Source: https://patents.google.com/patent/US7742993?oq=5%2C666%2C293
Timestamp: 2018-04-26 23:38:00
Document Index: 269751215

Matched Legal Cases: ['§106', '§106', '§107', '§109', '§202', '§109', '§109', '§109']

US7742993B2 - SCART-card (secure consumer advantaged retail trading) - Google Patents
SCART-card (secure consumer advantaged retail trading) Download PDF
US7742993B2
US7742993B2 US11329526 US32952606A US7742993B2 US 7742993 B2 US7742993 B2 US 7742993B2 US 11329526 US11329526 US 11329526 US 32952606 A US32952606 A US 32952606A US 7742993 B2 US7742993 B2 US 7742993B2
US11329526
US20070100707A1 (en )
James Leonard Driessen
DRIESSEN MARGUERITE L
DRIESSEN JAMES L
The CARD can also create many advantages over the prior art in the area of tracking of first sales in copyrighted materials, returns of such sales, as well as retransfer of ownership in copyrighted materials or other merchandise. It is well known in the art that Title 17 of the United States Code outlines the specific and exclusive rights of copyright owners. Original artists for copyrighted materials have the exclusive right to prevent others from copying, using, or destroying copyrighted works. Particularly 17 U.S.C. 107 §106 and §106 (a) without other exceptions would disallow anyone from modifying or destroying a copyrighted work. However, §107, §109, and other case specific copyright licensing legalities allow end-users of copyrighted products to sell or destroy their licensed product without the artists permission as well as the make “backup” copies for personal use, which become useable licensed copies, in the event that the original licensed copy becomes damaged or destroyed.
The above specification already described a method for creating and tracking a digital backup copy using content fingerprinting. A thorough reading of this section of the specification should facilitate the reader's attention to those above disclosures. When we take a closer look at 17 U.S.C. §202 in an expanded setting of the meaning and purposes of the entire Title 17, we can see a suggestion that an authorized user can also convey the rights in copyrighted media itself, regardless of the existence of or current form of the original media object. So long as the work remains some type of unique and tangible object, the transfer of authorized license for consumer use may also remain intact without the transfer of the original object.
The present invention offers improvements over previous methods in that every copy may be traced back to the original licensed copy even if formatting changes in the file or content have taken place and there is still an original media material object that exists separate from the content, namely the CARD. The present invention may thus become a legally disrupting technology worthy of exemption under the first sales doctrine of §109 for infringement. And herein, those disclosures can be the basis for process claims of how to accomplish such an exemption if one were to be carved out under the statute.
If a media material object such as a book, tape, CD, or DVD containing copyrighted material is copied and transferred using the CARD or any of the above taught methods with or without content fingerprinting, if the original “first sales” version of that same media material object is prevented from further circulation (impairment), and if the process is then somehow validated to show reasonable proof of such impairment; then the copy of that of that original “first sales” version may not be a “copy” at all under the meaning of §109 for infringement purposes. Much the same way that a set top player may hold a “copy” of the media in memory buffers during playback, in the present invention a one to one relationship between the “transfer” media and the original media can maintain “first sales” consistency.
The process can be described by the formula: Copy+SCMS+Impairment Validation=Legally Transferable Backup, where Copy equals the act of creating a backup of the original, SCMS equals a serial copy management system, and impairment validation equals a reasonably traceable record of the original being taken out of circulation and the particular “transfer” media created, which is not a copy of the original media under the meaning of §109 first sales doctrine.
US11329526 2000-06-30 2006-01-11 SCART-card (secure consumer advantaged retail trading) Active 2029-04-24 US7742993B2 (en)
US11262855 US7636695B2 (en) 2000-06-30 2005-10-31 Retail point of sale (RPOS) apparatus for internet merchandising
US11329526 US7742993B2 (en) 2005-10-31 2006-01-11 SCART-card (secure consumer advantaged retail trading)
US12772919 US8438111B2 (en) 2000-06-30 2010-05-03 Retail point of sale (RPOS) digital rights convergence
US14791407 US20180025346A9 (en) 2000-06-30 2015-07-04 Retail point of sale (RPOS) apparatus for internet merchandising
US09630272 Continuation-In-Part US7003500B1 (en) 2000-08-01 2000-08-01 Retail point of sale (RPOS) apparatus for internet merchandising
US11262855 Continuation-In-Part US7636695B2 (en) 2000-06-30 2005-10-31 Retail point of sale (RPOS) apparatus for internet merchandising
US12772919 Continuation-In-Part US8438111B2 (en) 2000-06-30 2010-05-03 Retail point of sale (RPOS) digital rights convergence
US12772919 Continuation US8438111B2 (en) 2000-06-30 2010-05-03 Retail point of sale (RPOS) digital rights convergence
US20070100707A1 true US20070100707A1 (en) 2007-05-03
US7742993B2 true US7742993B2 (en) 2010-06-22
ID=37997698
US11329526 Active 2029-04-24 US7742993B2 (en) 2000-06-30 2006-01-11 SCART-card (secure consumer advantaged retail trading)
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US20070100707A1 (en) 2007-05-03 application
Owner name: VIBME L.L.C., UTAH
Free format text: ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST;ASSIGNORS:DRIESSEN, JAMES L.;AKER, JOSHUA R.;REEL/FRAME:017464/0936
Owner name: VIBME L.L.C.,UTAH
Owner name: DRIESSEN, JAMES L, UTAH
Free format text: ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST;ASSIGNOR:VIBME LLC;REEL/FRAME:023405/0822
Owner name: DRIESSEN, JAMES L,UTAH
Owner name: DRIESSEN, MARGUERITE L, UTAH
Free format text: EQUITABLE ASSIGNMENT OF INTEREST;ASSIGNOR:DRIESSEN, JAMES L;REEL/FRAME:026171/0726