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07/10/07

7,240,619 Identifiable bullet which is unduplicatable
  Issued: July 10, 2007
  Filed: March 9, 2006
  U.S. Class: 102/430
Abstract:  
This invention is intended to provide an identifiable bullet which is unduplicatable by a third party.The means is to place plural (two or more) kinds of identification codes onto or into a bullet and to make the identification codes mutually related. By this means the bullet remains identifiable. Next, the means is to make at least one kind of the identification code or codes ciphered. By this means the mutual relations among the identification codes become confidential to a third party, so that the bullet becomes unduplicatable.In one embodiment, each identification code is placed in a different kind of material, and this enables an investigator to detect and compare the identification codes more easily after shooting of the bullet.In another embodiment, each kind of identification code or codes is placed in a different kind of material.

Posted by GEN-ERIC at 10:15:33 am into the following categories: Patents of the Day


07/10/07

7,243,231 Sensory verification of shared data
  Issued: July 10, 2007
  Filed: July 31, 2002
  U.S. Class: 713/168
Abstract:  
In one embodiment, a method for sensory verification comprises exchanging at least one data item with a computing unit and selecting a sequence number. Such selection may be accomplished by generation of the sequence number or manual entry by the user. Thereafter, a transformation is periodically performed on the data item, the sequence number and optionally a random value to produce a sequence of values, each value being used to produce a perceivable sensory element for comparison with another sensory element produced by another computing unit.

Posted by GEN-ERIC at 10:14:58 am into the following categories: Patents of the Day


07/10/07

7,240,688 Retrofitting a fire hydrant with secondary valve
  Issued: July 10, 2007
  Filed: March 2, 2006
  U.S. Class: 137/15.02
Abstract:  
The present invention relates to methods and devices for retrofitting fire hydrants with additional structure for reducing the potential that those with ill intent can foul municipal water supplies by introducing toxins or other materials into fire hydrants. Various embodiments include a seat and elongated member for efficient and cost effective installation and cooperation with valves, which close off portions of the hydrant otherwise available for receipt of toxic or other materials when the fire hydrant nozzle cap is unscrewed and open.

Posted by GEN-ERIC at 10:14:29 am into the following categories: Patents of the Day


07/10/07
Posted by GEN-ERIC at 10:13:26 am into the following categories: OG Notice Links


07/10/07
Posted by GEN-ERIC at 10:12:55 am into the following categories: OG Notice Links


07/10/07

Call it a case of Web 1.0 vs. Web 2.0. The controversy stems from development work done at Ikimbo, one of the original Internet companies. The company was developing an enterprise-level groupware application framework. In a 2001 position paper, Ikimbo described itself as “developing a real-time platform for accelerating business communications across the value-chain.” Ikimbo closed down in 2004, but it left behind a patent, applied for in 2000 by the inventors and subsequently issued by the U.S. Patent Office 2003, that became the property of Cross Atlantic Capital Partners, a venture capital management firm based in Radnor, Pa. The patent, entitled “System for creating a community of users with common interests to interact in,” was a continuation of another patent issued in 1998 to the inventors. Cross Atlantic contends that the patent was issued prior to development of the now-popular Facebook Web site—a poster child of the Web 2.0 era—which uses the same technology and which went live on Feb. 4, 2004. Cross Atlantic filed suit in U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, claiming that Facebook is in violation of that patent. Cross Atlantic is seeking an injunction, royalties and punitive damages.

Posted by GEN-ERIC at 12:04:37 am into the following categories: In The News


07/10/07

Sonosite Inc., a Washington state-based ultrasound firm, has filed a patent infringement suit against General Electric Co. in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Wisconsin in Madison, Sonosite said Thursday. The complaint is filed as a counterclaim to a GE complaint filed in May alleging Sonosite, which makes hand-held ultrasound systems, of infringing five of its patents. Sonosite is filing its answer to the complaint denying all of GE’s claims and alleging that the asserted patents are either invalid, not infringed or both. A GE spokesman did not return phone calls seeking comment. Complaints from both companies seek "unspecified monetary damages" and an injunction to prevent the companies from using the technologies in question.

Posted by GEN-ERIC at 12:03:35 am into the following categories: In The News


07/10/07

Baxter International Inc., the world's biggest maker of treatments for blood disease, settled a patent-infringement suit with Talecris Biotherapeutics Inc. over a means of preparing injectable antibodies, on the eve of trial. Talecris, based in Research Triangle Park, North Carolina, sued Baxter in federal court in Delaware in 2005 over the patent, licensed from Bayer HealthCare LLC, for a method of clearing viruses from serum to treat people with weakened immune systems. A jury trial was set to begin today in Wilmington, Delaware, before Chief U.S. District Judge Gregory M. Sleet. "I can confirm that the terms of the settlement are confidential," Talecris spokeswoman Lacy McMahon said in a statement. Baxter spokeswoman Deborah Spak said the trial was canceled and also declined to give details of the settlement. In the complaint, Talecris contended it would be "irreparably harmed" by the importation and sale of Baxter's infringing Gammagard Liquid product, and asked for a ruling to stop sales until the patent expires in 2020.

Posted by GEN-ERIC at 12:02:18 am into the following categories: In The News


07/10/07

Shares in biotechnology company Ciphergen Biosystems Inc. fell Friday after it agreed to pay $600,000 to Health Discovery Corp. to settle a patent infringement case. Under the terms of the agreement, Ciphergen will pay Savannah, Ga.-based Health Discovery and receive a non-exclusive license to use its support vector machines, Health Discovery said. Fremont, Calif.-based Ciphergen also dropped all counterclaims against HDC, a biomarker discovery company. Biomarkers act as the signals that stem cells give off when exposed to a certain drug or disease.

Posted by GEN-ERIC at 12:00:53 am into the following categories: In The News


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