages produced by SSPs. However, Dabbs et al., does not teach or suggest a method of providing a mediation capability whereby a plurality of network elements (other than SCPs) can be accessed in an efficient manner via a variety of interfaces and protocols as the case may be. Furthermore, the patent to Dabbs et al. does not teach or suggest a method whereby a mechanism of accessing subscriber attributes (e.g. account balance information) stored on network elements (e.g. SCPs) can be extended to other computational platforms which may reside outside of the telecommunications carrier via an object oriented Application Programming Interface (API).  
           [0004]    Consider similarly, U.S. Pat. No. 5,812,533 to Cox et al., entitled Service provision in communications networks, which details a service delivery infrastructure whereby a Service Control Point is augmented for the purpose of provisioning selected sets of services to users of the communications network by interacting with network systems via an object oriented architecture. However, it does not teach or suggest a method of reducing the number of transactions and therefore increasing the efficiency of non-augmented Service Control Points. Furthermore, the patent to Cox et al. does not teach or suggest a method of mediating and directing object-oriented requests to network elements other than Service Control Points.  
           [0005]    U.S. patent application Ser. No. 2002/0,058,496 by Bos et al., entitled Charging arrangement for a multimedia communication system, provides for a mechanism whereby charging information, related to multimedia service provided to a user, is directed to a Service Control Point via the CAMEL Application Part (CAP) bearer network interface for the purpose of facilitating the charging process for the aforementioned service. However, Bos et al.&#39;s application does not teach or suggest a method of providing a mediation capability whereby a plurality of network elements (other than SCPs) can be accessed in an efficient manner via a variety of interfaces and protocols (other than CAP) as the case may be. Furthermore, their application does not teach or suggest a method whereby a mechanism of accessing subscriber attributes (e.g. account balance information) stored on network elements (e.g. SCPs) can be extended to other computational platforms which may reside outside of the telecommunications carrier via an object oriented Application Programming Interface (API).  
           [0006]    In relation to the subscriber information caching mechanisms detailed herein, among other unique aspects of the invention of present, consider U.S. Pat. No. 6,473,402 to Moharram, entitled Communications link interconnecting service control points of a load sharing group for traffic management control, provides for a mechanism whereby a given a given transaction can be directed to a plurality of SCPs in order to share the transactional load among the SCPs. However, Moharram&#39;s patent does not teach or intimate a method of aggregating transactions for the purpose of reducing the collective number of transactions which have to be processed by a single SCP or plurality of SCPs. Furthermore, it does not teach or intimate a method of reducing the transactional capacity for network elements other than SCPs.  
           [0007]    U.S. patent application Pub. Ser. No. 2002/0,156,863 by Peng, entitled Apparatus and methods for managing caches on a gateway, details art relevant to the caching of data particular to Internet gateways and the prior art deficiencies of wireless internet users who may have inadequate processing capability for retrieving information, and similarly, very limited memory space for caching such information. Nonetheless, nothing therein details or intimates art designed to lessen the impact on IN elements, by specifically and uniquely gathering, collating and analyzing machine readable records (as wireless subscriber balances and so on); thereby enabling a single update to such platforms, as opposed to a multitude thereof.  
         REFERENCES CITED  
         [0008]    U.S. patent application Ser. No. 20,020,156,863 October 2002 Peng 709/217  
           [0009]    U.S. patent application Ser. No. 20,020,058,495 May 2002 Bos et al. 455/406  
           [0010]    U.S. Pat. No. 6,473,402 October 2002 Moharram 370/236  
           [0011]    U.S. Pat. No. 5,963,630 October 1999 Dabbs et al. 379/201.01  
           [0012]    U.S. Pat. No. 5,812,533 September 1998 Cox et al. 370/259  
         TECHNICAL FIELD  
         [0013]    The present invention relates generally to wireless communications and gateway services; and more specifically, to an improved method and system for effectuating and implementing an Open Charging (OC) middleware platform and gateway system.  
         SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION  
         [0014]    In keeping with the evolution of open services and architecture, the present method and system is disclosed which provides real-time routing, profiling and charging of transactable requests. The art of present provides a distributed, secure, robust, and transactional interface to the fabric of existing mobile Service Control Point (SCP) platforms, among other IN (Intelligent Network) elements.  
           [0015]    The Open Charging (OC) middleware platform and gateway system provides a distributed framework architecture through its implementation of Common Object Request Broker Architecture (CORBA) and SOAP-XML, which allows service enablers to build enhanced applications and other such services which interact with the IN platforms of multiple vendors. In addition to Common Object Request Broker Architecture (CORBA) and Extensible Markup Language (XML), practitioners skilled in the art shall recognize that a variety of object oriented application programming interfaces will satisfy the implementation of said architecture without affecting the intent and scope of the present invention.  
           [0016]    Additionally, the platform and system of present can intermediate and process the various protocols required to interact with said former platforms, including CS1 (INAP), Prepaid-CTP, UCP and CAMEL Phase 2, among others).  
           [0017]    The art of the Open Charging (OC) middleware platform and gateway system has been so crafted as to remain fully MVNO (Mobile Virtual Network Operator) compliant, providing as before an abstracted, secure, robust, distributed, and transactional interface to distributed mobile network and enterprise elements including, among others but in particular, IN platforms and, in alternate embodiments, HLRs, while utilizing advanced queuing methods to minimize impact on mobile services. Such an architecture carries with it, the unique potential for third-party developers and/or carriers to develop high capacity services and applications which interact with the nodes within mobile networks.  
       
    
    
     BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS  
       [0018]    [0018]FIG. 1 illustrates a typical, non-limiting embodiment of the system level architecture employed in the disclosure of present;  
         [0019]    [0019]FIG. 2A and FIG. 2B represent illustrative diagrams of the advanced queuing methods embodied within the Open Charging (OC) middleware platform and gateway system;  
         [0020]    [0020]FIG. 3 details an expanded illustration of the Virtual Account Application (VAA) architecture.  
     
    
     DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS  
       [0021]    With reference to FIG. 1, said architecture depicted consists of the following functional elements and/or modules:  
         [0022]    i. Subscriber Provisioning and/or Registration  101 ;  
         [0023]    ii. Application Interface  102 A,  103 A;  
         [0024]    iii. Security Engine (SE)  104 ;  
         [0025]    iv. Queuing Module (QM)  105 ;  
         [0026]    v. IN Platform/Protocol Adaptor (INPA)  106 ;  
         [0027]    vi. Application Activity Detection  107 ; and  
         [0028]    vii. Virtual Account Application (VAA) (Subscriber Information Caching Mechanisms)  110 .  
         [0029]    Subscriber Registration  101  is a feature of the platform and system  10  which allows said system  10  to determine which IN platform an application&#39;s request remains to be forwarded to, in systems where subscriber information is disseminated across multiple IN platforms.  
         [0030]    Subscriber Provisioning  101 A may be explicit, by indicating unequivocally which platform a request for a particular subscriber remains to be routed; or it may be implicit, providing general criteria in an effort to determine which platform to route requests to, as for example, in one embodiment, subscriber telephone number ranges.  
         [0031]    The Open Charging (OC) middleware platform and gateway system  10  requires that applications register and login  40  before they are permitted to utilize said system. The platform and system  10  maintains application profiles of each application permitted as such. Said profiles indicate the functions of the system which a given application is permitted to use.  
         [0032]    Still in reference to FIG. 1, the CORBA  102  and SOAP-XML  103  servers in tandem with their respective application interfaces  102 A  103 A (respectively), accept external application logins and external application function calls as per their usual function in a client-server system. Said CORBA  102  and SOAP-XML  103  servers accept, for instance, the balance query, balance deduction and balance increment function requests for a particular subscriber from an external application  20   30  (respectively) and relays said information to the Security Engine  104  to ensure that said application making the request has the requisite permission to so do. In addition to Common Object Request Broker Architecture (CORBA) and Extensible Markup Language (XML), which are delineated herein for the purposes of illustration, familiarity and simplicity, practitioners skilled in the art shall recognize that a variety of object oriented application programming interfaces will satisfy the implementation of said architecture without affecting the intent and scope of the present invention.  
         [0033]    In varying embodiments, said permission(s) are determined by any number of factors, of which the follows remain merely illustrative:  
         [0034]    a. whether the application is permitted to request said function;  
         [0035]    b. whether the application is permitted to access the IN platform where said subscriber is hosted.  
         [0036]    c. whether the application is permitted to access and/or to modify the subscriber data (as per Mobile Virtual Network Operator (MNVO) compliance).  
         [0037]    Once said request has satisfied the Security Engine  104  verifications, the requests are then routed to the Queuing Module  105 . Said Module  105  being responsible for routing the application request to the proper IN platform  200 , based on the information entered during the Subscriber Provisioning phase  101 A, and of queuing, throttling and prioritizing the requests (as stored on  40 ) to the IN platform(s)  200 .  
         [0038]    Each supported IN platform  200  is associated with a corresponding request queue. Each new request is added to the appropriate queue. Its place in said queue is determined by the priority of the application which has made the request. Requests are taken off the queue and passed to the IN platform  200  via the appropriate protocol adapter  106 . The rate at which the requests are taken off the queue and passed is dependent on the throttling settings of each queue. The throttling of transactions is controlled on an IN element basis, and can be set to limit transactions to a certain number of transactions per second or per unit time. Once set, transactions will be dispatched to the IN element at a rate not exceeding the given limit. The platform and system  10  is able to control the impact to the IN network as well as the relative order of request processing in this manner.  
         [0039]    Continuing with reference to FIG. 1, the Open Charging (OC) middleware platform and gateway system  10  has been so articulated as to support multiple IN platforms from a variety of equipment providers. Requests taken off the IN platform queue  105  are translated into the specific protocol of the IN platform  200 A  200 B  200 C  200 D by the IN specific adaptor  106 A  106 B  106 C  106 D (respectively) for that platform. In alternate embodiments, replies from the IN platform  200  may also handled by the adaptor  106 . Said IN adaptor  106  is responsible for executing any login and authorization required by the IN platform  200  prior to sending requests thereof.  
         [0040]    Although the IN specific adaptor  106  remains dependent upon the details of the vendor-provided IN platform  200 , among the various embodiments and workings of the adaptor  106  the following four (4) non-limiting instantiations have been distilled merely for the purposes of illustration, and are indeed not intended to affect or dilute the intent and scope of the present invention, as practitioners skilled in the art shall recognize.  
         [0041]    i. Non-Real Time (Machine Readable Record Based).  
         [0042]    The non-real-time, machine readable record based interface generates a written communications record in a IN platform specific format for each transaction request which has been passed to the IN adaptor  106 A by the queuing module  105 . The communications records are then collated and fed into the IN platform  200 A on a non-real time basis to be processed.  
         [0043]    ii. Real-Time (TCP/IP Based).  
         [0044]    A real-time TCP/IP based IN adaptor  106 B interfaces with the IN platform  200 B via a defined TCP/IP connection. The precise protocol employed is TCP/IP-based, and remains representative of a format compliant to the specifics of the interface as defined by the IN platform  200 B manufacturer. Requests which are passed to the IN adaptor  106 B by the queuing module  105  are translated into the IN platform specific protocol and transmitted to the IN platform  200 B for processing.  
         [0045]    iii. Generic Real-Time (Generic Real-Time Protocol Based).  
         [0046]    A generic real-time based IN adaptor  106 C interfaces with the IN platform  200 C in the same manner as the real-time TCP/IP based adaptor  106 B. However, the communication is done over that given generic real-time protocol rather than the TCP/IP protocol.  
         [0047]    iv. Hybrid (Machine Readable Record Based and Real-Time Based).  
         [0048]    The Hybrid interface  106 D utilizes a combination of machine readable record based and real-time based interfaces, as aforementioned. The specifics of which requests are to be processed by which method, remain dependent upon the specifications of the interfacing IN platform  200 D.  
         [0049]    In the preferred embodiment, the art is crafted as to permit the simultaneous interfacing of multiple IN platforms  200  each of which utilize a different IN adaptor  106 . Each adaptor may be of a different type of one of the above types. The CORBA  102  and SOAP-XML  103  servers will distribute the application requests to the appropriate queues  105 , which will in turn dequeue requests according to throttling parameters to the correct adaptor  106 , as described hitherto.  
         [0050]    Entrenched within the architecture of the system  10  resides the application activity detection art  107  which innovatively assesses and monitors the sanity and operation of the system  10  itself. Applications which make use of the Open Charging (OC) middleware platform and gateway system  10  are ordinarily expected to transmit a given number of requests during typical operation. Said system  107  monitors the number of transactions generated by the application per unit time period and reports a possible error condition if the expected number is derogated from.  
         [0051]    In alternate embodiments, a complementary module  110  may be invoked whereby transactions to the IN platform  200  which update, among others, a subscriber&#39;s account information, and in particular, the subscriber&#39;s account balance, is written to a cache  110  within the system  10  itself rather than to the IN platform  200  thereby minimizing network impact thereof  200 . Upon realization of preset activity thresholds, the updated subscriber information is then written to the IN Platform  200  by the module  110 . The subscriber information caching or virtual account application (VAA) module  110 , furthermore maintains synchronization with other events which can impact the subscriber balance by monitoring machine readable record which are generated by the IN platform  200  recording such activity.  
         [0052]    Now in reference to FIG. 2A and FIG. 2B, which both serve to further elucidate the innovative queuing process; the Queuing Module  105  supports advanced prioritized queuing which allows applications to be given priority over others. Priority is defined at the CORBA login level.  
         [0053]    In reference specifically to FIG. 2A, at  105 A said insertion position is based on transaction attributes (of which, non-limiting, illustrative examples include, priority of application that generated the transaction, type of transaction and length of time in the queue). At steps  105 B and  105 C, which are better delineated with reference now to FIG. 2B, an application with a higher priority  105 B will have its transactions processed ahead of applications with lower priority during congestion periods. Applications with lower priority  105 C will not be starved for resources as an individual transaction&#39;s priority increases the longer it stays in the queue. This will allow transactions by the lower priority application to be processed at a lower rate. Returning to FIG. 2A, at  105 D, said request transactions are propagated at a fixed (throttled) rate.  
         [0054]    With reference now to FIG. 3, which details an innovative, though elective, aspect of the Open Charging (OC) middleware platform and gateway system, the Virtual Account Application (VAA)  110  subscriber information caching mechanisms. The VAA  110  is situated architecturally amid the Security Engine  104  and the Queuing Module  105 . Now, whenever a request is made, said Security Engine  104  will route the request to the VAA  110  (only where the application has been so configured as to invoke it of course), and processed according to the configuration parameters  110 A.  
         [0055]    In maintaining an accurate indication of subscriber balances, the VAA  110  processes, in real-time, machine readable records  110 D generated by the IN Platform  200 . Said records allow the VAA  110  to maintain an accurate cached balance  110 C for each subscriber. In addition to the said cached balance  110 C for each subscriber, the VAA  110  maintains an increment amount for each subscriber. This amount is the sum of all of the balance increments and balance deductions (as negatives) that the VAA  110  has cached for the user.  
         [0056]    The VAA  110  then sends a single update  110 E to the IN Platform (via the Queuing Module  105  and so forth, as aforementioned in relation to FIG. 1). Said update  110 E representing all of the balance increments and balance deductions. The art of the VAA  110  thus reduces the number of transactions and network burden ultimately placed on the IN Platform  200 , as it accommodates multiple updates of the cached virtual accounts  110 C.  
         [0057]    The update  110 E to the IN Platform  200  is performed when said subscriber&#39;s balance, as calculated from the cached balance and the cached increment amount, passes a configurable threshold  110 B. In alternate embodiments, the update  110 E may be performed where a configurable amount of time  110 B has passed since the previous update.

Technology Classification (CPC): 7